M'kay, maybe there is more disagreement after all then.
At risk of committing the error you're after I'm tempted to ask: What is the problem?
I wonder what sort of pretence, exactly, you think philosophy might invite. Like, that we are just pretending that we do not know something, maybe? Sort of like a parlor game rather than something we are asking? — Moliere
The mistake, as I gather so far, has something to do with the habits of the philosophically inclined, and something to do with how they formulate questions, and in particular their usage of questions of the form "What is [x]?" -- that when the philosophically inclined ask such a question perhaps they are sort of deluding themselves into thinking they do not know what they, in some sense or other, know. Or that they are playing a game of making the obviously false appear true to them, at least for the moment, because they are in some kind of habit whereby they believe they're digging deeper into truths but are actually just chasing their own tail and rehashing what it is they already believe.
That's my closest guess. — Moliere
And I think, if I'm reading you right, your solution is to rephrase questions of the form "What is [x]?" to be more specific, or to reflect on whether or not what you're asking after is actually something easy to answer without anything more deep or profound to it. — Moliere
So, have you never found any philosophical question or topic to be superficial or shallow or having an obvious answer? — Sapientia
Thanks for the horrible audio/video! :joke: — Janus
OK, they could be added to your original list, but neither they nor the items on your list are unequivocally stupid questions. Because I thought frank was approaching the question of 'what is an idea' from a dismissively skeptical angle, I just wanted to show that his skeptical dismissal is misplaced if you take a deflationary or common-sense stance.
I also think dismissive scepticism is misplaced if you are searching for a deeper answer, because in that dimension, the value does not lie in the answer but in the searching. Of course such searching is not to everyone's taste; it may not appeal, may even seem pointless, to minds that are well-satisfied with common-sense explanations. — Janus
If, for example, theology is a waste of time for you, does it follow that it is a waste of time for all others? — Janus
Anyone who can read and has half a brain will be able to compare the two and note the difference, — Sapientia
Why don't you look it up in your Chambers English Dictionary (1998 edition)? — Sapientia
If the people are pretending, they are pretentious. — Sir2u
The second quote above seems to indicate that you do not understand what it means to be pretentious, and are misusing the word when you want to express the meaning, "someone who pretends" — Sapientia
No and it’s quite obvious that neither did you. — CuddlyHedgehog
Let me do the sweaty work for you though. — Sir2u
Please don’t. The odour is unbearable. — CuddlyHedgehog
Can’t stand the smell of sweaty peasants working for me, dear. — CuddlyHedgehog
No matter how many baths I take, you still stink, dear. — CuddlyHedgehog
Interesting fantasy. Have you spoken to your therapist about it? — CuddlyHedgehog
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