anonymous66
BC
Two fallen angels who were ejected from paradise find themselves banned in Wisconsin. They are now headed for New Jersey where they find a loophole that can get them back into heaven. The only catch is that it will destroy humanity. A group bands together to stop them. — Google
anonymous66
Would you like to know what I think existentialism is supposed to be?I'm never sure what existentialism is supposed to be, so it makes poor dogma. — Bitter Crank
anonymous66
Since these three rings encompass such a large circus of ideas, are more possibilities needed? — Bitter Crank
Thorongil
BC
Would you like to know what I think existentialism is supposed to be? — anonymous66
TimeLine
Are there other possibilities? — anonymous66
anonymous66
anonymous66
But isn't nihilism a dogma? It seems like a nihilist has to have this kernel of anti-dogma which repels every other dogma. — Bitter Crank
javra
Does it come down to either Dogma or Existentialism or Relativism?
[...]
Are there other possibilities? — anonymous66
anonymous66
Isn't foundationalism just a theory of knowledge? I'm talking about complete systems of philosophies that would include a theory of knowledge.I think a better term than dogma would be foundationalism. — Thorongil
Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Thorongil
Thorongil
Isn't foundationalism just a theory of knowledge? I'm talking about complete systems of philosophies that would include a theory of knowledge. — anonymous66
Wayfarer
Does it come down to either Dogma or Existentialism or Relativism? — anonymous66
My propositions serve as elucidations in the following way: anyone who understands me eventually recognizes them as nonsensical, when he has used them—as steps—to climb beyond them. (He must, so to speak, throw away the ladder after he has climbed up it.)
He must transcend these propositions, and then he will see the world aright.
javra
Just pointing out that there are plenty of things that we do not doubt until some philosopher asks us to.
Folk take it as read that we ought not believe unless we have a justification.
Ought we doubt the obvious without justification? — Banno
andrewk
Hello anonymous.or one could become a Relativist (there is no possibility of objectivity, only opinion- and all opinions are equal). — anonymous66
anonymous66
What about the differences between Aristotle's views and Plato's views? Weren't they each basically promoting a different set of dogma? (and didn't each have a complete system? they covered knowledge, ethics, etc.).I guess I don't understand you then. — Thorongil
anonymous66
I think we're on the same page. I see no reason to disagree.Rather, I suggest that being a 'Relativist' implies that one can see no objective way of comparing the worth of opinions. There are of course subjective measures. In my case, I like opinions that are conducive to flourishing. — andrewk
anonymous66
Dogmatism isn't all bad. I've been looking into Hilary Putnam. He seems to have been on a quest to find "that system" and promoting it's dogma. But.... he also changed his mind several times. He was willing to listen to criticism and change his mind when he deemed it necessary. It seems to me that searching after a system doesn't have to make one a rigid fundamentalist who is unwilling to question his own beliefs. If I were to search after a system (become a Dogmatist) Putnam is a good example to follow, IMHO.But dogmatism, as in being unwilling to even question one's own beliefs — Noble Dust
Wayfarer
What about the differences between Aristotle's views and Plato's views? Weren't they each basically promoting a different set of dogma? — anonymous66
anonymous66
Noble Dust
. It seems to me that searching after a system doesn't have to make one a rigid fundamentalist who is unwilling to question his own beliefs. — anonymous66
anonymous66
Noble Dust
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