• KantRemember
    22
    Hello Forum,
    I haven’t a degree in philosophy (accounting and finance instead, 2023 graduate) but I’m highly, highly interested in it. I want to engage dialectically to an academic standard. I have, over the last 3 - 4 years, as a hobby, familiarised myself with topics such as ethics, epistemology, modality, existentialism, logic, political philosophy etc… I’ve read a few key texts and other contemporary papers, books, articles. However , I want to arm myself with the academic (philosophical) rigour that one would gain in a BA.

    I’m capable of engaging in Philosophical discourse, but I want to being able to critically engage; for my own sake, better than the above average laymen

    Do you know any which way I would go about this , or have any must read, key texts to engage in. Over the course of a few months to a year or so

    I’m happy with essentially starting from scratch and re-building my foundations up properly

    Thank you all for your advice
  • T Clark
    15.4k
    My strongest interest is in metaphysics. Here are two books that have meant a lot to me.

    “An Essay on Metaphysics” by RG Collingwood. You should be able to find this free online.
    “The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science” by EA Burtt.

    If you’re interested in the philosophy of science, here’s a link to an article that really changed the way I think—“More is Different” by PW Anderson.

    https://cse-robotics.engr.tamu.edu/dshell/cs689/papers/anderson72more_is_different.pdf

    If you hang around here on the forum, you’ll find I also have a strong interest in Taoism. But we won’t go into that here.
  • KantRemember
    22
    Thanks. I’ll check these out. tbh I need to deep dive on every topic to get to a standard I’m happy with and be able to form and hold my own positions on them as such.

    Do you have any advice with regards to engaging in text, and improvement on Philosophical dialectic ?
  • Banno
    28.9k
    Welcome.

    Sounds like you want to move from reading philosophy to doing philosophy.

    It might seem that a forum such as this would be ideal, but while it might help, there is a lot of very poor work hereabouts. Caution is needed. Autodidacticism can lead to eccentricity, or worse.

    Philosophy is a discipline, and there's nothing better than spending time with professional philosophers. I'd suggest some sort of post grad study, perhaps a coursework MA if you are serious, or just seeing if you can audit a few courses at a local university. Something with face-to-face time. I'd personally commend a basic logic course above all else, but breadth is also a very important part of understanding how the subject works.

    This view will probably not be popular. Folk tend to forget that philosophy is a discipline.

    But also, write. Get your ideas down on paper. Spin your arguments out, make their structure explicate, and get someone to read them critically. These days, that can even be an AI.

    Good luck.
  • KantRemember
    22


    Thank you mate. I’ll do the best I can. Unfortunately I doubt I’d be able to enrol in a course, *maybe* online, but I work full time. Now, I understand that this comes with its difficulties - I’m trying to parse them as best I can.

    Your point on writing my own work and formulating my ideas is crucial to learning how to engage outside of just reading. So I will do that too.

    I may shadow an open source curriculum and enhance as such.
  • Tom Storm
    10.4k


    It might seem that a forum such as this would be ideal, but while it might help, there is a lot of very poor work hereabouts. Caution is needed. Autodidacticism can lead to eccentricity, or worse.Banno

    As an eccentric autodidact, I’d have to agree with this. He’s left out the monomaniac contingent...

    I’m capable of engaging in Philosophical discourse, but I want to being able to critically engage; for my own sake, better than the above average laymenKantRemember

    One issue with doing philosophy is that there are a plethora of views about what this discourse actually is, and many camps seem to resent or denigrate other camps. Some see it as a rigorous pursuit of truth, others as a language game, and still others as a form of personal or ethical guidance or self-help. Philosophy seems to be a tricky subject because its methods, goals, and even subject matter are endlessly contested, and what counts as philosophical in one tradition may be dismissed in another.

    Why are you interested?
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k


    A few really good resources I can think are:

    The Oxford Very Short Introductions - they can vary in quality, but they are generally quite good. They are on quite specific topics, which is helpful. The one on objectivity is especially good.

