For the Stoics, philosophy is a continuous act or art of living.
For Massimo Pigliucci it is ' a never-ending exercise of reflective equilibrium'.
It is an ongoing progress...
And this can also include study of analytical or continental philosophy. Whatever.
There is not just one way. — Amity
This is what I find so humourous about these skeptical-stoical threads: If stoicism clearly does not resonate with you...why bother? — Pantagruel
The entire point of the philosophy is its therapeutic benefits. — Pantagruel
If the principles work, then Stoicism is valid in that it has been effective for you. If not, then it is not effective for you, but it could still be 'true' in that it may well be valid for someone else.... — Pantagruel
Why bother what? I am interested in what's true. — Bartricks
No, a worldview is not true if it 'works' for you. — Bartricks
For instance, a view associated with Stoicism is the view that all wrongdoing is the product of ignorance. — Bartricks
Everyone's worldview is unique. — Pantagruel
I found the elements of Stoicism that inspire me, I get a thrill of inspiration reading the meditations of Marcus Aurelius. Maybe you will find something that you like. Maybe it isn't for you. — Pantagruel
It is the sense of the term according to which all of the following (and many others, of course) would qualify as philosophers: Plato, Kant, Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Mill and so on. — Bartricks
Analogously, says Hume, a few people can live the life of the philosopher in the narrow sense, i.e., spend most of their time reading and writing philosophy at a fairly abstract level, treating it almost as a monastic practice. But most of us can live a “philosophical” life in the sense of reading and reflecting about certain principles and attempting to put them into everyday practice, while at the same time engaging in other, more common, pursuits, what the Stoics call “preferred indifferents.”
The Stoic position, then, becomes untenable for Hume if they meant that only the narrow philosophical life is conducive to happiness. But they clearly did not. Just like there were Stoics who did live that life — Zeno, Chrysippus, Musonius Rufus, Epictetus — there were others who lived a Stoic life in the broad sense, including Cato and Marcus Aurelius.
— Massimo Pigliucci
Stop being so self-involved. So it inspired you. Doesn't matter. That won't make it true. — Bartricks
It won't make it not-true. — Pantagruel
I believe that people are in some sense misguided when they do misdeeds, yes. — Pantagruel
↪Bartricks
What I mind about is up to me.
You are clearly not listening. Repeating your claims when I, and others, have addressed them is a waste of time and energy. — Amity
Unless it is the case that truth and reason are therapeutic. — unenlightened
Which they surely must be, as delusion and unreason are the very definition of insanity. — unenlightened
for they have abandoned the pursuit of truth in favour of the pursuit of happiness. — Bartricks
A true philosopher — Bartricks
I think most of the philosophers you mentioned, bar perhaps Hobbes, would equate truth, or knowing truth with happiness or well-being in some sense — Janus
Remember you said that knowing the truth is sometimes awful — Janus
What reason could we have for submitting ourselves, as slaves, to truths that would destroy our well-being? — Janus
The further point is that the kinds of truths which must be sought, as opposed to those everyday truths which we can hardly deny, at least as they are in their everyday dimension, cannot be known with certainty but must be taken on faith. — Janus
I have reason to honour my promises even if I'd be happier breaking them. — Bartricks
Really? You are sure about 'that' are you? How? Kindly defend your claim without contradicting yourself. — Bartricks
↪Pantagruel Have you considered Buddhism? I recommend Buddhism to you. It encourages you to think nothing. I think you'll do well. — Bartricks
It complicates it because, as someone else said after me, someone might want to eradicate grief but not eradicate memory. I know I would. Eradicating the grief doesn't mean changing your preferences about the situation, like thinking that your partner dying is just as good as her not dying. It just means not feeling the actual pain of it.It doesn't complicate it, it just renders vivid the point - which is that sometimes we ought to hurt. If the pill eradiated grief, it would be wrong to take it after your partner has just died. Wrong, because you ought to grieve. — Bartricks
That's what a reason is. You keep typing "Reason" with a capital R, and referring to it with personal pronouns, like you think it's some kind of deity. A reason is just a justification, a motive, a "because" given in answer to a "why" question. I ask why is it unhealthy to be able (if you are able) to shrug off emotional pain more easily or quickly. If you say "because reason", that's like saying "because because". It's not an answer.When you ask for 'a reason' what you actually mean is not a reason, but an explanation that you personally find satisfying. — Bartricks
Thinking nothing is a great accomplishment. — Pantagruel
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