Now, we have a lot of questions about God, life, and such. But, aren't these questions epistemically inchoate? — Posty McPostface
Is your criteria for inchoate, that it can be answered in too many ways for there to be any common ground to advance any position? — schopenhauer1
As far as epistemology relates to these matters, the situation is similar. A person can try with limited success to formalize their epistemological way of being. But much of what is going on is 'behind' any particular sentence. This connects to your post on attitudes. 'Attitude' points at a global approach or a fundamental grasping of existence in a certain way. This fundamental grasping is not the sort of thing that can be squeezed into a few sentences (or, if so, only with great talent via an apt metaphor.)And this strong metaphor as metaphor doesn't give itself way cheaply. It requires interpretation. — macrosoft
aren't these questions epistemically inchoate? — Posty McPostface
But it is just those kinds of domains of discourse which are being dissolved in the acid of modernity and globalisation. It is possible to re-imagine the substance of those myths in modern terms but it’s not at all easy. — Wayfarer
What do you think unenlightened? — Posty McPostface
I'm not sure what you're asking. — unenlightened
In it we discussed that ethical questions cannot be intellectualized. — Posty McPostface
Yes. It is too vague a question for there to be useful agreement on. — Posty McPostface
?? There are thousands of years of philosophy "intellectualizing"/analyzing ethical questions. So I'm not sure how we can say that it's not possible. — Terrapin Station
Philosophy is a field in which there is going to be continued disagreement about even the most fundamental claims. Some would even say that looking at philosophy as a field where we should be reaching widespread consensuses is essentially not getting what philosophy is about, because the gist of the discipline is its methodological tools, part of which involves regularly looking for and challenging various assumptions that are made in premises, in ideas of entailment, etc. — Terrapin Station
As maxim, 'when you have no idea, do not try to express it' has somewhat to recommend it. However, in this case even if you have no idea, you must answer with your life. You can call that systematically inchoate if you like, does it help? — unenlightened
I'm asking whether there is any merit to philosophical quietism? Or must we be loud and rambunctious about the issue of God, life, ethics, and so on? — Posty McPostface
I'd say look to the difference between a talk between friends and a kind of evangelism that insists it has THE truth. Some of the best and most deeply joyful conversations involve really connecting with someone on the grand and terrible issues of what life and death are all about. In these conversations we speak for ourselves from our own experiences. We try to meet in the middle (understanding one another) because there is already affection, respect, and curiosity. We are open. We don't just want to send or convert. And while we do hope for some amount of mirroring, we also hope to be surprised and learn. — macrosoft
Then what job does a philosopher have? A questioner of truth? — Posty McPostface
Then what job does a philosopher have? A questioner of truth? — Posty McPostface
But, how do you reach Rogerian agreements between such opposing views as supremacism or such matters? — Posty McPostface
Basically, yes. It's a critical thinking toolkit. Expecting philosophy to build up some big cache of conclusions that have widespread consensus throughout the field amounts to not getting what philosophy is in my opinion.
Of course, some folks will say that I'm way off base in the above, but that's just the idea, isn't it?
It's the old joke re the "Two Laws of Philosophy:"
(1) For every philosopher, there is an equal and opposite philosopher.
(2) They're both wrong. — Terrapin Station
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