    The Routledge Contemporary Introductions to - these are pretty good topical introductions. They are generally quite biased towards later analytic thought. However, since historical surveys are always incredibly thin, they're still better than attempting some sort of chronological slog (and I say this as someone who is not particularly hot on analytic philosophy).

    The Teaching Company - they do a lot of lecture series on various topics. The one on mind-body philosophy and philosophy of science are particularly good, as is the one on the Platonic dialogues by Segrue. The one on information theory is also neat, if not quite philosophy. They're hideously overpriced on their site but on Audible they aren't that expensive and I think a number are free with a membership at any given time. Or the site Wonderium had them fairly cheap and I discovered that if you do a trial and then cancel they give them to you at a steep discount.

    The Modern Scholar - Sort of the parallel to the Teaching Company. They have a good series on Plato and Aristotle, and one on speech act theory that I didn't get to finish that seemed good. The guy who does the Divine Comedy and other epic literature is great too (Timothy B. Shutt).

    And then for stuff I know is up online:

    I really like Eric Perl's Thinking Being for metaphysics, although being a survey it is quite broad. That one happens to be up on Google right now: https://afkimel.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/eric-perl-on-metaphysics.pdf (IDK, maybe it isn't supposed to be, but it's been one of the top search results for ages now so I assume I'm not doing any harm by pointing it out).

    Pierre Hadot's Philosophy as a Way of Life on how ancient philosophy was practiced (very different from modern philosophy is also interesting, and it's essays so you can dip into it: https://ascetology.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/pierre-hadot-philosophy-as-a-way-of-life-spiritual-exercises-from-socrates-to-foucault-1.pdf

    I normally recommend Robert M. Wallace's Philosophical Mysticism in Plato, Hegel, and the Present because I think it's a really great introduction to the broadly "Platonic" tradition in quite accessible terms. If you ever get into Hegel (which I wouldn't at first lol), his book on Hegel is really great (so is Houlgate's commentary on the Logic and Gary Dorrien's Kantian Reason and Hegelian Spirit as an introduction on German Idealism, at least the first parts of the book).

    And lastly, Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy is a really beautiful book.

    Oh, and Fukuyama's Origins of Political Order is quite encyclopedic on theories of state development (political theory), although it is a bit of a "whig history" in favor of liberalism.
  • Paine
    3k

    In so far as directly engaging with original texts goes, I found it helpful to record reactions, note parallels, and keep track of references as one proceeds. Apart from whatever direction I have gone, the practice I began at the beginning has been a gift to my future self. It started out as marginalia and then a notebook linked to marginalia, and then linking to indexes in specific works. I developed a kind of marginalia in those indexes that still helps me decades later.

    Everyone has their own style, but some form of this discipline helps one keep building on previous learning.
  • Banno
    28.9k
    Unfortunately I doubt I’d be able to enrol in a course, *maybe* online, but I work full time.KantRemember
    Sure.

    it might help us identify some good on line stuff if you list your interests.

    I highly commend the EdX philosophy and critical thinking course. See https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/13633/page/p1

    The Ethics Centre has various courses, and on line conversations.

    Look for stuff by actual working philosophers.
  • Paine
    3k
    Each attendee to the welcome wagon certainly presents their own tray of muffins.
  • ProtagoranSocratist
    57
    I’m capable of engaging in Philosophical discourse, but I want to being able to critically engage; for my own sake, better than the above average laymenKantRemember

    Okay, here's how i look at it: there's informal philosophy. This is anything: "What is life"?

    And the there's formal philosophy, related to specific thinkers, which ends up being academic philosophy.

    The two are not totally separate practices, but what we can call "non-philosophy" are specific and technical matters. "Did you wash the dishes?" is not philosophy. Philosophy deals with general ideas and abstractions primarily...and that's why your "average person" tends to hate it.
  • apokrisis
    7.7k
    I need to deep dive on every topic to get to a standard I’m happy with and be able to form and hold my own positions on them as such.KantRemember

    But is there a point to this other than to join some imagined club of sophisticated thought?

