Do you think that you're currently living the good life? — Πετροκότσυφας
What does yes and no means? If you don't know how one answers that question how does the phrase "living the good live" even make sense? — Πετροκότσυφας
If your "ideal" has any content, you have a grasp of it; maybe not refined, but a grasp nonetheless. If you don't, then your ideal is nothing. It's a vacuous concept which corresponds to nothing. — Πετροκότσυφας
I don't follow. You meant you're uncertain of the goodness of what? Of the ideal or of your current way of living? — Πετροκότσυφας
If you're uncertain of your current situation, then it's something specific in your life that causes this. What is it? Is it depression, unemployment, familial relations, anger? Is it the way you deal with some or with all of these? What is it? — Πετροκότσυφας
Is it procrastination that makes you feel uncertain? Maybe a lack of productivity? Or at least an ideal level of productivity? — Πετροκότσυφας
I don't quite get yet how philosophy should be studied?
Do you just pick up a work and plow through it? — Posty McPostface
Pick up a work and plow through it. True philosophy is doing it in your own way. — Blue Lux
Understanding differs greatly to remembering specific things. What specific details do you remember about learning to talk? If you had to take a test on the details of your advancement, what you learn from one day to the next, I think you'd fail that test. Look though, fluency, like magic! — All sight
If one goes about treating the very questions of philosophy as problems, per se, then how do you ever lift yourself out of that sorry predicament that philosophy imposes upon you? — Posty McPostface
Interesting! I've always held that Wittgenstein was the epitome of what you are describing (a philosopher who treated the whole field of philosophy as one big problem), and hence the resolution of said problems was found in quietism. — Posty McPostface
As an aside, I don't think quietism qualifies as philosophy. It's intellectual failure hardened into pseudo-philosophical position. — StreetlightX
It's not a sorry predicament at all. Particular 'philosophies' are nothing but problems taken to the very end: problems explored for all their implications, for all they say about the world. And the field of problems is open-ended and constantly evolving, calling each time for a creative endeavour equal to it. To study philosophy is to learn how to occupy these problems, and implicate ever vaster swathes of the world into them. — StreetlightX
A problem is not something to be solved as if once and for all: it it something to work-through, to occupy, to inhabit. — StreetlightX
As an aside, I don't think quietism qualifies as philosophy. It's intellectual failure hardened into pseudo-philosophical position. The the failure of thought masquerading as the thought of failure. Wittgenstein which much more than his 'quietism', which was nothing more than a weakness of nerve. — StreetlightX
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