- Beelzebub's tales to his grandson (Chapter 4 - The Law of Falling).Everything existing in the World falls to the bottom. And the bottom for any part of the Universe is its nearest “stability,” and this said “stability” is the place or the point upon which all the lines of force arriving from all directions converge.
The centers of all the suns and of all the planets of our Universe are just such points of “stability.” They are the lowest points of those regions of space upon which forces from all directions of the given part of the Universe definitely tend and where they are concentrated. In these points there is also concentrated the equilibrium which enables suns and planets to maintain their position.
If philosophy was really about applying reason to the real world we live in, at least half the articles would be about nuclear weapons, and the assumptions which led to their invention, and our complacent relationship with them etc. — Jake
How about global warming or resource depletion? It is arguable that they are far greater threats to the flourishing, or even survival, of humanity than nuclear weapons are. — Janus
I don't think that philosophy is better than science as a method for acquiring knowledge. I think that philosophy has been superseded in that regard by science. Philosophy is too varied and at odds with itself, whereas science is more unified and more reliable. — S
How closely philosophy resembles reality ought to be assessed on the prevalence or lack thereof of realistic positions in philosophy. To my knowledge, the more wacky positions, like idealism, and even more so solipsism and panpsychism, remain a relatively small minority. — S
So far, what has been said about the shortcomings of philosophy seems quite unfair considering philosophy has played its part of providing the necessary information — BrianW
I'm not sure what you're saying here. Philosophy doesn't interest most people, and isn't all that relevant to most problems outside some fairly specific cases. And the boons to, say, quality of life have no direct and obvious connection to philosophy outside an incredibly hamfisted "Everything is philosophy" idea, so I don't think it's unfair. — MindForged
Why, when we have access to so much knowledge and such incredible technology, can life seem so utterly bereft of meaning? I think that's a pretty central question for philosophy. — Wayfarer
I think there's something in the way modern Western culture construes reality that is corrosive and dangerous, to the soul and to the planet. We're seeing that writ large in environmental degradation, and on a personal level in the kinds of problems referred to above. Again, philosophy ought to wrestle with why that is, why despite our amazing technology and privileges, such problems keep occuring. That is very much in keeping with the kinds of questions that Socrates would wander about Athens asking. — Wayfarer
In fact it's the very absence of such questioning that distinguishes what is taught as philosophy in Western universities... But a great deal of what is taught under the banner of philosophy in the Universities is the emaciated corpse of the grand tradition. — Wayfarer
If, on the other hand, you restrict "philosophy" to what is studied in departments of philosophy, then no: philosophy is irrelevant except inside a narrow academic ditch. — Bitter Crank
You're defining philosophy so broadly that it applies to everything and thus fails to pick anything out non-trivially. — MindForged
Philosophy itself is worthwhile the same way Literature is worthwhile: studying it won't make you a philosopher any more than studying literature will make you an author. — Bitter Crank
None of the fields of knowledge spawned and nurtured by philosophy can claim to be different and separate from it when the term philosophy itself implies a blanket embrace of them all. — BrianW
Philosophy used in that way becomes much too large a blanket to be meaningful. — Bitter Crank
believe the problem with modern culture is the prevalence of the 'quick fix' or 'shortcut' mentality. If we have a problem with the environment, we start looking for ways to fix it right then and there. Most people don't consider that it is possible to start something that may take decades, perhaps centuries, of continuous effort just to get things back on track. And, often enough, as soon as the 'quick fix' seems to stall, it is often abandoned and another solution is sought out. In the end, it takes us decades just to realise we're taking the wrong approach towards a lasting solution. By then, most people, especially those with the capacity to work out solutions, have given up because they realise there won't be any significant degree of success during their lifetimes and, therefore, embark on a journey of self-ambition aimed at personal gains. — BrianW
. Because philosophy is a bigger picture than the other branches of study, it is best suited to act as a control measure for them. There may be a great degree of specialisation of knowledge but we need philosophy to mediate between those many seemingly diverse branches e.g. to remind us in scientific endeavours that ethics is important and an integral part of all undertakings, to remind us in mathematics that numbers have a relation to nature and to reality and therefore there is a way to interact with them and that they are a part of us. — BrianW
[url=http://]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_to_Methuselah[/url] — sign
Shaw also advocates what he calls homeopathy as a pedagogical method, arguing that society "can only be lamed and enslaved by" education. Shaw's "homeopathic" educational method consisted of lying to students, until the students were able to see through the lies and argue with the teachers.
What vexes me is that they fail to see how they are a part of philosophy. Without the larger picture which philosophy gives, science becomes too materialistic and fails to reveal meaning in the activities observed in reality. — BrianW
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