    Sure it is great to launch into the usual Grand Tour of the history of philosophy as another subject to study. But do you really want instead to become skilled at critical thought? To gain skills beyond mere philosophising?

    Your point on writing my own work and formulating my ideas is crucial to learning how to engage outside of just reading. So I will do that too.KantRemember

    I'll tell you my secret. Start by finding some question you really want answered. Then start reading around that. Make notes every time some fact or thought strikes you as somehow feeling key to the question you have in mind, you are just not quite sure how. Then as you start to accumulate a decent collection of these snippets – stumbled across all most randomly as you sample widely – begin to sort the collection into its emerging patterns.

    Look for the more general things that connect up a lot of particular things. Delete what starts to seem irrelevant. Begin reading much more about anything that starts to really seem to matter. Keep adding the snippets and sorting them into their natural clumps. Eventually you will find you are coming at your original question from all its many angles. You really begin to see an answer emerging as a fully structured whole.

    And doing that not only answers your question – to the degree that it can be – it is also teaching you critical thinking of the valuable real world kind.

    My own first question was "how could the human mind have evolved so suddenly?". I had been a good enough student at school and university, but never the slightest bit stimulated to engage beyond passing everything with minimum effort. But this is how I got hooked on really learning. And it is incredibly efficient as you are turning a morass of what everyone has ever thought and said, then zipping through looking for only the ideas that properly connect as a whole, while discarding vast chunks of guff that only clutter up the view of what matters.

    Even with a day job as a magazine editor, I had generated a tightly reasoned book in a couple of years. I was off to the races.

    Do you want to wade through all of philosophy – much of which is sophisticated guff? Arguments for the sake of arguments. Tiny amendments to disputes of increasing irrelevance.

    Do you want to have random arguments with random strangers with a random array of opinions?

    Probably not. So what is some really difficult but pointed question you would want to tackle in a thorough manner, and thus learn your own limits when it comes to critical thinking.

    You can't just invent answers off the top of your head. And you can't learn answers by asking around or reading diligently, as there are just any number of answers that will be offered. You have to turn yourself into an efficient search algorithm with an end in mind and a method that sifts the wheat from the chaff.

    Why are you interested?Tom Storm

    That is the start point. How do you begin with the something worth doing and not a vague hope of becoming more learned?

    Everyone has their own style, but some form of this discipline helps one keep building on previous learning.Paine

    Yep. It is about a method with that built-in feedback of condensing and reacting. Then reacting to that reaction with even more distilling. With an infinity of texts available, the ones to read next start popping out.

    Okay, here's how i look at it: there's informal philosophy. This is anything: "What is life"?

    And the there's formal philosophy, related to specific thinkers, which ends up being academic philosophy.
    ProtagoranSocratist

    This is a good summary of how people tend to divide. Either they wander around picking up on what seems interesting. Or they will treat it like being back in school or joining an impressive institution.

    Either too unfocused to be something that personal, or too focused on what some institution has decided is the proper course work to master and parrot.

    So that is why I recommend a middle road. Find that interesting thing. Then make full use of the institutional knowledge and support that exists. Have the best of both worlds. And undertaking a structured search task is the best way to emerge out of it as a proper critical thinker.
  • bert1
    2.1k
    The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy is an amazing resource. It goes in depth.
  • Paine
    3k

    I have learned many things through it but have often come to question their summaries when reading actual texts. Probably the fate of all attempts at classification.
  • Gnomon
    4.2k
    I haven’t a degree in philosophy (accounting and finance instead, 2023 graduate) but I’m highly, highly interested in it.KantRemember
    The only philosophy course I took in college was Logic. And that was a math requirement. My interest in philosophy, post college, was mainly in looking for a substitute worldview to replace my childhood religious indoctrination. But I never had time to get into philosophy seriously until after retirement. And most of my autodidact education since college has been obtained from science books with a philosophical inclination.

