• Tom Storm
    10.2k
    Not that it's impossible to have someone change the way you view things, it just looks to be very rare.Manuel

    Which is curious, if true.

    I'm pretty sure people can be 'radicalised' by philosophy. I’ve certainly met those who 'converted' to idealism or became obsessed with Heidegger’s model of time, to the point where perpetually excited and they would talk about nothing else. And then there are those who abandoned their Islamic or Christian faith and became bores about secular philosophy instead.

    You would think that if philosophy truly had the power to lift us beyond convention and common sense, it would amount to a profoundly mind-bending and transformative experience for many people.
  • Manuel
    4.3k
    for many peopleTom Storm

    That's the key isn't it? What's "many people"? If you have in mind people like us and people adjacent to us, then we are what, 5% of the population at very best?

    One thing is passing interest: oh, I read Plato once or I saw this lecture on Heidegger. Another thing is to become a Platonist or a Heideggerian.

    Most people - even in optimal conditions - don't care enough about these issues. Heck even interest in science is low for what I would like it to be, but philosophy today? That's tough.

    It becomes more complicated if you pursue the analytic/continental tradition in which I think you do get cults. Some are mostly harmless, Wittgenstein - maybe Popper. Another thing is being a follower of Derrida or Lacan, that exists, is relatively small, but probably not good for thinking, imo.

    But that's just how I see things.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    If you have in mind people like us and people adjacent to us, then we are what, 5% of the population at very best?Manuel

    Never thought about it. I’m not sure if I should be concerned or amused by this figure,

    Most people - even in optimal conditions - don't care enough about these issues. Heck even interest in science is low for what I would like it to be, but philosophy today? That's tough.Manuel

    I wonder if there are some good stats on this. I mentioned philosophy at work a couple of times and people made it clear they thought it was bullshit. Mind you this is a crowd interested in critical theory so go figure.

    Another thing is being a follower of Derrida or Lacan, that exists, is relatively small, but probably not good for thinking, imo.Manuel

    Yes, all the smart young kids of my era were cheerfully fixated with deconstruction in the 1980’s. I never had the temperament to make it through the texts. They were so turgid and took time from women and booze.
  • 180 Proof
    16k
    Yes, all the [emo] kids of my era were cheerfully fixated with deconstruction in the 1980’s. I never had the temperament to make it through the texts. They were so turgid and took time from women and booze.Tom Storm
    :cool: :up:
  • Manuel
    4.3k
    Yes, all the smart young kids of my era were cheerfully fixated with deconstruction in the 1980’s. I never had the temperament to make it through the texts. They were so turgid and took time from women and booze.Tom Storm

    :lol:

    At least most of that fad is behind us now.
  • Joshs
    6.3k
    I keep wondering if there are transformational understandings about time and self and being and truth and reality that would open up and utterly change one. Surely that's the promise of thinkers like Nietzsche and Heidegger.Tom Storm

    That’s also the promise of psychologist George Kelly, the one who said that each of us walks around every moment of very day with our own personal construct system. You can think of it as a dynamical, constantly self-updating personal philosophy which doesn’t need to be articulated verbally to oneself or others in order to guide every aspect of our lives and determines our success at coping with emotional, intellectual and ethical challenges.We don’t need Nietzsche and Heidegger in order to do philosophy , since we are already formulating, testing and revising our own philosophical systems all the time. By the way, Kelly collapses these categories together. He gets rid of the separation between will, affect and cognition.

    I think life difficulties are much more defined or informed by one's temperament more than what some intelligent person said back in the day.
    — Manuel

    Well said. A perspective people tend not to consider as they seem to attribute everything to learning and discernment.
    Tom Storm

    The mysterious concept of ‘temperament’ arises out of creating artificially separated categories out of learning , cognition and affectivity. This prompts us to dismiss a child’s temper tantrum as the product of temperament rather than as their flailing attempts at making sense of social events that impact them.
  • Hanover
    14.2k
    I do like me a questionaire.

    ​Ethics in Action: How do you personally resolve ethical contradictions that arise in your everyday life?Astorre

    I don't resort to philosophical analysis for determining what is ethical. I find ethical theories post hoc attempts to describe why you act in instinctively ethical ways. To the extent a contradiction arises, I just weigh the two and try to figure out what is best.

    ​Coping with Life's Challenges: Does your knowledge of philosophy help you deal with life's difficulties, losses, or existential anxiety?
    Astorre
    I don't. That's the purpose of religion.

