One can be as rational as possible, even though the information is fuzzy. — Jake Tarragon
I don’t think philosophy ought to be productive - the wish to make it so, is part of the whole instrumentalisation of reason. It can be a waste of time, but that depends on whether it is achieving its intended aim - which in traditional philosophy, is the ‘pursuit of practical wisdom’, ‘the contemplation of truth’ and so on. They’re not productive concerns but nor are they intended as such. — Wayfarer
On a practical level, though, I find philosophy has helped my in my professional life (as a technical writer). Certainly helps with comprehension, problem-solving, and abstract thinking. — Wayfarer
Hmmm...I'll chew on that for a while. Is this a case for Foucaultian criticism? Language, words like ''productivity'', for instance, influencing us - changing the way we think? — TheMadFool
I've learned a lot too. — TheMadFool
But the attempt to make philosophy (or the arts generally) 'useful', is simply more economic rationalism, the subordination of intellectual life to the demands of commerce. — Wayfarer
Actually, I think the quality of your input has increased considerably during 2017, if you don't mind me saying. — Wayfarer
Yes, mad Fool life is a contradiction...
and what a cool contradiction it is, is it not? — MathematicalPhysicist
Initial assumptions are supposed to be ''obvious'' truths that need no arguments to prove. — TheMadFool
Formalism holds that mathematical statements may be thought of as statements about the consequences of certain string manipulation rules. According to formalism, mathematical truths are not about numbers and sets and triangles and the like—in fact, they are not "about" anything at all. Formalists, such as Rudolf Carnap, Alfred Tarski, and Haskell Curry, considered mathematics to be the investigation of formal axiom systems. Formalists are relatively tolerant and inviting to new approaches to logic, non-standard number systems, new set theories etc. The more games we study, the better. Formalism is thus silent on the question of which axiom systems ought to be studied, as none is more meaningful than another from a formalistic point of view. — Wikipedia on formalism
Well, think about it.
Existence is quite puzzling, I mean you wouldn't think there should exist something in the first place; but here it is we exist.
And no matter how do you face the existence problem it's always there.
For me this is cool, otherwise non-existence would be quite boring... nothing to do all day, not even existing. :-) — MathematicalPhysicist
Life is not a contradiction.Logic isn't to blame because most arguments tend to cite learned thinkers and the arguments that follow are good ones. So, in a very simplistic sense, the problem lies with the premises, the initial assumptions, the starting point of our reasoning. — TheMadFool
@Harry HinduYou want the dictionary meaning of the word "cool", then google for it. — MathematicalPhysicist
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