Of course they do. There are times, like at work or in serious situation when you certainly do stay focused but my experience with friends being professors and scientists with papers cited in the hundreds is that the do very much love a leisurely discussion. And well, I love to see myself as pretty well intellectually informed, but I do not love arguing with people.One of the biggest gripes of philosophers is that folks like to cherry-pick what they write. I admit to it in this case, but I also found a reason: as a rule, intellectually informed people don’t discuss leisurely. — Mww
Just so you don't think it was anything personal, I'll have you know not 3 hours ago I purchased a book written by a new member, one Pieter R van Wyk off an online marketplace (Amazon) for 17.36 USD. It shall be here Wednesday. While I'm questionable as to whether it will be as great as I contend it may, judging by some very critical comments here it may instead only reveal the mind and mannerisms of a confused soul. Either way, I have a morbid sense of valuation so I will likely enjoy it regardless of what I find. That should tell you all you need to know about me. — Outlander
Sure he can be casually analyzed. There are a heck of a lot in between repeating and scrutinizing everything with indignation cause what the dude says is not in your echo chamber, if it isnt. Actually, "enlightenment now" was suggested to me by a "progressive" friend in our local uni and its one of the books we do discuss.Therefore, Pinker resists "casual analysis"; either you repeat what Pinker says completely oblivious to all the moral, political, ecological, statistical collection and analysis methods, qualitative, issues Pinker never addresses, or then even the smallest analysis immediately starts to encounter questions and problems that just lead to more questions and problems, which is not a leisurely task to get through, and you just end up in those debates of those issues which Pinker ignores, and the whole point of Pinker's proposition is to encourage ignoring those issues; but if those issues aren't ignored, then in those "actual debates about stuff", Pinker's work becomes purely ornamental to the discussion. — boethius
isn't this whole forum armchair philosophers? — DifferentiatingEgg
But, yes, I think we're basically as laidback as philosophy can get while still actually reaching for philosophy. — Moliere
I don't think that's the issue here, but as has been pointed out by Outlander, the OP and some associates want their points to be taken seriously about matters in which they have not read the source material. — boethius
And deserves to be taken seriously, provided it is logical. — Outlander
How is the Dunning–Kruger effect tied to persons leisurely discussing some lighter Philosophy? Remember my ”not stupid” in the heading. Only a stupid person should feel fully informed by a pleasurable discussion as such. The one’s I have irl, have quite the opposite effect on me. I get a teaser to learn more.The biggest problem is how the Dunning-Kruger effect plays out. — I like sushi
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