......has already been established.a ground you can build your beliefs on — Monist
By this I mean that you should avoid this the first time around and come to your own conclusions about the text written by the philosopher before being spoon fed someone else’s interpretation. All philosophers are basically working from others anyway so why bother to distance yourself fro the text by seeing it through the lens of another? I understand that this is generally necessary for university student — I like sushi
If you were to start from scratch to study the fields of philosophy like epistemology, logic, metaphysics, ethics, philosophy of religion/science/mind etc., not to just know them, but being able to establish knowledge on any ground, to establish a ground you can build your beliefs on, how would your ultimate planning look like? — Monist
I understand that this is generally necessary for university students as they simply don’t have time to read through anything themselves. — I like sushi
If you were to start from scratch to study ... philosophy ... ? — Monist
... to establish knowledge on any ground,
... to establish a ground you can build your beliefs on,
I understand that this is generally necessary for university students as they simply don’t have time to read through anything themselves. — I like sushi
Yes. However, he implied that anyone beginning a study of a particular philosopher should read not only those works, but other's critiques as well. — jgill
That is why majors in almost any subject will graduate with close to zero understanding of that subject. The only ones who understand the subject are people who have been confronted with solving practical problems in that subject. Everybody else invariably sounds like an idiot. — alcontali
This seems a bit harsh and I do not agree. However, I will admit that working in an area may clarify and solidify the knowledge gained as an undergraduate. In the academic world the problems don't necessarily have to be practical to have this effect. — jgill
If you want to study the subject, which is not necessarily the same as developing a personal philosophy, I strongly recommend studying it historically. Start with the pre-Socratics, then read forward - widely, synoptically and historically. Try and get a feel for the questions that were being grappled with and the historical circumstances in which they arose. Get a feeling for dialectic - that is one of the most elusive aspects of philosophy. Don’t neglect Plato. Find some question that nags at you, then try and find sources that seem to be dealing with the same questions. Learn to feel the questions, not simply verbalise them. — Wayfarer
If you were to start from scratch to study the fields of philosophy like epistemology, logic, metaphysics, ethics, philosophy of religion/science/mind etc., not to just know them, but being able to establish knowledge on any ground, to establish a ground you can build your beliefs on, how would your ultimate planning look like?
(If you could include details like, what subject you would start with and/or what materials and platforms you would make use of, I would appreciate that)
I welcome well-thought and, strategically smart answers. — Monist
The ability to be a good programmer is something you either have or do not have. — EricH
However the courses I took in data structures, programming languages, math (e.g. set theory) gave me an advantage over my compatriots. — EricH
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