    ​Balancing Depth and Superficiality: How do you find a balance between your philosophical mindset and the superficiality you encounter in others?
    Astorre
    We can learn from everyone. I think it's a mistake to assume the philosophically minded offer more than those not so.
    Does philosophical thinking change your approach to relationships, friendships, and love? If so, how?Astorre
    To the extent being philosophical is synonymous with being even tempered, then I suppose it makes me not tempermental, but I don't think philosophy made me that way. I think that's just the way I am.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    The mysterious concept of ‘temperament’ arises out of creating artificially separated categories out of learning , cognition and affectivity.Joshs

    Cool. So can we think of temperament as habitual patterns of sense making? I’m assuming you include in temperament people’s preferences for order, simplicity, chaos, or whatever…

    We don’t need Nietzsche and Heidegger in order to do philosophy, since we are already formulating, testing and revising our own philosophical systems all the time.Joshs

    Of course, but in most cases it often seems to take the contributions of others to promote a significant shift in our thinking. Although I’m sure break through moments can also happen from life events. But what does it mean to read Wittgenstein or Heidegger and see the world radically anew? From what you say above, is it correct to think you might define philosophy as an act of sense making?
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.1k


    I keep wondering if there are transformational understandings about time and self and being and truth and reality that would open up and utterly change one.

    That's one of the key points of Saint Augustine's autobiography. In his thirties, after a very different sort of life, Augustine became a celibate, gave up his very promising career in the imperial circle, and gave away all his (not inconsiderable) wealth. Only then did he start producing all his influential philosophical texts; although obviously the ideas had been developed over time. It's not an uncommon motif, particularly in earlier philosophical biographies. It seems significantly less common in modern philosophy, although there are examples such as Pascal. It's a sort of "trope" in Eastern thought too, the life of the Buddha being a paradigmatic example. But, just because these are tropes and find their way into hagiography, doesn't mean they aren't real; we do have first hand biographical accounts as well.

    There is a similar, but much more limited phenomenon within Marxism, the "Marxist conversion." Yet that tends to be a more limited awakening to a particular political outlook.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    It seems significantly less common in modern philosophy, although there are examples such as Pascal. It's a sort of "trope" in Eastern thought too, the life of the Buddha being a paradigmatic example. But, just because these are tropes and find their way into hagiography, doesn't mean they aren't real; we do have first hand biographical accounts as well.Count Timothy von Icarus

    Yes, I was thinking about this kind of thing earlier. I was also considering the difference between attaining ‘enlightenment’ (for want of a better term) and, in the case of Marxists or Muslims, being radicalised.

    But I was thinking less ambitiously: more like an understanding about the nature of time, or a perspective offered by phenomenology, and how, even on a smaller scale, such realizations might completely recalibrate one’s way of relating to the world and its “problems.” Not enlightenment, radicalisation, or conversion to a faith, but rather (damn, I’ll have to use the phrase) a paradigm shift. Perhaps 'realization' is the better word.

    I have a romantic notion of philosophy as potentially being able to provide this kind of psychological or experiential transformation, not just the lifeless pursuit of analysis and cold reasoning, but a new way of seeing that enlarges our experience in some way. Yet such a description feels rather tendentious, soft and poetic.
  • Joshs
    6.3k


    The mysterious concept of ‘temperament’ arises out of creating artificially separated categories out of learning , cognition and affectivity.
    — Joshs

    Cool. So can we think of temperament as habitual patterns of sense making? I’m assuming you include in temperament people’s preferences for order, simplicity, chaos, or whatever…
    Tom Storm

    We could say they are habits, but not blind or arbitrary habits. They are shaped by the needs of optimal anticipation of events, so to the extent that a particular pattern of interpreting events reproduces itself stably over time, it does this not because of some inertia, but to the extent that it is effective. Emotion crises arise as indications that the patterns we relied on are brining to fail us, and we either have to construct our world to a small and smaller circle of what we can cope with, or begin the process of re-organizing our system of constructs.

    We don’t need Nietzsche and Heidegger in order to do philosophy, since we are already formulating, testing and revising our own philosophical systems all the time.
    — Joshs

    Of course, but in most cases it often seems to take the contributions of others to promote a significant shift in our thinking. Although I’m sure break through moments can also happen from life events. But what does it mean to read Wittgenstein or Heidegger and see the world radically anew? From what you say above, is it correct to think you might define philosophy as an act of sense making?
    Tom Storm

    All of our behaviors are acts of sense-making, questions we pose to the world that it may either confirm or invalidate. It is certainly true that other people provide rich resources that we can take average of in opening up promising new avenues of thought. But more important than the contributions of others is the audacity, persistence and ingenuity with which we tinker with our ideas. Nietzsche and Heidegger will do nothing for us if we are not prepared to rethink them in our own terms, relative to our own concerns and history. Because we must already be prepared to absorb the ideas than any great philosophy has to offer, 90% of the work has already been done before we are ever exposed to the likes of Nietzsche and Heidegger. Whenever someone claims that so and so’s thinking had a life-changing effect on them, I suspect that scratching beneath the surface will reveal such a readiness to be transformed.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    Emotion crises arise as indications that the patterns we relied on are brining to fail us, and we either have to construct our world to a small and smaller circle of what we can cope with, or begin the process of re-organizing our system of constructs.Joshs

    Yes. Good point.

    Whenever someone claims that so and so’s thinking had a life-changing effect on them, I suspect that scratching beneath the surface will reveal such a readiness to be transformed.Joshs

    Yes, that likely to be accurate.

