darthbarracuda — darthbarracuda
Mathematics, rightly viewed, possesses not only truth, but supreme beauty — a beauty cold and austere, like that of sculpture, without appeal to any part of our weaker nature, without the gorgeous trappings of painting or music, yet sublimely pure, and capable of a stern perfection such as only the greatest art can show. — G.H.Hardy
I guess the love of philosophical truth can be similar. — EnPassant
Truth is not valuable in and of itself, and a terrible truth will leave you on the side of the road, nursing your wounds and wondering why you ever thought it was valuable in the first place. — darthbarracuda
it's more about beautifying truth into something it's not. — darthbarracuda
Look at me! Listen to me! I have truth, I am the truth! In actuality there cannot be a lover of truth but only lovers of opinion, and more specifically their own. All of this is a charade - ironically, the lover of truth is in a state of profound self-delusion. — darthbarracuda
I am not criticizing truth in this circular manner, I am simply saying that truth as it is truth in and of itself is worthless. — darthbarracuda
laurels on their shoulders — darthbarracuda
My point, rather, was that there is no value to truth qua truth. There is always something else that truth is in the service to that makes it valuable — darthbarracuda
The point was that the search for truth is fundamentally conditioned by the psychology of the person. Whether or not truth is valuable cannot be determined apart from the person themselves, and to assert otherwise is to trample over others in power relations. Truth cannot be separated from its source in the power structures of society, nor from the psychological dispositions of its adherents. — darthbarracuda
Why? — darthbarracuda
Why? — darthbarracuda
darthbarracuda — darthbarracuda
Those who love truth for the sake of truth are at best fools, at worst, narcissistic megalomaniacs. Alternatively they may also be masochists. — darthbarracuda
But who would damn you for a life devoted to accumulating practical wisdom?
So why not focus on that? — apokrisis
Only thing I would change is the language - not 'accumulating' practical 'wisdom' - but just finding a way to live practically. — csalisbury
So the best we can do is grow to be pragmatically wise. And that will be such a sediment of habits that we are exposed if circumstances are changed radically. Like happens all the time in nature. — apokrisis
I agree with most of what you say, by the way.
But it's strikingly at odds with your metaphysics. — csalisbury
Of course one's metaphysics can be separated from one's practice. If your passion is [non-metaphysical-x] all the more power to you - but your passion seems to be metaphysics, no? — csalisbury
Those who love truth for the sake of truth are at best fools, at worst, narcissistic megalomaniacs. Alternatively they may also be masochists. — darthbarracuda
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.