• _db
    3.6k
    Albert Einstein said that the definition of insanity was doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same result. Can this be applied to philosophy? It seems pretty stupid in itself to even ask if philosophy could be stupid (stupidity is anathema to philosophy) - but can this be applied to the goal of philosophy? (of course this is a philosophical question, but more of a pragmatic one regarding the choice to continue the philosophical enterprise). If something doesn't work, and it continues to not work after countless attempts, should we consider giving up?

    A cursory look at the history of philosophy (which is more of a history of loosely-related thinkers and groups of thinkers instead of some kind of perennial tradition) will show that it has a rather poor record of producing true statements, when truth is the goal. Countless philosophers have used the same general methods to try to come to true statements, but we never seem to be able to agree on any of them. At least from a superficial point of view, Einstein's quote would seem to apply: philosophers from all eras keep trying to answer the same damn questions and every time they fall short. The shortness of one's life means that each new generation is presented with the same arguments - they seem new to them, but they're really thousands of years old.

    Now, Einstein's quote was probably meant more as a joke and would apply to things in which there are alternative methods of acquiring the goal. Typing incompatible code into a Python processor will not give you everything you wanted, and continuing to use the incompatible code instead of trying something new like Python will not do anything and is just stupid.

    If we continue to slip up and fail to produce true statements, does that mean we ought to stop trying? Are we being foolish by expecting truth? Out of all of the previous attempts at truth, how likely is it that your attempt is going to be true? The ongoing cultural trend in (modern) philosophy has less to do with inquiring about the nature of the world and more about winning an argument, or releasing "weird" philosophy. It's more of a game than anything. The same could be said about many other academic fields (including mainstream science), but philosophy kind of stands out from what I can tell.

    We can keep trying to beat the computer AI at chess on Master level - but we'll never be able to beat it. We can try to make a perpetual mechanical motion machine, but we'll never manage it. We can try to make a utopian society that will last forever - but we'll never reach that point without hurting others and it'll eventually get fucked anyway by entropy.

    It does seem rather hopeless at times.

    A couple of my thoughts on this:

    • Philosophy actually has produced truth in some sense, or, at the very least, constrained the possibilities within a more manageable range. It has a great track record of identifying problems. I think there are two types of philosophical questions: the interpretive and the constructive. The interpretive questions are the ones that are more likely to lead to agreement and are mostly reflective problems (pace Wittgenstein), the ones that can be revealed after an honest look at the everyday experiences of a person without bias or apprehension. They are questions whose answers don't usually stray far away from experience itself, and are the questions whose answer typically result in the feeling of "enlightenment". The constructive questions are those that start to get into the real theoretical aspects of philosophy, such as metaphysics, epistemology, etc, things that can't be immediately experienced but must be modeled. The constructive questions, like any architectural structure, will inevitably fall or be revised. Out of both of these types, the questions that are more pressing and thus require more pragmatic answers are going to result in more agreement (and collective agreement is the closest we'll ever get to real truth).
    • Philosophy is largely innocuous. That is to say, it is usually ethically innocent. Nobody usually gets seriously hurt by philosophical inquiry alone (the fallout is another issue...). If there's any reason to stop doing philosophy, ethical issues isn't one of them. Ethics is, fundamentally, a philosophical field anyway.
    • It's fun.
    • It's therapeutic (a symptom of a larger problem)
    • The biggest thing, though, is that philosophy is largely a natural thing for any person to do. We can't stop thinking philosophically. It's what we, as minded individuals, do. We think, just like we breathe and eat and shit and sleep. We might as well try to think right, or at least better.
    • If nothing more, irrational thinking has a tendency to harm other people and yourself. If you're concerned about not being an idiot and hurting other people, then philosophy, particularly the pragmatic questions, is going to be needed.

    And maybe we shouldn't always see the philosophical method as a streamlined route to truth. Perhaps it's sometimes like analyzing a strange structure; everyone's poking, prodding, nodding, murmuring, measuring, changing perspectives on, and theorizing about the structure in front of them. We'll probably never quite know what the structure is, but for some reason we're drawn to it, unable to ignore it.

    In conclusion, my view on philosophy is that, when it's not ethics or politics (the more pragmatic-oriented), or an interpretive question, we're never going to really come to truth or professional agreement. I don't share the optimism of the graduate student who thinks their new idea will be the-next-big-thing and will lead to a century of understanding, finally solving everything.

    Most of us claim to be against subjectivism and relativism - and yet we're content with believing we hold the truth in spite of history.

    -----

    This is especially pertinent to someone as pessimistic as myself. I've made my pessimistic views known before. My love of philosophy seems almost like the "black sheep" of my worldview - humanity is doomed, we really shouldn't reproduce, politicians inevitably become corrupt, life in general is malignantly useless, whoever made the universe was either incompetent or morally questionable, but hey! philosophy! hooray! (never mind that pessimism is philosophy...)

    The thing about philosophy is that you can't half-ass it and still consider it philosophy. If you didn't try your very best, then it's probably bullshit. Even if you try your very best, it's almost certainly bullshit.

