This is very confusing. "Thinking alone", "armchair"... You mean philosophy doesn't do experiments? This would differentiate philosophy from the natural sciences, but not from many other branches of knowledge. Pure mathematics, for example.by thinking alone; from the armchair, as it were (ex cathedra, literally). — Ciceronianus the White
Can you answer your own questions? Some of them are not very clear and I don't like to play riddles. :grin:Well, what makes object-discourse different from meta-discourse? suppositions different from presuppositions? judgments different from criteria? knowing different from understanding? :chin: — 180 Proof
This is very confusing. "Thinking alone", "armchair"... You mean philosophy doesn't do experiments? This would differentiate philosophy from the natural sciences, but not from many other branches of knowledge. Pure mathematics, for example. — David Mo
consider to be outside the domain of philosophy, in that they appeal to specific, contingent hedonic experiences in the same way the physical sciences appeal to specific, contingent empirical experiences. — Pfhorrest
Hedonism is only a theory within ethics. Where do you leave all its opponents? — David Mo
One's own experiences are very different from scientific ones. These concern inter-communicable experience of external objects. They are or try to be objective. If you restrict philosophy to personal experience this would relegate it to subjective. — David Mo
Philosophy is more or less the oftentimes superfluous process of refining our learned understanding of things. How, what, and why depends on your given persuasions... — VagabondSpectre
On the contrary. Different ethical theories think they know what good is, they just don't agree. For example, with hedonism. I don't agree with hedonism either, unless it is reformulated in such a way that it ceases to be evident.As not actually philosophy at all, in the end, because they ultimately end up saying there is no way to tell what is good or bad. — Pfhorrest
Objectivity is just the limit of inter-subjectivity. Every scientific observation is just a bunch of people confirming that they too also share that same subjective experience i — Pfhorrest
This commensurablist approach to morality may be called "liberal hedonic moralism", as moralism is the prescriptive face of objectivism, — The Codex Quarentis: Commensurablism
That's a simple philosophical opinion. You should argue better to be a reasoned opinion. Because the characteristic of philosophy is that it reasons what it says. Not like in your case, where you just set your opinion down as the only reasonable one. — David Mo
That's a simple philosophical opinion. — David Mo
You should argue better to be a reasoned opinion. — David Mo
Because the characteristic of philosophy is that it reasons what it says. — David Mo
Not like in your case, where you just set your opinion down as the only reasonable one. — David Mo
Could you give some examples? Let's say ten. If there's a lot of them, it should be easy to do. Please give examples of "pontification", as you called it.However, there are lots of philosophies that don't reason what they say (and some that don't even bother trying); — VagabondSpectre
Sorry, I didn't mean simple in a pejorative sense, but not argumentative. Not complex.They say that it's a love of knowledge, but I suspect it's rather a love of articulation and pontification. — VagabondSpectre
his is very confusing. "Thinking alone", "armchair"... You mean philosophy doesn't do experiments? This would differentiate philosophy from the natural sciences, but not from many other branches of knowledge. Pure mathematics, for example. — David Mo
any branch of knowledge which has as its subject matter the world in which we live and is based on our interaction with that world as living organisms — Ciceronianus the White
And do you think that Sartre's concept of anguish -for example- does not speak of the world and man's relationship to the world? Sartre would not be an "armchair" philosopher? — David Mo
On the contrary. Different ethical theories think they know what good is, they just don't agree. — David Mo
But it is not the same to share an experience of the same phenomenon, as to share the experience of an event that only happens inside my head. — David Mo
There's a fallacy here. The moral good cannot be elected by a majority like the government. — David Mo
List of religions and spiritual traditions.Could you give some examples? Let's say ten. If there's a lot of them, it should be easy to do. — David Mo
Please give examples of "pontification", as you called it. — David Mo
In ancient Rome, the pontifices were powerful priests who administered the part of civil law that regulated relationships with the deities recognized by the state. Their name, pontifex, derives from the Latin words pons, meaning "bridge," and facere, meaning "to make," and some think it may have developed because the group was associated with a sacred bridge over the river Tiber (although there is no proof of that). With the rise of Catholicism, the title "pontifex" was transferred to the Pope and to Catholic bishops. Pontificate derives from "pontifex," and in its earliest English uses it referred to things associated with such prelates. By the early 1800s, "pontificate" was also being used derisively for individuals who spoke as if they had the authority of an ecclesiastic.
