These concepts aren't apprehended and don't exist linearly, but are diffuse, interconnected, and apprehended purely through experience — Noble Dust
Overall you appear to be making an appeal for flawed 'experience' to take precedence over testable 'logic' in our examination of the world. What is there to prevent that becoming a free for all for every possible belief in which credibility is judged only by the fact that someone believes it? What safeguard is there against the grossest of error? — Barry Etheridge
Your concept of logic seems too narrow. It encompasses not only deduction (explication), but also retroduction (conjecture) and induction (evaluation). Intuition (or instinct) and creativity are essential to retroduction, the formulation of explanatory hypotheses; it is the only way that new ideas are generated. We then employ deduction to work out the necessary consequences of each hypothesis, and induction to test experimentally whether those outcomes indeed occur under the appropriate conditions. — aletheist
misguided intuition — Noble Dust
as the constant bickering over logical arguments for any given topic on this forum demonstrates. — Noble Dust
The problem I have here is that philosophy is treated as a science. — Noble Dust
Philosophy should be a search for meaning. Meaning is not an empirical physical object or force that avails itself to scientific inquiry. — Noble Dust
Meaning is spiritual, so naturally — Noble Dust
Firstly, I'm not getting your distinction between logic and intuition. Could you try and and differentiate them another way? — Heister Eggcart
How exactly can an intuition be misguided? — Heister Eggcart
It isn't philosophy's fault that some people treat philosophy as a science. — Heister Eggcart
How have you decided this to be true? — Heister Eggcart
What do you mean by this? And is spirituality necessarily natural? — Heister Eggcart
Science studies the outer, philosophy should study the inner. — Noble Dust
How exactly do you distinguish "outer" from "inner"? — aletheist
How and why would the best method of study...be different between the two? — aletheist
An appeal to defining terms in an attempt to invalidate this argument just distracts from the simple, self-evident truth of the primacy of experience. — Noble Dust
I'm not sure what you mean; I don't understand the sentence. — Noble Dust
I asked you to define your terms in an effort to understand better what you were saying. — aletheist
Why would I bother trying to invalidate an "argument" being offered by someone who rejects logic — aletheist
In what "simple" and "self-evident" sense do you believe that experience is primary? — aletheist
What happens when different people have different experiences? — aletheist
Why would we use a fundamentally different method to study "the inner" than what we use to study "the outer"? How exactly would the two methods differ? — aletheist
You need to extricate yourself from abstract analysis to grasp the primacy of experience. — Noble Dust
You're playing with a limited set of rules when everything has to be subjected to abstraction. — Noble Dust
We can't talk about it first; we have to experience first, and then talk about it. Actually, things always happen in this order, we just don't acknowledge it if we insist on the primacy of logic. — Noble Dust
Through intuition. My aim personally is to search for truth. I'm happy to use a different word than philosophy to signify the search, if that seems necessary. — Noble Dust
The meanings of words constantly change. Is philosophy still "the love of wisdom"?
I'm still looking for any evidence of wisdom in the discussions on this forum...
Meaning is extra-physical. It's the inner life of experience. — Noble Dust
I am still trying to figure out what you mean by "the primacy of experience." — aletheist
Well, we cannot think about everything in the universe all at once; so in that sense, we have no choice but to engage in abstraction - neglecting some aspects of reality in order to focus on others. — aletheist
Again, what do you mean here by "the primacy of logic"? — aletheist
Having a philosophy about x, y, or z is different from the actual doing of philosophy. Does this make sense? — Heister Eggcart
I find there to be a difference between having knowledge of having an experience, and having knowledge of what you experience. — Heister Eggcart
I think lots of posters here "love wisdom." This doesn't mean that everyone has knowledge of what wisdom is in practice, however :-* — Heister Eggcart
This makes no sense. — Heister Eggcart
But what did Pierce mean when he said he was first and foremost a logician, then? — Noble Dust
Logic is not a source of knowledge; it is the set of methods by which we obtain, organize, and communicate knowledge. — aletheist
If your critique is actually aimed at scientism, then your target is not logic — aletheist
I'm still looking for any evidence of wisdom in the discussions on this forum — Noble Dust
Perhaps the wise would not look to Internet forums as the depositories of wisdom. — Thorongil
Logic is actually an expression. It's intuitive and creative. Not a rule that necessitates or means of knowing regardless of anything else, but an expression all of its own, found nowhere and defined by nothing else. Every logical truth is born from nowhere and dies all on its own. Logic reasoning functions not by determining rules, but in understanding expressions themselves.
In this respect, it is far more powerful (or weaker, deepening on what you are looking for) than an arbiter. Rather than a force which commands, it is an expression of the living. Logic is "undoubtable" because it is always an expression itself. Commanders can be defied. Each moment, itself, cannot be. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If you agree with Pierce that "nothing is in the intellect which was not previously in the senses", then do you understand what I'm trying to say about experience being primary? Do you agree, or no? — Noble Dust
"The elements of every concept enter into logical thought at the gate of perception and make their exit at the gate of purposive action; and whatever cannot show its passports at both those two gates is to be arrested as unauthorized by reason." — aletheist
So if Pierce means that logic is the only gate for perception to first go through in order to arrive at purposive action, then no, I disagree, and I don't mean the same thing as him. — Noble Dust
So if Pierce means that logic is the only gate for perception to first go through in order to arrive at purposive action ... — Noble Dust
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