    At the same time, however, to try your best requires that you have a desired end-goal in mind: in this case, it's truth.

    But look at the history of philosophy. We haven't really gotten close to any constructive truth, it seems. Philosophers hold a position either because they naively think they have found the truth, or because they feel that by holding a belief, they are helping the dialectic.

    And that is why it's at least prima facie difficult to "justify" constructive philosophy as a pessimist. If I don't have faith in humanity, why should I have faith in philosophy? If I don't really care whether or not humanity dies out, why should I care about finding the truths of reality, something that kinda needs a temporally-extended intelligent species?

    At least for myself, philosophy have several uses:

    • Contrary to the established belief that metaphysics is first philosophy, I think that it is ethics that is first philosophy (pace Levinas), or an ethics-based metaphysics. You have to be alive in order to do anything else, and so we have to ask ourselves how we ought to live, or if we should live in the first place.
    • Philosophy is largely therapeutic for me, not so different from the philosophical works entitled "Meditations" by various authors like Descartes or Husserl. It's something to dissolve issues with, and to most importantly pass the time. It's something to think about on the train, or at work, or while you're falling asleep.
    • As said before, philosophy is largely ethically innocent. So the drive for truth is not that problematic in the way the reproduction of the species is. Now, the transcendent drive for truth is partly dependent upon the continuation of a species that can do this drive. In which case, something like philosophy is not a justification for the continuation of the species, but merely a result of it. However, what is justified is a personal drive for truth. I can do whatever the hell I want so long as I don't seriously impact anyone negatively. In a sort of twisted manner, I can "leech" off of the surrounding insanity without condoning it. I can be a part of society without approving of it. I can watch Game of Thrones, take a walk in a public park, and read philosophy without explicitly approving of the underlying structure, just like someone can enjoy a monastery while being an atheist, or enjoy the fireworks of a national holiday even if they don't explicitly approve of the country.
    • I like philosophy as a challenge more than I like it out of a wish to come to truth. Coming to truth is more of a byproduct of my enjoyment of it as a challenge, just like a rock climber may just enjoy rock climbing in general and not necessarily or solely the final push to the top.

    What do you think? What is the purpose of philosophy? What is its methodology and where is it going?
  • Wosret
    3.4k
    That's actually not really a quote by Einstein... That's a myth.
  • _db
    3.6k
    Well, TIL
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Like you I've taken to philosophy. I find it absorbing. People have thought hard about things, and it's all about thought.

    I'm not interested in truth which seems overrated: an important-sounding value you put into a system if you want. I like clarification and insight. I doubt there is truth, I suppose: philosophy seems to me non-progressive, and I like it for that.
  • Janus
    16.5k
    The thing about philosophy is that you can't half-ass it and still consider it philosophy. If you didn't try your very best, then it's probably bullshit. Even if you try your very best, it's almost certainly bullshit.darthbarracuda

    If when you don't try your best its only "probably bullshit", whereas if you do try your best "it's almost certainly bullshit", it would seem that we'd best not try our best; at least not at philosophy, anywho....

    We may conclude that philosophically, then, (at least) the half-arse rules! 8-)
  • Janus
    16.5k


    I agree with you, philosophy is not about truth at all, but about validity. Philosophy is an endlessly permutable exercise in learning to think valid thoughts; there is absolutely nothing in it that will serve to ascertain truth.

    The Realm of Truth and the Realm of Philosophy, as currently (post-critically) conceived at least, are a twain that shall never meet.
  • Hanover
    13k
    That's actually not really a quote by Einstein... That's a myth.Wosret

    Einstein said that if you keep correcting people over and over over minor details you'll have no friends.

    The text of Ecclesiastes indicates it was written by Solomon, but it's pretty clear it couldn't have been. This misattribution is likely the result of the authors trying to point out the wisdom contained in the work because Solomon's name was synonymous with "a wise man."

    So, when we say "Einstein said..." all we mean is "Take note, what I'm about to say is really smart..." It's second only to "Hanover said.." Hanover, Einstein, Solomon in that order pretty much.
  • Hanover
    13k
    Since a central question of philosophy is "what is truth," it's hard to know if philosophy has arrived at the truth, considering we're not even sure what it is.

    You can also look at the track record of science and conclude that with its constant modifications of theories, we can only expect that what we think today to be the truth will not be what is considered the truth in 1000 years.

    The practical question is whether either science or philosophy has produced a useful result. It doesn't matter whether our reasoning bears any relationship to reality if we arrive at a successful result. I often think that many philosophical positions (and certainly some theological ones) might be terribly untrue (and some even incoherent), but they seem to yield useful results.

    There are numerous examples of superseded scientific theories (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superseded_scientific_theories). In many of those examples, we still received useful results, even though the theory was ultimately wrong. In philosophy, fundamental principles are often accepted as true even though there is no way to show their existence, like time, space, free will, etc. (and some of these concepts become incoherent upon deep evaluation). In theology, I'd argue the entire enterprise is founded upon false premises, but there is no question that if done right, it can inject meaning and purpose into lives.

