It ends up treating the pragmatics as mere accidents on the way to some eternal Platonic story which was there from the beginning — StreetlightX
Vagueness is for me the ultimate transcendental illusion: it takes a perfectly valid move - the step from particular to general, always motivated by a particular problem (B&C's 'decision points') - and then illegitimately extrapolates that step into what one might call an 'unmotivated generality'. — StreetlightX
So basically I can agree with you up right up until the point where you invoke unmotivated generality as a Platonic bow to tie the whole developmental story together. It's this very last step that shifts a perfectly rigorous and valid methodology into a procrustean metaphysics that tries to retroactively fit concrete developments into a pre-ordained story. It's just a theological-Platonic hangover/residue that needs to be rejected. — StreetlightX
(1) Measures of length (every number corresponds to a measurable length, like a table-leg) and
(2) Expressible as ratios ('every number can be expressed by a ratio, like x/y'). — StreetlightX
Further, among the points that B&C stress is that it is not at all 'discovery' that is at stake, but what they call - following Wittgenstein - concept-determination: "what is going on here is best described neither as ‘discovery’ nor as ‘invention’ of something entirely new. There are facts to be revealed, and creativity to be exhibited, but what is crucial is the opening up of different aspects of something ... which prompts a choice that sooner or later ‘catches on’... and proves fruitful." — StreetlightX
The concepts we employ are a function of what we aim to capture with them; to employ one concept rather than another is to bring out one aspect of the world rather than another. Moreover, the deployment of our concepts is not governed by truth, but by their range of illumination — street
For B&C, the important point is that the choices made, although forced by the math itself, are nonetheless grounded in what we aim to do with the math, considerations which are not dictated by the math itself ('extra-mathematical') — sx
will respond tomorrow — street
The motivating problem, for the philosophy of choices, is the problem that we don't know what we want to do. — csalisbury
Eh. Looks like frames all the way down to me. Wouldn't be so many philosophies of the event otherwise.
don't think you can escape the regress that's ultimately truncated through what you do; that's what it means to make your mark.
Philosophy also has this strange thing where asking questions makes other questions disappear. — fdrake
Philosophy seems pinned between two attacks, those who demand it reveal what 'truths' it has discovered or else be consigned to the rubbish heap, and those who claim the whole thing is nothing more than a series of works of art, you either like or you don't.
I think you gave the conditions under which this is a non-problem in your post, ironically. All inquiry functions like that, thinking critically, rationally and creatively are all part of inquiry in general - they don't suddenly disappear or lose their general character when the inquiry is philosophical in nature. — fdrake
Not really. If we are talking about a pan-semiotic metaphysics now, the goal is to divide reality into its necessities and its accidents. — apokrisis
the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence, especially when considered as an academic discipline.
It becomes a problem for me when the ambiguity about definition is used to shut down lines of enquiry others are finding useful. Too often I hear "Logical Positivism has been disproven", "Kant showed that...", "[X, y or z] is not even proper philosophy", "you can't comment on X until you've read y".None of this has any justification without a definition.
Philosophy is, by necessity, everything that isn't something else.
Ordinary language is not the last word: in principle it can everywhere be supplemented and improved upon and superseded. Only remember, it is the first word.
Not only that. On the basis of the Greeks' initial contributions towards
an Interpretation of Being, a dogma has been developed which not only
declares the question about the meaning of Being to be superfluous, but
sanctions its complete neglect. It is said that 'Being' is the most universal
and the emptiest of concepts. As such it resists every attempt at definition.
Nor does this most universal and hence indefinable concept require any
definition, for everyone uses it constantly and already understands what
he means by it. In this way, that which tP'- ancient philosophers found
continually disturbing as something obscure and hidden has taken on a
clarity and self-evidence such that if anyone continues to ask about it he
is charged with an error of method.
it really doesn't matter; that is, it has no meaning for philosophy, to have a sufficient and necessary condition for what it is. — fdrake
The choice you've presented the Greeks is between giving up the idea that there are irrational numbers at all (presumably by denying that there can even be squares covering an area of two square units) and retaining criteria (2), or just dropping criteria (2) in favour of something restricted to the use of whole numbers in expressing the rationals only. That makes a little more sense to me, but not much. — MetaphysicsNow
Oh, also; I discovered a food allergy last night, got one hour's sleep and I'm running out of pile cream. I'm probably not in the best place for understanding detailed prose at the minute. — fdrake
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