Depends who you ask - I know the Cambridge faculty of philosophy (at least at one time) would have rejected any claim to the effect that Derrida was a philosopher. Russell, of course, was truly venerated as one. But then, that's probably grist to your mill :wink:Not to mention the fact that it allows Derrida and Russell to be considered as part of the same subject.
Explanation occurs in medias res, and not sub specie aeternitatis.
A particular line of reasoning can have internal consistency, but there are so many theories from so many avenues, that can aim at solving a certain question... — schopenhauer1
Or put otherwise: there is no 'ultimate symmetry', the breaking of which explains individuation; it only seems that way after-the-fact, once you've illegitimately abstracted the concept from the conditions which gave rise to it; Symmetry is always-already broken in some way: there are generalities and particulars, and even stratified hierarchies of such divisions, but they develop from the 'bottom-up', even if, once so developed, the higher levels attain a consistency of their own (e.g. category theory as a 'response' to problems in algebraic topology). Explanation occurs in medias res, and not sub specie aeternitatis. — StreetlightX
As an aside, something that I find interesting here is that Kripkenstein functions a lot like a philosopher in philosophical discourse despite being an interpretation of one by another. — fdrake
Basically what I'm saying is that the lack of an all encompassing good definition of philosophy is itself contextualised within the problems of philosophy; and while I'm certain that an absence of the definition can act as a motivation or problematic itself (like what you're doing), most philosophy doesn't seem to proceed like that and so can't take this definition as part of its 'native' nature. — fdrake
I agree with this, for most philosophy though in a practical sense, the definition it really works with is simply "those propositions contained within the canon already labelled philosophy, or those stated by people qualified by their knowledge of such propositions". By which I mean that realistically most philosophers simply let someone else define philosophy for them and only become agitated where there's some suggestions that their current project isn't it. — Pseudonym
Philosophies of the event (as a sociological phenomenon) correspond exactly to the inability to unironically and sincerely hold some kind of value (related to action, not thought) that can be actually acted upon to produce an 'event'. — csalisbury
These are all things that 'catch-on' on the basis of pragmatics; they're all 'machines' that are well-tailored to working with certain inputs, and not others. Tools, liable to be put down in favour of other, different tools if necessary. Philosophy is a tool-kit, just like that. — StreetlightX
But again, this "catching-on" in mathematics, eventually moves to consensus. Thus, even debates over axioms about infinities, etc. will eventually get to a point via demonstrable proofs that convince the community that this should be included in standard views of the problem, until someone else brings up an issue. — schopenhauer1
This consensus and branching out of mathematics (what I call "step-wise" fashion) is not possible in philosophy where the constraints of the variables to be discussed are so open-ended. As someone previously brought up, that problems can be framed from a Derridaean or a Russelian perspective would negate this analogy to math. — schopenhauer1
But, to be blunt - this is wrong. — StreetlightX
What's the best approach? Geometric? (qua Netwon?) Arithmetic? (Delta-Epsilon?) Non-Standard? (Leibnizian flavoured)? But there is no 'best' approach because 'best' is only ever relative to what you're trying to do with the calculations. — StreetlightX
I don't want to play the Socratic authority game and I'm tired. Say what you want to say and let it stand on its own merits. — fdrake
This probably requires a bounded terrain; if everything can be relevantly said of an idea it says nothing. — fdrake
To my mind they've got to do a few things to be doing inquiry in general:
They have to set up the problemscape somehow.
They have to provide analytical tools and demonstrations that allow navigating the problemscape; these might be arguments, phenomenologies, references, interpretations of scientific studies etc. — fdrake
I suppose methodologically, I'm advocating a kind of 'sub specie aeternitas' stance towards philosophy; look at it both anthropologically and materially, how do its concepts tend to develop. Maybe I should call it 'philosophical naturalism' just to be incredibly perverse. — fdrake
Positing things as irrelevant is pretty easy, but this might speak to my inexperience with philosophy institutionally. If you're doing philosophy within a research paradigm or quite constrained theoretical context then the problems you deal with are prefigured (but not necessarily circumscribed) by that theoretical milieu. PhD student X works in dialethic logic, PhD student Y works in feminist standpoint epistemology, PhD student Z works in mereology. They're dealing with stuff already in a little island of sense; equivalently a frame; with stable ideas of what the problems are. — fdrake
However, the claim still remains- demonstrable results and consensus make mathematical creativity/novelty different than philosophical creativity. — schopenhauer1
Since consensus on mathematical principles is dependent on consensus of ontology, it is impossible that there could be a higher degree of consensus on mathematical principles than there is on philosophical principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does "one" signify an indivisible unit, or does it signify a divisible unit? Numbers like 2, 3, 4, represent divisible units, 2 representing a unity which is divisible into two distinct units. But 1 when understood in this way must be indivisible. If we allow that 1 is divisible, we undermine the meaning of unity. But we need to allow that one is both a unity and is divisible, so we allow two incompatible, contradictory concepts to coexist within one, being signified within one symbol. — Metaphysician Undercover
So I think your whole approach mistakes description for prescription, effect for cause: once you suck the life out of problems-in-duration and make the move into a higher dimension where everything can be seen from the perceptive of placing them into neatly-parsed boxes (accidents or necessities? generalities or particulars?), then and only then does development seem to proceed on that basis; but the leap into that dimension is illegitimate: it's simply retroactive ratiocination, the work of philosophical morticians. — StreetlightX
Or put otherwise: there is no 'ultimate symmetry', the breaking of which explains individuation; it only seems that way after-the-fact, once you've illegitimately abstracted the concept from the conditions which gave rise to it; Symmetry is always-already broken in some way: there are generalities and particulars, and even stratified hierarchies of such divisions - all this can be granted - but they develop from the 'bottom-up', even if, once so developed, the higher levels attain a consistency of their own (e.g. category theory as a 'response' to problems in algebraic topology). Explanation occurs in medias res, and not sub specie aeternitatis. — StreetlightX
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