    If we ask ourselves the question "does it assist us in living our lives" as opposed to "is it true," then I think philosophy falls just about where every other field does. It can, depending upon the life.

    This is an interesting Wiki article I stumbled across a while ago where they have gone through and itemized all the unanswerable questions in philosophy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_philosophy
    Every time we begin a debate into one of these areas (which is often), I guess we could just cite this article for the proposition that we're going to get nowhere debating it.
  • Wosret
    3.4k


    No, I have all kinds of friends! All of the friends. All of the best friends! Everyone is my friend -- except for you!

    Also, I think that it was probably because Einstein was a jew and everyone feels bad for them because of Hitler, so that when you said that Einstein said it, people would be all like "oh, the poor jews", and not want to say it's wrong, because it might make the jews feel bad. That's clearly what happened.
  • Hanover
    13k
    No, I have all kinds of friends! All of the friends. All of the best friends! Everyone is my friend -- except for you!Wosret

    Alas, here's how I learn we're not friends. Sigh.

    Also, I think that it was probably because Einstein was a jew and everyone feels bad for them because of Hitler, so that when you said that Einstein said it, people would be all like "oh, the poor jews", and not want to say it's wrong, because it might make the jews feel bad. That's clearly what happened.Wosret

    Honestly it is the least that can be done for the Jews considering their mistreatment. Sometimes when a regular white guy says something at work that makes sense, we'll agree to ignore it because regular white guys always get their way and now it's time for everyone else to get their way.

    And now I've turned your playful comment into a cutting evaluation of liberal diversity trends. Well played Hanover! Well played indeed!
  • Wosret
    3.4k


    No, they must at the very least be an irregular white guy. We had a meeting.
  • _db
    3.6k
    I'm not interested in truth which seems overrated: an important-sounding value you put into a system if you want. I like clarification and insight. I doubt there is truth, I suppose: philosophy seems to me non-progressive, and I like it for that.mcdoodle

    I suppose this means you aren't very interested in, say, analytic philosophy? Analyticism does not use phenomenology very much, it's more intuitions and logic.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    I suppose this means you aren't very interested in, say, analytic philosophy? Analyticism does not use phenomenology very much, it's more intuitions and logic.darthbarracuda

    Well I'm actually back in Academe doing an analytic-based course. It's an interesting exercise trying to squeeze what I think into an analytic-shaped box :)
  • Hoo
    415
    Should we measure the success of philosophy in terms of professional consensus? Or the attainment of these things called truths? Is Newton's physics a truth? It remains useful. When I reflect on the imperfection of our measuring instruments and the floating point numbers bouncing around in circuits, I'm tempted to say that "accurate enough" has just about always been good enough.

    Also, let an individual reflect on what those books for sale under "philosophy" have or have not done for them. In my case, from my point of view, I have no doubt that philosophy has been good and valuable and right enough. If words empower and enrich, they are working.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Albert Einstein said that the definition of insanity was doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same result. Can this be applied to philosophy?darthbarracuda

    Is asking questions truth conducive?

    It depends who you ask, and it depends whether the question is sensible.

    Is it sensible to ask what questions are sensible? Well yes, I think it is, but it is probably not sensible to expect a universal formula, as it is not probably sensible to expect a formula for wisdom.

    Oh, and Einstein didn't say that, he said the opposite. Sensible chap. Asked himself good questions - new questions.
  • Cavacava
    2.4k
    "the definition of insanity was doing the same thing over and over again "

    I disagree...repetition is the condition of knowledge, of sanity. Camus's stone roller was sane.
  • schopenhauer1
    11k
    Contrary to the established belief that metaphysics is first philosophy, I think that it is ethics that is first philosophy (pace Levinas), or an ethics-based metaphysics. You have to be alive in order to do anything else, and so we have to ask ourselves how we ought to live, or if we should live in the first place.darthbarracuda

    Pace Schopenhauer (and the later existentialists)- our wills force us to have make choices about actions. Choices about actions are traditionally considered in the realm of value theory and ethics so this makes sense in a certain way. Doing metaphysical philosophizing is making the choice to get a better understanding of what really is. Similarly, doing political philosophizing is making the choice to get to the understanding of how to distribute power. Perhaps you can rank it in terms of what life forces upon humans:

    1) Dealing with choices (ethics)
    2) Dealing with society (roughly politics/social science)
    3) Dealing with what is or is not the case (metaphysics and epistemology)

    It can be said that this is the order in which humans must contend with the world. To a varying degree, Marx could be right that in order to get a more philosophical (that is to say more systematic) approach to any of these things, an economic superstructure must be in place as well, but one does not even need a Marxist view to understand that personal choices and community choices come before the luxury of being able to look more deeply into existence itself. Even if there was not forethought (in the systematic-philosophical sense) of ethics and society in ancient societies which had no economic superstructure to be so rigorous- they still had to contend with choices and society in the resources available at the time and thus the hierarchy holds up even for ancient time periods that may have had less systematic thinking on dealing with choices and society.
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