In this thread I'm interested to hear if other people have their own core principles that they think entail all of their positions on all of the different philosophical sub-questions, and if they think that there are common errors underlying all of the positions that they think are wrong. — Pfhorrest
In that regard, systematic philosophy like Whitehead, Hegel, and Kant have the merit of owning the responsibility of owning the conversation they started. — Valentinus
↪DingoJones I'm not seeing the implications of Ockham's Razor on a bunch of fields, but if you think there are some, I'd like to hear about them. — Pfhorrest
In this thread I'm interested to hear if other people have their own core principles that they think entail all of their positions on all of the different philosophical sub-questions, and if they think that there are common errors underlying all of the positions that they think are wrong. — Pfhorrest
For me it's agency; which I understand as capabilities - affordances - ('the commons' e.g. grammars, adaptive habits, eusocial institutions, etc) for optimizing agency, and frame any 'optimizing exercises' in terms of (the) ontology, axiology & epistemology of always-already, suboptimal, agents in order to in/re/per-form such 'exercises' reflectively.I'm asking if you have some very general philosophical opinions that then obligate you to more specific philosophical opinions across a bunch of different topics. — Pfhorrest
Ruling out the so-called "Principle of Sufficient Reason" (or as Clemént Rosset interprets it the Principle of Insufficient Reality) also rules out 'positive' conceptions of ontology axiology & epistemology (i.e. 'what is real', 'what we must' do/value [beauty, good, truth] & 'what we can know', respectively); and so I (must? / only can?) conceive of these topics by negation, or apophasis:Or conversely, if there are some general philosophical opinions that, if ruled out, also rule out a bunch of specific philosophical opinions across a bunch of different topics.
In this thread I'm interested to hear if other people have their own core principles that they think entail all of their positions on all of the different philosophical sub-questions, and if they think that there are common errors underlying all of the positions that they think are wrong. — Pfhorrest
In this thread I'm interested to hear if other people have their own core principles that they think entail all of their positions on all of the different philosophical sub-questions, and if they think that there are common errors underlying all of the positions that they think are wrong. — Pfhorrest
One of the amazing things about ideas though, especially philosophical systems, is that they are perspectival; every well thought out idea is a perspective on the world and generates a view on other ideas connected to it. — fdrake
For that reason, being truthful, honest, precocious, exploratory and recognising limitation and fallibility is much more important than doctrine; care how you generate your perspective and the rest will take care of itself. — fdrake
Lists don’t really cut it if what you are reaching for is an account of a functional architecture — apokrisis
Where do they start (their general principles) and where does that take them (their various conclusions about specific topics). — Pfhorrest
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