reflexivity of the mind and will; as self-awareness and self-control, the ability to have opinions about your opinions, to be aware of what you are thinking, to assess whether you are thinking the correct things, and if you deem that you are not, to cause yourself to think differently. — Pfhorrest
In other words, (at minimum) one needs the courage - nerve - to question questions and problematize problems without giving-in to the temptation to offer "answers" or "solutions" (à la self-help / sophistry), in order to do philosophy well (that is, limiting 'beliefs-in' to make room for agency (i.e. capabilities for judging, etc)).What are the faculties that enable someone to do philosophy, to be a philosopher?
— Pfhorrest
1.4 Courage Sapere aude. Amor fati. Solitaire et solidaire. No doubt intellectual courage is needed, but only moral courage suffices for philosophizing with skin in the game (i.e. fat in the fire), or like Freddy says "with a hammer", and not just to sound out "hollow idols" but to build anew in (or bricole with) the rubble (our) hammering makes of (the last) old prisons. Otherwise, without courage, philosophers amount to little more than idly vacuous, tenured twats - either p0m0 scholastics of "wokeness" or think-tank rationalizers of the status quo ante. — 180 Proof
allowing you to assess the validity of the inferences you make — Pfhorrest
I see no profit in allowing myself to do that which I am mandated by my very nature to have already done. — Mww
What it takes to do philosophy is the same as what it takes for a human to do anything of conscious intent: reason. — Mww
I hold that all that is needed, strictly speaking, is personhood — Pfhorrest
I use agent where you use "person" and agency where you use "sapience" and judgment instead of "wisdom". Our respective terms are more or less sympatico. A person, however, I think of as an agent (that's) capable of anticipating and recognizing suffering other than her own, or sentience (which you seem to dismiss).Sapience is that faculty that makes something a person; a sapient being is one that possesses those features that make humans count as persons. I analyze the structure of that faculty to be reflexivity of both experience and behavior, hence self-awareness and self-control. Sapience in that sense is not wisdom itself, but more like the capacity for wisdom. — Pfhorrest
Please clarify your terms. — fishfry
So I think it also takes a degree of willingness to go out on a limb, in that you’ll often find yourself in disagreement with a lot of people, with nothing more to go on than your reasoned conviction. — Wayfarer
I use agent where you use "person" and agency where you use "sapience" — 180 Proof
A person, however, I think of as an agent (that's) capable of anticipating and recognizing suffering other than her own, — 180 Proof
sentience (which you seem to dismiss). — 180 Proof
Is philosophy therefore more like sitting on the couch and watching tv than it is like brain surgery? — fishfry
I'll pick this nit, P, with non-sentient sapients - like (yeah speculative but plausable) strong AI. Sentience seems a pecularly biological-mammalian, phenomenal function and, at least from functionalist-connectionist or enactivist perspectives(?), not (strictly) required for sapience. :chin:All sapient things are sentient, but not all sentient things are sapient. — Pfhorrest
In other words, (at minimum) one needs the courage - nerve - to question questions and problematize problems without giving-in to the temptation to offer "answers" or "solutions" (à la self-help / sophistry), in order to do philosophy well (that is, limiting 'beliefs-in' to make room for agency (i.e. capabilities for judging, etc)). — 180 Proof
:chin: Okay, works for me ...You could totally have intelligence without sentience, as in a sophisticated problem-solving ability, but not sapience, since that just is reflective, higher-order sentience. — Pfhorrest
I profit from a philosopher only insofar as he can be an example. — Untimely Meditations III
Do not let yourself be deceived: great intellects are sceptical. Zarathustra is a sceptic. The strength, the freedom which proceed from intellectual power, from a superabundance of intellectual power, manifest themselves as scepticism. Men of fixed convictions do not count when it comes to determining what is fundamental in values and lack of values. Men of convictions are prisoners. — The Antichrist
Philosophy, as I have so far understood and lived it, means living voluntarily among ice and high mountains—seeking out everything strange and questionable in existence, everything so far placed under a ban by morality. — Ecce Homo
Interesting question. I would say philosophy is like sitting on the couch watching a Science Channel show on brain surgery, then chatting knowingly about it with others in the room. Hmmm . . — jgill
I feel like I shouldn’t even respond to this, — Pfhorrest
but I don’t mean that mere sapience is all it takes to do philosophy WELL. Just that people who do philosophy, well or otherwise, aren’t using any special faculties or abilities besides their capacity for reflection, honed to various degrees. — Pfhorrest
And that other faculties like intelligence, as in problem-solving ability, all by themselves, no matter how well-honed, don’t make someone able to do philosophy, without first adding in that capacity for reflection. — Pfhorrest
I don't know why. If you feel you shouldn't respond to something I write, you probably shouldn't. I surely meant no offense and don't understand why you wrote that. But if it's true you shouldn't have replied! Or perhaps asked for clarification. — fishfry
It would be helpful if you say which use of the word philosophizing you're using: breeze-shooting or academic research or at least serious philosophy, even if done by amateurs. — fishfry
I got a strong sense of hostility in your post, which was perhaps a mistake on my part. If so, my apologies. — Pfhorrest
I
I don’t see those as different in kind, but more of a spectrum of quality: doing the same thing at its core, but with different degrees of skill and sophistication. — Pfhorrest
Please quote the exact phrase that set you off so that I can analyze it and adjust my programming — fishfry
Or by philosophy do you mean typing idle thoughts into a philosophy forum, which is no more involved that watching tv; as opposed to excelling in academic philosophy, which typically takes years of focussed study? — fishfry
At my end it felt like sharp questions in response to vague and ambiguous thinking. You could just as well have thanked me. — fishfry
By that standard a high schooler cutting up a frog in biology class is engaged in the same essential activity as an experienced surgeon. — fishfry
I suspect we are all "doing philosophy" by simply making our way through life. — Frank Apisa
Waking in the morning and wondering, "What should I do first today?" is more "doing philosophy" — Frank Apisa
Pfhorrest
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I suspect we are all "doing philosophy" by simply making our way through life.
— Frank Apisa
:up:
Waking in the morning and wondering, "What should I do first today?" is more "doing philosophy"
— Frank Apisa
I wouldn’t say that exactly, but the immediate followup question of “How do I decide?” definitely is philosophy. — Pfhorrest
3017amen
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↪Frank Apisa
:up:
There is a difference between overthinking for thinking's sake and critical thinking. We all could use a little bit more of this : " It entails effective communication and problem-solving abilities as well as a commitment to overcome native egocentrism and sociocentrism." — 3017amen
It was this bit, which felt like an accusation that what I'm / we're doing here on this forum / in this thread is somehow deridable:
Or by philosophy do you mean typing idle thoughts into a philosophy forum, which is no more involved that watching tv; as opposed to excelling in academic philosophy, which typically takes years of focussed study?
— fishfry — Pfhorrest
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