Yeah, that's perhaps the issue here. Nobody asked to be cured. Nobody wants to be cured. So, why bother? The people who demand that others be cured are no different than evangelicals. Don't you think so too? — Wallows
I think there's a difference between demanding something of someone, and showing them a pathway, or inviting someone to sit under a tree for a while? If they decline or walk a different path, then so be it. If someone doesn't need to be cured, then good for them. But perhaps they're under an illusion. Personally, I strive to treat myself where necessary. But it's important to treat yourself with medicine, and not poison. — S
But, is the unexamined life really not worth living? — Wallows
I could just as well live "an unexamined life" and be happy too. — Wallows
Keep in mind that all what our conversations amount to are elaborate and abstract sayings like "philosophy as therapy", "the unexamined life..." and so on.
Is this plain and simple mental masturbation? — Wallows
People who use less drugs are more likely to spend more time with things that deal with the mind. — christian2017
As to how someone progresses from that dilemna i would say we can only control ourselves and i would say out in public or outside in the "real world" its best to say less rather than more when it comes to deep subjects. — christian2017
I guess I didn't phrase that quite right, but the way that I intended to phrase it is that people who use drugs are more likely to end their boredom with something other than things like philosophy forums. — christian2017
You're a smart guy, do away with the drugs. They're a dead end. — Wallows
As far as the OP, I have two things to say. The first is that your opening statement is inaccurate. Philosophy, for thousands of years, has been a mental gymnastics domain for the wealthy, the educated intellectual, the sane, for the most part. The second thing I wanted to say ties into the first, and it is that philosophy is available to more common people and has far different utility than it did 3,000 years ago. It isn't for everyone, and it's never been for everyone. It isn't even for everyone who exhibits a strong desire to attempt to exercise some form of it. — whollyrolling
I'm aware that they're not exactly harmless little drops of magic. But we were just taking demanding something of someone, and I certainly do not simply bow down to an imperative like, "Do away with the drugs". No, do away with the do away-ing: wasn't that sort of your message here? I don't want your cure. — S
But, I have had some (extensive) experience with drugs myself, and nothing good ever came out of it. — Wallows
You project your own experience on to others, overstepping your bounds. But you mean well. — S
Hence, I find anyone who advocates philosophy as therapy, where nobody is asking for it in some sort of contradiction.
How does one progress from this dilemma? — Wallows
How does one progress from this dilemma? — Wallows
In my opinion, philosophy as a field of study is regressive and fundamentally useless to society, but discussion, debate and "philosophizing" can be useful or entertaining, possibly even enlightening, as a pastime for individuals or groups of people. — whollyrolling
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