    I've had minimal communication and interaction with other philosophers, until I started posting on intellectual forums. Some on TPF have formal academic training, but most seem to be what I call "amateur" philosophers, and self-taught, like me. But, you are not likely to get training that is up to "academic standards". Also, as warned : " Autodidacticism can lead to eccentricity, or worse".

    I assume he would put me in that category, since I have a shallow & narrow focus on a few topics of interest to me, but don't fit neatly into any of the traditional philosophical viewpoints, such as Idealism or Realism. Instead, I call my personal worldview Enformationism, which is unconventional, idiosyncratic, and mostly science-based : e.g. quantum physics & information theory & systems theory.

    My ideology doesn't conform to any of the authoritative doctrines & systems*1, but has some affinity with several, including A.N. Whitehead's Process Philosophy. Like you, my retirement hobby has touched on a variety of scholarly topics, but with little academic rigor. Do you see yourself becoming a Platonian, or Kantian or Hegelian or Marxist, or Existentialist, or a master of some other formal system of thought?

    Some TPF posters are offended by my unorthodox views, but most accept a bit of oddity as typical of independent thinkers. So, since your time is limited, you might find that this forum will give you access to a variety of views, and experience with having your beliefs challenged. You may have thin skin at first, but it will toughen as you endure critical analysis of your favorite values & assumptions. :smile:


    *1. Philosophical systems are comprehensive, interconnected frameworks of thought that offer structured perspectives on fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, ethics, and reality, such as Plato's Idealism, Aristotle's Logic, Kant's critical philosophy, Hegel's absolute idealism, Whitehead's process philosophy, and Ervin Laszlo's Systems Philosophy. These systems provide a lens to understand the world and shape cultural beliefs, offering foundational principles and a coherence that allows for interpretation of complex phenomena.
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=philosophical+systems
  • Manuel
    4.3k


    Confessions of a Philosopher by Bryan Magee is probably your best bet. He covers most of the great figures quite accurately in great, easy to grasp prose. I can't think of a better introduction.

    His book on Schopenhauer is also very good and will help build more critical thinking skills.

    Beyond that, there's a lot of stuff, it depends on what you like. Russell's History of Western Philosophy, though uneven, is a great reference.

    Once you see a topic click, you can read intro books, lectures or just begin to read the classics. I think it's important to note that you never really finished with Plato or Descartes or Wittgenstein, it's a lifelong thing. So don't pressure yourself in mastery of the subject. It comes with time and changing perspectives.

    Shout out to T Clark for mentioning The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern science by Burtt. Knowing a bit about the history of the time period helps A LOT. What may seem silly to us now, was perfectly reasonable for the time, given what they knew. That's also a good book for the early-modern period in philosophy, which contains the most important figures outside of Antient Greece. It's a great book too.
  • apokrisis
    7.7k
    Some TPF posters are offended by my unorthodox views, but most accept a bit of oddity as typical of independent thinkers.Gnomon

    Not always offended, but puzzled that you would be resistant to learning of the philosophers and scientists already saying much the same thing in a more nailed down fashion.

    It is a good case as my own investigations into biosemiosis put me among a community of about 100 researchers trying to figure it all out. They had a number of discussion boards and the level of discussion could be both friendly and rigourous. Welcoming to independents making an effort.

    And also occasionally so violently acrimonious that one discussion board got simply deleted with its many years of posts by its admin who didn't think it was sticking close enough to the view of his own particular recently deceased mentor. Professors are only human too. :grin:

    Anyway, there was even one philosopher there – John Collier – who had coined your term enformation. He defined it dichotomously as the opposite of intropy and firmed it up with the suitable mathematical equations.

    See Causation is the Transfer of Information (1997).

    So this is my point. One could get mired in philosophy as some whole cosmopolitan edifice of collective human wisdom. Or at least a history of certain leading questions and the endless acrimonious splits that they created. A soap opera of endless fissions and not much helpful consensus.

