I find it difficult to tease out the substantive arguments of many philosophers, especially those who write in a an evocative style( Deleuze, Lyotard, Lacan, Heidegger) without finding a way to translate their ideas into a form that I can then match up with more, let us say, ' empirical' or pragmatic fields. — Joshs
Has the Cartesian dualism inhering in the earlier generation of cognitivism, with its sharp dichotomizing of affect and cognition, been overcome by what you have called the general physicalist monism of the newer approaches(and some not so new ones)? — Joshs
For me what is crucially at stake is the ethical-psychotherapeutic possibilities opened up by a way of thinking. — Joshs
It seems to me that today one set of cognitivists gather on the conservative, that is , Nietzschean-Darwinian, side of a philosophical divide, while a much smaller group(Shaun Gallagher, Varela, Jan Slaby, Matthew Ratcliffe) attempts to incorporate into their thinking phenomenologists like Husserl, Merleau-Pony and Heidegger , and poststructuralists like Foucault and Lyotard. — Joshs
I'm sure you're aware that this latter group of philosophers is responsible for the ongoing assault on the presuppositions of physicalist science.
We are accustomed to dealing with this from humanities and cultural studies departments, but a gentler version of it is now being put forth by those calling themselves cognitive scientists. — Joshs
Would you agree that the philosophical understanding of concepts like quality, quantity and essence have undergone continual shift over the past centuries, and those changes in understanding make their way subtly into the empirical descriptions of scientists?
If so , then I would expect that the notion of quality as a 'general theoretical essence', which is about as Cartesian a definition as I can imagine, has room for updating. — Joshs
The way that I am exposed to otherness via sociality is as an assault, an imposition, a conditioning. It is more interesting and complex than this. — Joshs
So any simple edge or mark , in being inseparably, undecidably, both a passing of a past present and a presenting of a now, is both formal and empirical, both of form and content indissociably, not one opposed to the other, but originally both. Is this a a profoundly different situating of the origin of difference than what we find in Deleuze? — Joshs
Whats missing throughout all of this is the notion that any of the treatments the soldiers are subject to are differently assimilated by each, such that the very meaning of the 'group' varies from individual to individual and thus there is no Supra personal vantage from which the sense of a group gestalt can be defined. The concept of distributed group cognition and the idea of a reflex rage module reify to an extent both subjective and objective components of assemblages. — Joshs
I have always been a big fan of philosophers who start their investigation by locating that about which one can say 'at least this much is true, always,everywhere' , the irreducible conditions of possibility for any thing to appear in the world.
You and I aren't going to agree on the validity or usefulness of this move. From my perspective, you are among the majority of philosophically minded people( especially those from Anglo cultures) who view that sort of attempt to ground ontology in such a fashion as wrong headed from the get go. Or perhaps you see the value or legitimacy of that move in earlier thinkers like Descartes, Kant and perhaps Hegel, but don't think that Heidegger and Derrida have managed to pull it off( — Joshs
However, there just may be limits to what can be said about the metaphysical, i.e., language itself may impose limits on what can be said — Sam26
, but it's difficult to know where those limits are,
Metaphysics is the limit of what can be discussed, described, argued. — Michael Ossipoff
I think we all agree that metaphysics, discussion, description and argument don't cover or apply to all of Reality. — Michael Ossipoff
I didn't say "Metaphysics is the limit of what can be discussed...," I said, "...there are limits to what can be said about the metaphysical." — Sam26
Wittgenstein thought that the boundary between what can be sensibly talked about is the boundary between "the world," and the metaphysical. I do disagree with Wittgenstein on this point. It sounds like you agree with him, if I understand your point.
You make it sound so obvious, as though I'm pointing out a truism.
There is much disagreement about these points.
"I think we all agree that metaphysics, discussion, description and argument don't cover or apply to all of Reality." — Michael Ossipoff
I'm glad you think we all agree
..., but you must not be paying much attention to what people write.
Humans are animals. The animal is unitary, no separate body and "Consciousness".
Animals, including humans, are purposefully-responsive devices, not different in principle from mousetraps, refrigerator lightswitches or thermostats. (..but differing from then in complexity, and natural-selection origin). — Michael Ossipoff
Humans are animals. The animal is unitary, no separate body and "Consciousness".
Animals, including humans, are purposefully-responsive devices, not different in principle from mousetraps, refrigerator lightswitches or thermostats. (..but differing from then in complexity, and natural-selection origin) — Michael Ossipoff
I kind of feel like starting to throw ad hominems around after reading that, but then again the inclusion of humans confuses my insultedness. I guess I'm fine with the conclusion and the reasons based on which you believe what you believe about animals, but I'm still insulted by the way you draw the simplicity of humans from the simplicity of animals. — BlueBanana
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