I’m an undergraduate philosophy major (currently) and I get a lot of “jokes” about my useless degree, what am I going to do with my life, ect. One time in a viscious argument someone once told me “I don’t know shit thats why I’m in philosophy”. — Grre
I think a lot of (us) philosophy majors have become so acclimatized with this assumption that we joke about it ourselves and devalue it. — Grre
Philosophy has saved my life. I don’t think philosophy is about “auhority” over knowledge like in the other disciplines like science ect. its not about being right. its about asking question, about pursuing truth, about saving lives and see life-in many different ways. — Grre
To nail, the dam point is for me to ask, when does a philosopher have authority over... well, pretty much anything philosophical? — Wallows
When they’re dead. When they’re dead it is then for the rest of us to sort out what is of use to us or not without them making additional footnotes in order to scrape together the vague resemblance of “meaning” to what has been thoroughly torn to shreds by the analysis and critique of others. — I like sushi
Pragmatism is its own counterfactual stupidity. A hoodwinking of humanity’s creative eye and nascent faculties directed at “direction” itself - meaning exploration in the light of ignorance (ignorance the best moral attribute of humanity that we’re able to conceptual frame). — I like sushi
Then I take it you're not a fan of pragmatism. — Wallows
When they’re dead.
Progress in the technical sense is enormous but in the ethical sense we are almost at the level of the Middle Ages. — MrSpock
It is a matter of determining how best to live in light of our ignorance of what is best. In the absence of knowledge, one is guided by what seems to be best. But what seems to be best may not be what is best, and so, one is always willing to examine and revise his or her opinions. This is a Socratic attitude, but it may also be expressed in terms from another time and place, the Daodejing - "practice extreme tenuousness" — Fooloso4
if you are sincere and honest with yourself (can I get a show of hands on who are actually like that?) then what are you trying to accomplish here? — Wallows
I'm going to take an example that keeps on popping up in my mind, a la Plato, Marx, and others that progress has been made when the Holli Poli has been changed in some fundamental way. — Wallows
What is it to practise 'extreme tenuousness' ?
Do you have a reference ? — Amity
But, what about Wittgenstein? Don't you think he made his fair share of contribution to the state of philosophy? — Wallows
‘I read: “philosophers are no nearer to the meaning of ‘Reality’ than Plato got … ” What a singular situation. How singular then that Plato has been able to get even as far as he did! Or that we could get no further afterwards! Was it because Plato was so clever?’
Philosophy hasn't made any progress? -- If somebody scratches the spot where he has an itch, do we have to see some progress? Isn't it genuine scratching otherwise, or genuine itching? And can't this reaction to an irritation continue in the same way for a long time before a cure for the itching is discovered?
Our civilization is characterized by the word ‘progress’. Progress is its form rather than making progress one of its features. Typically it constructs. It is occupied with building an ever more complicated structure. ‘And even clarity is only sought as a means to this end,not as an end in itself. For me on the contrary clarity,perspicuity are valuable in themselves. I am not interested in constructing a building, so much as in having a perspicuous view of the foundations of typical buildings.’
Tenuousness is an openness, a lack of insistence. It is to allow things to show themselves as they are rather than imposing some conceptual scheme or structure on them. It is the opposite of attempting to have things conform to one's will. — Fooloso4
I do not see progress having been made in the state of the art of philosophy. There is good reason why there has been a resurgence of interest in the ancients.
— Fooloso4
But, what about Wittgenstein? Don't you think he made his fair share of contribution to the state of philosophy? — Wallows
if we are aware of our ignorance then we do not insist that things are or should be according to our desires and understanding — Fooloso4
You're asking me quite a difficult question. I'll get back to you later on this. — Wallows
But it seems to have value... — Amity
When is a philosopher justified in their assumptions about (human) nature? We have science for the nature part that is going along full steam ahead. See, this little pig has its own issues when anyone from the fild of philosophy says something profound, deep, almost orgasmic about human nature. Yet, here we are some 2000 years after we crucified our own version of Jesus or that one person who poitinted this fact out.
How far have we come since him?
If progress has been made in some regards, then how do we measure it?
Talking the Wittgensteinian turn, are all the answers to philosophy, really psychological and therefore immeasurable and therefore quietism? — Wallows
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