Jeremy Murray
180 Proof
:100: :fire:So much of what we know and do is unstated and unconscious. For instance, we use language fluidly, and so clearly we all 'know' the rules of grammar, but when asked to explain them we are often at a loss. Words too: we 'know' what they mean, as we use them with ease, but we grope for definitions. The same goes for concepts, purposes, ideologies, worldviews.
And so goes the majority of our lives, acting without knowing why, doing without quite knowing what we do. This is the unexamined life. Philosophy remedies this: it can make the implicit explicit, the unconscious conscious.
As we bring the unconscious to light, more often then not, we realize that these implicit beliefs we've carried with us don't really make sense. Then we have the opportunity to replace the unconscious and irrational with the conscious and rational. This is growth, the transition to true adulthood that so many make all too late, or never at all. The conscious cultivation of a worldview which is consonant with the world, rather than an artifact of upbringing.
This is the purpose of philosophy. — hypericin
Tom Storm
Which leads me to ask - what questions of an urgent / topical nature today can be best addressed, or perhaps just effectively addressed, with philosophy? Are there discussions on subjects now that will seem just as urgent in 15 years as discussions of AI have proven to be? I would love to hear some predictions, or be pointed towards urgent current topics in philosophy. — Jeremy Murray
Canadian philosopher Joseph Heath noted on his substack that many of his colleagues seem to be 'sitting out' many fraught contemporary subjects — Jeremy Murray
Philosophim
Which leads me to ask - what questions of an urgent / topical nature today can be best addressed, or perhaps just effectively addressed, with philosophy? — Jeremy Murray
180 Proof
Imo, "trans issues" are psychosociological or anthropological much more so than "philosophical".What are male and female is science, but cultural associations with sex, aka gender, is a goldmine of philosophical discussion. — Philosophim
baker
Ask questions of whom?Notice how in traditional culture, but also in many situations in modern culture, asking questions is the domain of the person who holds the higher status.
— baker
I’ve not noticed that. Certainly, in the cultures I know here, people of all status commonly ask difficult questions and are sometimes insolent while doing so. — Tom Storm
There you go: they harass.In Australian culture low status workers habitually question and sometimes harass the management and ruling classes.
baker
You may very well come from an enlightened family where such questions are common. In many families such questions are off limits, yelled at, and discouraged. — Philosophim
baker
Does that mean that philosophy is a fool's enterprise? No, its an ideal that every human being struggles with. We all have a bit of ego, and we all fail at thinking at times. The point is to get back up. Yes, the pressures of the world and yourself may have won today, but there's always the next day. Never stop thinking and never stop questioning even basic assumptions and outlooks. That is what pushes us forward. That is the purpose of philosophy. — Philosophim

Philosophim
Imo, "trans issues" are psychosociological or anthropological much more so than "philosophical". — 180 Proof
Philosophim
Sometimes, the only appropriate place for a particular person to ask about the things that concern them is the privacy of their diary. — baker
It's naive to think that one could talk about just anything with just anyone in just any situation. — baker
180 Proof
Well, at lease since Parmenides, "nothing" certainly is a "philosophical issue", we agree on that much.If trans gender is not a philosophical issue, nothing is. — Philosophim
Philosophim
Well, at lease since Parmenides, "nothing" certainly is a "philosophical issue", we agree on that. — 180 Proof
Joshs
Well, at lease since Parmenides, "nothing" certainly is a "philosophical issue", we agree on that.
— 180 Proof
Ha! Clever reply 180 Proof. — Philosophim
Tom Storm
Ask questions of whom?
And yes, they are insolent: because being of lower status, one isn't supposed to ask questions, at all. — baker
There you go: they harass. — baker
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