Some question! It seems to me useful to distinguish between sickness and illness, sickness being that which incapacitates with respect to most thinking. And illness itself being on a continuum of disaccommodation that intersects sickness at one end, and ranges at the other end to just inconvenience. And then there is the distinction between mental illness and physical illness.I was going to ask for peoples thoughts on the impact of illness on philosophy but then I found this quote that I agree with. — Andrew4Handel
To me illness (which I am currently experiencing) reminds me that I have a body and that body is fallible and finite. I have to try and cope with this finitude. I am not sure how finitude squares with beliefs looking for eternal truths.
:death: Memento mori, memento vivare. :flower:To me illness (which I am currently experiencing) reminds me that I have a body and that body is fallible and finite. I have to try and cope with this finitude. — Andrew4Handel
Amor fati.I am not sure how finitude squares with beliefs looking for eternal truths — Andrew4Handel
It’s true that disease, illness and pain are keen reminders of our mortality, but to push it a little further, they should remind you that you are a body, as fragile as you are finite. — NOS4A2
It leaves the question as to whether mania - madness - itself can produce anything of real worth. At the moment it seems to me that can only be in a negative sense, the words and pictures - the works - produced by madness being ultimately a kind of accident, and of only incidental or accidental value. — tim wood
Cognitive neuroscience has been heavily based on neurological disorders, brain lesions and brain injures. Disorder and absence can show what constitutes normality. — Andrew4Handel
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.