Shawn
Noble Dust
BC
It's the stance of prizing ideas over persons, or, more realistically, ideas over stances themselves. People in academia take stances, and their stances become their identity; they become statues with stances. They don't move. They're dead. — Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Shawn
But to treat philosophy as a way of life...is a much larger concern. What does that mean, treat it as a way of life? — Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Shawn
This is an idea I've tried to argue here ever since I joined. — Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Shawn
Noble Dust
Shawn
That's a little hard for me to imagine as I never formally studied philosophy in College; the crisis of formulating my own philosophy came after I left Christianity, which I suppose could be an analogy to graduating with a degree in philosophy, in it's own metaphorical way. — Noble Dust
So, then what? What's next is clearing away the bullshit. — Noble Dust
Noble Dust
I guess it can be the inverse, as your saying. Namely, some set of entrenched beliefs get challenged or questioned which I associate with myself, and then get challenged in the appropriate settings of sorts. — Posty McPostface
Yeah, I do like Harry Frankfurt. Have you read his, 'On Bullshitting'? — Posty McPostface
Pattern-chaser
But to treat philosophy as a way of life...is a much larger concern. What does that mean, treat it as a way of life? — Noble Dust
John Doe
But to treat philosophy as a way of life...is a much larger concern. What does that mean, treat it as a way of life? — Noble Dust
I think it means adopting philosophy as one's belief system, and choosing to live by it. Just like some people might adopt a religion, or a political view. But everyone does this. — Pattern-chaser
So, then how does one differentiate between what is true (supposedly, the process of academic philosophy), and believing in what is true (associating what is true with one's self)? — Posty McPostface
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.