I label myself a 'philosopher'. Philosophy I liken to a thinker's toolbox, and Objectivity (as an example, not directing this thread specifically at Objectivists) as just one tool, of the array we have available. I use any/all of them, according to the subject I'm considering. Why would I restrict myself to a hammer for all jobs, when I have an array of tools available, and can choose the best one to address my current needs/interests? — Pattern-chaser
The important point about this to me is the idea that the way we choose to approach a question can vary from person to person, time to time, and situation to situation. It's a choice. — T Clark
Indeed it is. But I wonder why anyone would deny themselves the whole toolbox to choose from? Each person, for each problem (or problem type) might choose differently from the toolbox, but why would anyone deliberately restrict their own choice of tools? — Pattern-chaser
↪Pattern-chaser
I should note that despite the following, I wouldn't say I follow a single school of philosophy, I often find myself in agreement with incompatible views.
Essentially, it's for the sake of consistency. Consistency is a theoretical virtue, that is, most of the time consistency is a property of a theory which makes the good or better relative to a theory which is otherwise identical save a for a contradiction amongst its assumptions or entailments. The more you pick views and assumptions between schools, the more likely you are to introduce contradictions into your set of beliefs. Of course, one can still find themselves in a school of thought who's tenets are inconsistent or results in a belief system with some other unwanted feature (ad hoc-ness, poor explanatory power, lack of fruitfulness, etc.) — MindForged
↪Pattern-chaser
I should note that despite the following, I wouldn't say I follow a single school of philosophy, I often find myself in agreement with incompatible views.
Essentially, it's for the sake of consistency. Consistency is a theoretical virtue, that is, most of the time consistency is a property of a theory which makes the good or better relative to a theory which is otherwise identical save a for a contradiction amongst its assumptions or entailments. The more you pick views and assumptions between schools, the more likely you are to introduce contradictions into your set of beliefs. Of course, one can still find themselves in a school of thought who's tenets are inconsistent or results in a belief system with some other unwanted feature (ad hoc-ness, poor explanatory power, lack of fruitfulness, etc.) — MindForged
I use philosophy in pursuit of an ever deepening understanding of the nature of being. My philosophy tool box is going to be full of tools that best enable that pursuit. And if most of those tools come from a particular school of philosophy (a particular hardware store? a particular hardware brand? from a particular hardware department?), then those are the tools that are going to be in my tool box. — Arne
I was equating each school of philosophy with a single tool, — Pattern-chaser
If Ethics isn't your thing, I can see how you wouldn't include it in your toolbox — Pattern-chaser
...but to limit ourselves to just one tool, when there are others available that might also prove useful? Not me. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
Then surely ethics is not a tool, but a collection of tools? My sentiment still applies, I think. — Pattern-chaser
...but to limit ourselves to just one tool, when there are others available that might also prove useful? Not me. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
My interest is in correctly identifying and describing what is. — Terrapin Station
I don't really look at ethics as a "tool" (or set of tools), by the way. I look at it as phenomena to be described. — Terrapin Station
Yes, and don't we then follow on by using that description as a tool of understanding? — Pattern-chaser
a description of what ethics is isn't itself ethics. — Terrapin Station
Officially people may support only one school, but in practice pretty much everyone is eclectic. They will use a number of different epistemologies to arrive at beliefs they will act on (as if those beliefs are true). They will use some mish mash of deontology and consequentialism (and subdivisions therein), to arrive at actions (and that's when they ar being actively rational about it.) They will internally at the very least, see themselves as determined in certain situations, and having free will in others. They will talk about it these differing ways. Discussions will reveal all sorts of ideas, implicit mostly, about ontology. People present unified fronts with themselves and the guy up there in the observation tower will claim to be this or that, but if you follow them, over time, in situ, they will most be all over the place. And the ones who are not - I would guess they would scare me a bit.Why support only one school of philosophy?
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