Streetlight
Pseudonym
None of these maps are more true than the other, and maps are useful to the extent that they are used for some purpose or another. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
How could a professor say of his student's thesis anything other than "Well, it's not of any terrain I recognise, and it has no utility to me", — Pseudonym
These do not sound like maps of meta-philosophy which are no more true than other maps, they sound like absolute edicts about what must be, what is necessary. — Pseudonym
Number2018
One's judgment related to this project cannot be separated from one's movement generated by a creation of the new cartography, and this movement is similar to autopoieticI fail to see how this integrates with any form of judgement. If a philosophical investigation can be considered a kind of map, no more true than any other and no less valuable than its specific utility, then how does one go about judging such an investigation? — Pseudonym
fdrake

Streetlight
Pseudonym
Any good thesis clearly and convincingly sets out the stakes upon which it turns; that they may not be stakes that you - or anyone else in particular - are interested in is, of course, entirely irrelevant. Is this something that really needs to be explained to you? — StreetlightX
Any cartographer knows that map making is driven - absolutely - by the necessities of what is being mapped, along with what is aimed at by such mapping. — StreetlightX
Even the most basic understanding of necessity recognizes that it can operate at varying levels of generality that leaves plenty of room for creativity and pragmatics - which in turn operate according to constraints appropriate to their own orders. — StreetlightX
One's judgment related to this project cannot be separated from one's movement generated by a creation of the new cartography, and this movement is similar to autopoietic
self-establishment of aesthetic becoming. — Number2018
Streetlight
No such purpose exists for philosophical investigations... — Pseudonym
Pseudonym
Streetlight
The universally agreed on purpose of philosophical investigation is... — Pseudonym
Pseudonym
... any competent reader can assess how well it goes about doing that, and if cashes out those stakes well. — StreetlightX
philosophies fail at this all the time. — StreetlightX
The idea that what I'm saying renders anything immune to criticism is another silly contention. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
Number2018
One's judgment related to this project cannot be separated from one's movement generated by a creation of the new cartography, and this movement is similar to autopoietic
self-establishment of aesthetic becoming.
— Number2018
And in English? — Pseudonym
Pseudonym
It's generally something most people learn in the course of an education.
What examples would you give of such 'failed philosophies'? — Pseudonym
Oh, philosophical 'therapeutics', say. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
BrianW
Streetlight
John Doe
Ah, sadly the academy isn't perfect. They'll let any old dolt through once in a while. Somtimes, rooted agape by a series of shiny letters, people even look up to them. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
John Doe
Eh, don't read too much into it. I just couldn't care less about the posts of the windbag I was responding to. — StreetlightX
I do think they have an incredibly flawed understanding of philosophy: they treat philosophical cartography as a matter of collecting pretty things; they have a dilettante's understanding of philosophy. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
I think it's more akin to seeing a map as a tool for getting you where you want or need to go. — John Doe
John Doe
This 'use' - in the instrumental sense, like a bureaucrat's - doesn't seem to me to respect the autonomy of philosophy's problems. — StreetlightX
Any philosopher knows that problems impose themselves upon you, that they worm their way into you so its not a simple matter of submitting philosophy to one's whim and fancy, even if that is a 'therapeurics of the soul'; to engage in philosophy is to be driven where the problem takes you: to submit to necessity, as one does to a landscape which one maps out. — StreetlightX
Deleuze once wrote that the only use of philosophy is to sadden and shame and these are affects I think far more appropriate to philosophy than the self-gratifying attempts to make it some bourgeois weekend retreat in the Caribbean. — StreetlightX
Therapeutics makes use of philosophy as one makes use of another without regard or respect for their autonomy. It prostitutes philosophy. — StreetlightX
Pseudonym
Streetlight
That's therapy. In a thread like that we engage in a discussion with someone in order to better understand the nature of the problems that have wormed their way in, why s/he's not getting what s/he wants from the activity of engaging these problems in the way s/he is, and what changes in her life, her meta-philosophy and her understanding of these problems might get her feeling right again. — John Doe
Pseudonym
I'm a little loathe to get into the middle of an extended debate on this forum between two members, especially when it seemingly supports one side of that debate. — John Doe
Pseudonym
Streetlight
The offense taken at the examination of the presumptions in one's own field is not an adequate defence against any issues thereby raised. — Pseudonym
Pseudonym
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