I ask this because I'm not finding philosophy very fun... — Pfhorrest
Your implication may be correct that this forum is not frequented primarily by academically-trained philosophers, but mostly by amateur & self-taught thinkers like me. Your interests, and I assume your training, are directed toward very abstruse & abstract topics. But many posters here use the forum to share gossip about politicians and viral pandemics, instead of pondering Liberty/Ethics/Justice, or the Viral Memes of Sophistry.But I still get the impression that most people here aren't interested in the same kind of big-picture philosophy-as-a-whole thing that my interest is all about. — Pfhorrest
It was more of a passion or hunger, an adventurous urge to explore further and further upstream in the intellectual waters and find where they all come from. — Pfhorrest
But I still get the impression that most people here aren't interested in the same kind of big-picture philosophy-as-a-whole thing that my interest is all about.
— Pfhorrest
Your implication may be correct that this forum is not frequented primarily by academically-trained philosophers, but mostly by amateur & self-taught thinkers like me. Your interests, and I assume your training, are directed toward very abstruse & abstract topics. But many posters here use the forum to share gossip about politicians and viral pandemics, instead of pondering Liberty/Ethics/Justice, or the Viral Memes of Sophistry.
The thing is - and this isn't targeted towards you - but philosophers aren't laying out entire systems anymore that aim to cover basically all topics. Philosophy - at least academic philosophy - is very concentrated. I think if you really want someone serious to go through your manifesto you're probably need to pay an expert philosopher for it. Even people with degrees in philosophy aren't going to take time out of their own day to read through pages of technical material and write up critiques. — BitconnectCarlos
Fans of that old game enjoyed having some new game content to play, and some of those fans enjoyed creating such content themselves, and both of those subgroups of that fandom checked out and gave feedback on my project, and eventually a lot of us ended up collaborating and creating something far greater than I could have all by myself in a vacuum.
Philosophy strikes me as the fruit of intellectual dizziness, paralysis or crisis. A sense of urgency is key: an urgent or debilitating craving for intellectual illumination. There's nothing fun about a debilitating craving. Through philosophical devotion, the dizziness, paralysis or crisis may be overcome — ZzzoneiroCosm
You probably just need a tonne more persistence and the resolve to finish a project — I like sushi
Try writing something about one particular topic in depth first. — I like sushi
I wonder if either of you have considered condensing your system into something that fits onto a t-shirt? — Possibility
Through philosophical devotion, the dizziness, paralysis or crisis may be overcome — ZzzoneiroCosm
:clap:Philosophy strikes me as the fruit of intellectual dizziness, paralysis or crisis. A sense of urgency is key: an urgent or debilitating craving for intellectual illumination ... — ZzzoneiroCosm
:up:Through philosophical devotion, the dizziness, paralysis or crisis may be overcome. After that, philosophy is just good exercise for the brain.
"It may be hopeless, but I'm trying anyway." (My pragmatic maxim).
"No unanswerable questions, no unquestionable answers." (My core philosophical principles).
"From the meaning of words to the meaning of life". (My take on what philosophy is about).
I love catchy little slogans like that, but they basically communicate nothing useful out of context. — Pfhorrest
:up: A worthy challenge, @Pfhorrest!I challenge you to write what your book is about in 200 words only. Try several ways of doing this, including writing with the assumption that your audience knows how you think and has your knowledge, writing with the assumption they know nothing about philosophy and don’t really care to, or write it like it’s a narrative laced with analogies and symbolism.
If you are as persistent as you say keep failing and enjoy failing — I like sushi
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.