About your battery of questions: Which one do you want to start with? Because all at the same time I'm afraid I can't do it. I have my own time limits. — David Mo
With the rise of Catholicism, the title "pontifex" was transferred to the Pope and to Catholic bishops. — VagabondSpectre
That's like saying light is "what we gaze upon or look for". I don't think so. Rather: we see, as Plato might say, by light - by seeing, so to speak - which is not "given", not "seen" as such. — 180 Proof
Yes, being is presupposed -- it's what's thought and questioned.
By "presupposed" I understand, instead, conditions[...]which must obtain for 'thoughts and questions' to make sense, and not "what's thought and questioned" itself. Being is not a supposition - answer to the question "what is real?" (caveat: Heideggerian "what is" is a gnomic sentence-fragment, and not a question). — 180 Proof
Philosophy doesn't appeal to empirical observation? What would be considered "evidence" in that case?
— Xtrix
A priori argument. — Pfhorrest
You're taking epistemological positions for granted, though. — Pfhorrest
In the context of the meaning of being (which I argue is what philosophy thinks). But in that case the nature of ἐπιστήμη is not being used in the sense you're using it, nor is "truth."
— Xtrix
No, in the context of whether all philosophy starts with assumed axioms. — Pfhorrest
There is no way around it -- you have to start somewhere. Any proposition in philosophy presupposes something, and in the end it does in fact come down to matters of belief. These core beliefs I call "axioms," but call it whatever you want. It's not that they're unquestionable -- it's that you have to accept them only in order to proceed. —
Whether or not there's an afterlife isn't relevant.
— Xtrix
We’re not talking about an afterlife, but about continuing in more of the same kind of life again. If all of one’s conscious existence ceased permanently at death, that would guarantee an end to dukkha. It’s only against the prospect of that going on indefinitely that any special escape is needed. — Pfhorrest
So philosophy, in your view, is restricted to the a priori. Since anything a priori does not rely on empirical observation or experimentation, it's quite a stretch to associate it with "evidence." If it's a priori, it needs no evidence. — Xtrix
This includes your proposition about critical rationalism. — Xtrix
This, again, assumes a scientific method, and no one so far has demonstrated there is one -- as far as I can tell.
— Xtrix
That there are various scientific methods according to the various sciences and that they are the best way to present evidence about facts seems to me unquestionable. If you know of another method, I can reconsider my position. — David Mo
To this day we're in the shadow of Aristotle
— Xtrix
You don't say. Did Wittgenstein believe in prime mover and prima materia? First news.
You're exaggerating a little. — David Mo
In everyday life, it's certainly not the case that definitions "work in the background" -- or if they do, it's exceptional.
— Xtrix
The definition is only the use of the word. You may be aware of how you use it or not, but you cannot stop using it one way or another. That is its meaning. — David Mo
Maybe we simply have to say "So much the worse for definitions," and leave it to intuition and specific situations.
— Xtrix
You can't avoid definitions. If you don't make them explicit, they will work in the background. And this is a source of pseudo-problems.
— David Mo
It depends on what you mean. In explicit, theoretical understanding -- that's certainly true. In everyday life, it's certainly not the case that definitions "work in the background" -- or if they do, it's exceptional. — Xtrix
I don't see why "opposite." They're just different.
— Xtrix
Well, didn't you say they were the same? Are they the same or are they different? Because the same and different are opposites. Or aren't they? — David Mo
So philosophy, in your view, is restricted to the a priori. Since anything a priori does not rely on empirical observation or experimentation, it's quite a stretch to associate it with "evidence." If it's a priori, it needs no evidence.
— Xtrix
The “evidence” part was just distinguishing it from religion. I said “reasons or evidence” then. Distinguishing it from science further narrows that down to basically “reason”. — Pfhorrest
On the contrary, it is consciousness that we have, if we mean by this our lived world -- our experiences, our being
— Xtrix
You put a lot of things into your concept of consciousness. It is not the same to have perceptions as to capture the 'I'. Among other things because you do not grasp your "self" in the same way that you perceive a phenomenon. What is an empty abstraction is not the concept of consciousness, but the way you use it. It does not refer to anything concrete. The opposition between reason and consciousness that you make is meaningless. — David Mo
For the rest, it would be good for you to distinguish between discursive reason and reason. In your daily life you are constantly using reason. Even when you perceive things. You evaluate, compare, remember, draw conclusions... Making syllogisms is another thing. Of course. — David Mo
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