    Or one can go the "independent" route which at best can only end up with you repeating the semi-obvious in a suitably obscure way.

    And then there is always an informed community who have narrowed down the search space in some robust fashion. They are surprisingly welcoming as they are always pleased to find someone sort of on the same page. But also their tongues are sharp, their tempers sometimes explosive. A contest of ideas is what it is about. And then a few virtual beers after the fray.

    But having the discipline of a research mentality is the only way to reach the inner circles of current thought. And that is just the way it is.
  • Copernicus
    387
    I think the moment you "learn" art is the moment it loses meaning.

    Philosophy, like any art, is about expression. Any intake is unnecessary. Just take it out and give it to the world.

    I think this is the single best reason why I love philosophy over science.
  • KantRemember
    22
    One issue with doing philosophy is that there are a plethora of views about what this discourse actually is, and many camps seem to resent or denigrate other camps. Some see it as a rigorous pursuit of truth, others as a language game, and still others as a form of personal or ethical guidance or self-help. Philosophy seems to be a tricky subject because its methods, goals, and even subject matter are endlessly contested, and what counts as philosophical in one tradition may be dismissed in another.

    Why are you interested?

    My interest came primarily from 3 things. 1. My desire to learn, think critically, and challenge myself, 2. A want to understand the nature of reality, and 3. It started a few years back with a deconversion from faith when questioning the rationality behind it all - that led to questions on morality, theology, which, naturally, led me down to ontological thought, and further, what it meant to know something. This has developed further into an interest regarding all things Phil. Mind, matter, more so the analytical stuff rather than continental - but I see a large value in both, and I do not know enough about either to confidently say which has more value in general.
  • I like sushi
    5.2k
    Think write think write think write. Mostly write. Or try speaking to camera (as you see I have tried!). Attempting to articulate what you think you know/mean can reveal interesting questions or assumptions you needed notice you held.

    I am VERY happy to help if you want? It is probably most worthwhile picking a question and exploring different ways you could answer it.

    If you are in your 20's I would recommend getting a reasonable idea about the science behind our understanding of reality in terms of physics, the cognitive neurosciences and general anthropology.

    Feel free to DM me :)
  • KantRemember
    22
    Thanks again. I'll check these out.

    My interests are:
    Logic. I'm familiar with informal logic and very vaguely so with formal logic , but I need to deep dive on what actually, seriously, makes a good logical argument - being able to spot arguments in any body of text, critically engage and follow the premises towards the conclusion and question effectively whether they follow, what they pre-suppose etc. /

    metaphysics: I believe this to be foundational and commonplace in many philosophical discussions and readings. I want to seriously be able to understand what is being talked about and effectively contribute - further to this, with metaphysics being so broad and widely applied, having an understanding on this will help me down the line with any of the granular topics that follow from it.

    Ethics / morality: I already hold my own positions on moral realism, ethics, the good etc, however I'd like to strengthen these rigorously, question my own world view, critique it, and be able to formalise it.

    Language: I find that in my own experience, a lot of philosophy is lost and/or found in semantics. I view language as the medium by which thoughts are expressed and that in itself holds its own weight.


    I think I am already on the right track, but again, the structure is what I believe I am lacking.
  • KantRemember
    22
    Thank you for your type out. The introductory resources seem like a great preliminary before a deep dive into any particular topic.

    I've heard Hegel Is a shit show at first. I find idealism interesting, but I don't see the value in engaging is such technical prose at first. I'm aware that I more than likely won't be able to grasp Hegel in full until maybe the 90th read.
  • Astorre
    256


    I'm also a semi-academic philosopher, but I'm still on my way to becoming one. In my opinion, a child can utter a philosophical formula that rivals a master in its content, but academic philosophy is more about rigorous explanation. I believe some philosophers are so engrossed in this that it's unbearable to read. For example, Heidegger is wonderful, but unbearable to read. His ideas are magnificent, but formulate them in three or four paragraphs and something that makes them "philosophical" evaporates.

