It's great how you've laid out what you see as a 'problemscape' in maths, that has been helpful, but (and I feel bad I didn’t think to specify this at first) I actually meant to ask what you thought an incomplete problemscape would look like in philosophy. The point being that I'm not sure how such a process would apply in philosophy even though I'm sure it does in maths. — Pseudonym
My first step in both types of philosophical problem would be to understand why it's a problem in the first place, I'd first want to know why it needed solving at all, what place they have in the wider problem hierarchy? Already, I'm not sure whether this step is even necessary in your maths problem. Do we need to know why integrals even need solving to approach a solution? I could certainly solve y=x+4 (much more my level) without needing to know why we might need to know X in terms of y, but I wouldn't dream of approaching a philosophical problem without such background. — Pseudonym
I think Witty drew the wrong conclusion from his own argument, — StreetlightX
All of that ambiguity was removed from the problem because there are signposts in the problemscape already interpreting what the problem consists of and solution methods. — fdrake
Yes. I mean I haven't mentioned him at all here but yes, 'how to step beyond Derrida' is massively written across all of this. Because yeah, it's actually a question that really messes me up, like, how do you move beyond the formalist promise of the à venir, of the 'mere' always-already opening to the future? (especially because I think it's entirely correct?). And I'm finding in this language of 'choice' precisely that way to think beyond Derrida's 'undecidables', those moments that both belong and do not belong to a system (like Godel statements...); But I'm also trying to think that move beyond in a very specific way, a way that isn't just a fall-back into a Russellian 'theory of types' where you simply avoid self-reference (even as you self-refer to do it), but in a way that affirms the productivity or the generativity of paradox, where this moment of two co-existing incommensurables force a leap of creativity to diffuse the tension. — StreetlightX
I expect my question got lost in my rambling prose, but it would help me to understand your line of thought if you could tell me how you think the history of the problem affects the approach. As I said, in philosophy it's absolutely instrumental, I'm not seeing any way it is in maths. — Pseudonym
I think (and maybe this is laruellian?) that there’s no formalist (and philosophy is alway formal) way past the a venir. Once you’re there, then you just have to enter into it, which, to me, means bringing philosophy into uneasy commerce with something else — csalisbury
Philosophy is different in that the psychological effect, the human reception, of the solution actually matters, matters way more than the constraints (which are trivially surmounted by simply re-arranging axioms), matters way more than the signposts of previous thinkers (which can be discarded as easily as logical positivism). What we're producing as a solution is an attractive salve to the wounds caused by the uncertainty of that which is as yet unknown. Look at the continuing popularity of the Cosmological Argument, the staying power of 'Meditations'. Do you honestly think these are solutions which just fell out inevitably from the definition of the problemscape. They are crafted such as to make the water flow where its needed.
To my mind, you're characterising the adoption of hinge propositions as a kind of psychological excess to the discourse; why engage in this rather than that? Must be mere feeling. — fdrake
Not at all. I'm arguing, as Salvatore does in response to Wright's 'hinges', that one cannot simultaneously allow the discourse to range over both the argument given the use of hinges and the selection of hinges, which is what happens in philosophical debate. To do so would be a misuse of the terms used to judge positions in ordinary use. The selection of hinges is mere feeling, that's the point, if they were not then the problem of 'selecting hinges' would itself require hinges in order to resolve it, and so on ad infinitum. This is what I meant originally by 'having your cake and eating it'. I entirely agree that maths may well proceed by certain selections which then dictate the nature of the solution (I'm hardly in a position to disagree, given my mathematical knowledge), but the fact that philosophy will also proceed thus is trivially true. All that's being said there is that the selection of axioms/hinges/problmescapes will constrain the set of possible solutions. Solutions are constrained by factors (which themselves must be presumed to be true). I don't see anything controversial there. — Pseudonym
Can hinges be analysed in contexts in which they are not presumed? It isn't as if everything that's required to philosophise about X is required to philosophise about Y. I take it that we're actually doing this at the minute; we're arguing about the framing of philosophy itself. — fdrake
Each of us is using a different framing device. This is supposed to be an impossibility, but it's not. — fdrake
To operate on this level of abstraction has as a hinge that we can take other hinges and philosophise about them. — fdrake
So, philosophers are full of shit when they talk about hinge propositions? — Posty McPostface
I don't really think there are hinge propositions, but I adopted the vocabulary because it was appropriate. Hinge propositions, as used in philosophy, are a gloss of certainty on a statement of incommensurability. — fdrake
I'm not sure I understand your point here. — Pseudonym
I agree. I don't see how either of us could conceive of the concept of 'hinges' without being able to abstract them from their use. — Pseudonym
the recent Abel Prize winner won the prize: not just what he proved, but the way he proved stuff and the exciting conjectures his methodological development allowed, — fdrake
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