    Thanks.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.1k


    I have a romantic notion of philosophy as potentially being able to provide this kind of psychological or experiential transformation, not just the lifeless pursuit of analysis and cold reasoning, but a new way of seeing that enlarges our experience in some way. Yet such a description feels rather tendentious, soft and poetic.Tom Storm

    Well, one interesting thing is that back when the primary goal of philosophical education was existential transformation instead of intellectual specialization (i.e., for most of pre-modern though, and for much Eastern philosophy) it was also taught very differently. In order to achieve that sort of transformation, it was very much a sort of "lifestyle" education, with a heavy focus on asceticism, "spiritual exercises," and generally time for silence/contemplation (although not as much for the Cynics).

    Whether this actually worked, or how exactly it worked is another question. The ancient sources are often idealized, and we might suspect that some of them are fictionalized (a few are satirical or slanderous). Obviously, it worked in a certain sense, in that life in the community was radically different as long as people stayed in it. From what I know, in-depth guides to practice don't really exist until the Middle Ages, when different monastic communities wanted to compare notes on methods. But by that point their role had already expanded significantly and so they were often dealing with populations that were less zealously committed to the project, or were putting other sorts of concerns first (charity, more general education, good old fashioned corruption, etc.).
  • Wayfarer
    25.2k
    I have a romantic notion of philosophy as potentially being able to provide this kind of psychological or experiential transformation, not just the lifeless pursuit of analysis and cold reasoning, but a new way of seeing that enlarges our experience in some way. Yet such a description feels rather tendentious, soft and poetic.Tom Storm

    For Pierre Hadot, famously, the means for the philosophical student to achieve the “complete reversal of our usual ways of looking at things” epitomized by the Sage were a series of spiritual exercises. These exercises encompassed all of those practices still associated with philosophical teaching and study: reading, listening, dialogue, inquiry, and research. However, they also included practices deliberately aimed at addressing the student’s larger way of life, and demanding daily or continuous repetition: practices of attention (prosoche), meditations (meletai), memorizations of dogmata, self-mastery (enkrateia), the therapy of the passions, the remembrance of good things, the accomplishment of duties, and the cultivation of indifference towards indifferent things (PWL 84).]

    https://iep.utm.edu/hadot/#SH5a

    This kind of attitude is bubbling up through independent philosophers rather than academics although again John Vervaeke is both.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    Nice quote and exactly what I was thinking of.

    Well, one interesting thing is that back when the primary goal of philosophical education was existential transformation instead of intellectual specialization (i.e., for most of pre-modern though, and for much Eastern philosophy) it was also taught very differently.Count Timothy von Icarus

    I hadn't thought of it in terms of existential transformation but I guess that works. There does seem to be a kind of bifurcation between the problem solvers and the dreamers - for want of better terms. And no doubt there's overlap.
  • Wayfarer
    25.2k
    I sometimes entertain the idea that modern culture normalizes problematical states of consciousness—restlessness, distraction, alienation—and that philosophy, properly understood, is a discipline that seeks critical awareness of this fact. In that sense, it’s not just abstract speculation but a kind of therapy, aimed at cultivating lucidity. Of course easier said than done as we’re all to some extent immersed in it.
  • Astorre
    125


    This is the problem I had in mind when I spoke about interaction with others. Many people are driven by prejudices. As Gadamer says, this is not bad, since it gives a person the very possibility of knowledge. But often these prejudices become reinforced concrete for their bearer. In this sense, I often have a contradiction in the relationship between me and others.

    The question arises: Is it worth undermining their prejudice, although it does not stand up to criticism? This is exactly what I mean when I say that I am forced to "step on my own throat"

    A very subtle definition for philosophy that you voiced: "therapy aimed at developing clarity of thinking."
  • Wayfarer
    25.2k
    often these prejudices become reinforced concrete for their bearerAstorre

    Ain’t that the truth. Everyone has them but the wise are willlng to own up to it.
  • Astorre
    125


    I agree with you. In this sense, philosophy is a dude who sits in your head and criticizes you. In psychology, this is called self-reflection (if I'm not mistaken). Education in general (including philosophy itself) teaches a person to be friends with this dude, and not shut his mouth =)
  • Wayfarer
    25.2k
    That’s more Freud’s superego, The philosopher’s aim is always ‘seeing what is’.
  • Astorre
    125


    But at the same time it is difficult for a philosopher to stop in his criticism. The philosopher begins to ask - "What is "is"?", "What does "to be" mean?" And so on ad infinitum. As they said above - you can't put the genie back in the bottle =)))
  • Wayfarer
    25.2k
    Krishnamurti used to say, ‘to see as it is without condemning it or justifying it.’ That is something that stayed with me,
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    Many people are driven by prejudices.Astorre

    One person’s prejudice is another’s insight.

    I agree with you. In this sense, philosophy is a dude who sits in your head and criticizes you. In psychology, this is called self-reflection (if I'm not mistaken).Astorre

    I think it’s often called critical reflection or in nursing, teaching and social work, reflective practice.

    But what is often forgotten here is that critical practice also acknowledges strengths: what works, what is possible given limitations and what is successful. Rather than pointing out a need for change or highlighting omissions or flaws, it can actually embolden and be an affirmation of your choices and approaches.
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