    For me, philosophizing means living within a philosophical paradigm, constantly asking myself questions, constantly critiquing my own ideas, and constantly consulting with people, the participants of this forum, authors of philosophical works, and even AI.

    So the very pursuit of philosophy is philosophy itself, but it requires the use of tools for purity of thought. For myself, I define philosophy as "astonishment before the self-evident."
  • KantRemember
    22
    Thank you. I've been noting down the works I've been reading over the last 3 months. Namely: An enquiry concerning human understanding, and Arguing about gods - Oppy. Both of which have been particularly useful to me.
  • Tom Storm
    10.4k
    My interest came primarily from 3 things. 1. My desire to learn, think critically, and challenge myself, 2. A want to understand the nature of reality, and 3. It started a few years back with a deconversion from faith when questioning the rationality behind it all - that led to questions on morality, theology, which, naturally, led me down to ontological thought, and further, what it meant to know something.KantRemember

    Thank you. Yes, that all sounds understandable. I believe that a deconversion can leave some with a big hole to fill. A lot of former Muslims and Christians often end up looking for foundationalist justifications in philosophy. Although I also find it interesting how often they rest for a while alongside New Age or Pagan groups- a kind of methadone program for hard core theism. What people believe and why is always interesting.
  • KantRemember
    22


    In terms of why I like philosophy, please refer to my replies to Banno/Tom storm.
    in terms of what my goals are; as superficial as it is, I want to be able to reach that level of being able to read philosophical text, separate the sense from the non-sense and make sense out of the arguments and propositions. I want to also be able to provide meaningful , non shallow insight in discussions I partake in. I’m aware that this will take years but my love for philosophy and study gives me time for that. The only downside is that it is almost entirely autodidactic.

    I should note. I believe myself capable of providing interesting opinions. It’s more so I’ve reached a stage where, as previously mentioned, I want to move from reading philosophy, to doing philosophy. Being self taught means lacking guidance. I think I’ve had enough of briefly reading supplementary texts on a plethora of topics and much rather would like to seriously hone my skills.

    As to whether there is a point outside of some imaginary sophisticated club of 'smart people', that is up for debate. for now, at least, I motivated by my desire to engage and understand. I feel as though I am learning for learnings sake, but at present, that satisfies me.

    I will have to have a hard think about a question in the same vain as yours that I want to seriously grasp though.
  • KantRemember
    22
    It does indeed leave a big hole to fill. For me, that meant curiosity. Im not looking for comfort, or any particular religious answers, as a matter of fact, Im perfectly content oscillating between deism and agnosticism.

    I find it much more interesting trying to understand reality for what it is than attributing everything to a divine cause. That isn't to say doing so is wrong or there is no value in doing so, but I love the epistemic pursuit of figuring things out for ourselves.
  • KantRemember
    22
    Thanks. I'll take a check at this source. A good intro book will definitely help.
  • Banno
    28.9k
    There are a few logic courses around. The Stanford one is pretty good, but clunky in its presentation. Language, proof and Logic at EdX also looked good, although it is a few years since I audited it.
  • Tom Storm
    10.4k
    I find it much more interesting trying to understand reality for what it is than attributing everything to a divine cause. That isn't to say doing so is wrong or there is no value in doing so, but I love the epistemic pursuit of figuring things out for ourselves.KantRemember

    Fair enough. I tend to think of “reality” as a human construct, a kind of secular version of God, serving as a foundational justification for all our ills. There’s a lot of searching for the "really real" in philosophy, it seems to me. By temperament, I’m more drawn to the view that humans are meaning-making creatures who can’t help but explain things through gods, science, karma, or whatever framework they inherit or (less commonly), choose. They all work to a point, depending on one’s culture and axioms. I tend to think I’ve chosen to step aside from that impulse and not concern myself too much with explanations, except the provisional or pragmatic kind that help me as I go about my business.
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