philosophers are a prideful bunch, perhaps because of how much criticism philosophy gets in the modern day, not many are willing to admit that a lot of it is, in fact, contradictory bullshit. — Grre
And most modern philosophy is constructed so as to adhere to scientific facts, given this, he was right to eliminate metaphysical and mystical concerns from philosophy. But in doing so, he cut the balls off. — Merkwurdichliebe
If an anti-philosopher is sufficiently exciting, he gets interpreted as a philosopher. His demystifications are repackaged so that yet again experts are needed as sage-whisperers. Heidegger played into this big time. Wittgenstein's style in Philosophical Investigations is so informal and anti-systematic that it backfired! The anti-systematic point was presented so anti-systematically that experts are called in to connect the dots into a system. — ghost
nice point. That is why I prefer the ancient spirit in which there is no mediation. They bring it to your face, and if necessary, a hammer to the back of the head. — Merkwurdichliebe
Thanks. And when I look into the ancients or the moderns I like...it seems to me that not much has really been accomplished since. — ghost
As I see it, the moderns rehashed the ancient ideas into new terms. And in their unique cleverness, they created a bunch of fantastical problems. — Merkwurdichliebe
And because in Deliberation the Appetites and Aversions are raised by foresight of the good and evill consequences, and sequels of the action whereof we Deliberate; the good or evill effect thereof dependeth on the foresight of a long chain of consequences, of which very seldome any man is able to see to the end. But for so far as a man seeth, if the Good in those consequences be greater than the evill, the whole chain is that which Writers call Apparent or Seeming Good. And contrarily, when the evill exceedeth the good, the whole is Apparent or Seeming Evill: so that he who hath by Experience, or Reason, the greatest and surest prospect of Consequences, Deliberates best himself; and is able, when he will, to give the best counsel unto others. — Hobbes
I've got an assignment due and have to concentrate. :sad: — Wayfarer
Life calls. I will check back. Great thread! — ghost
[. . .]that it embodies a kind of forgotten truth, some vital insight that became redacted out of it by subsequent generations. — Wayfarer
Reason-experience is directed at future consequences. I like all that is packed into this way of framing it. It looks outward at the world and prioritizes experience. — ghost
To begin, Hobbes was essentially an empiricist. — Merkwurdichliebe
But he slightly preceded Locke, who is considered the founder of empiricism. — Merkwurdichliebe
Democracy only monetizes the individual, as a quantity or numerical unit in relation to the whole, it does not factor in the qualitative importance of the unique value of each individual in itself. — Merkwurdichliebe
I found his politics more fascinating than convincing. — ghost
I think the empircists had their eye on the right ball. They wanted an escape from superstition and linguistic confusion. — ghost
That is a near perfect assessment of their intention. The consequences did not turn out so optimal. Nevertheless, the consequence of empiricism was not as detrimental as the that of Marxist or Hegelian thought, which produced ideologies that resulted in the worst travesties in history. — Merkwurdichliebe
Their fascination is part of what makes them so convincing. These guys are original geniuses, the like of which we have never seen in our lifetimes. — Merkwurdichliebe
That tradition becomes the incidental victim is the great tragedy of all progress (philosophy included). — Merkwurdichliebe
Good point. How much of philosophy is left over once part of it becomes literature-mysticism-politics and the other part of it becomes science? Others who know more might illuminate me here, but it seems to me that obsessing over language is largely what's left over. — ghost
The problems of philosophy...do they really exist, as in having some correspondence to reality? Or are they simply artificial constructs of philosophical thought? — Merkwurdichliebe
How much of philosophy is left over once part of it becomes literature-mysticism-politics and the other part of it becomes science? Others who know more might illuminate me here, but it seems to me that obsessing over language is largely what's left over.
a distinction between genuine problems (which are interesting to people outside of philosophy departments) and spurious problems due to philosophical inbreeding. — Izat So
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