Why do you label a clarifying question as derision? — fishfry
You are equating a kid stabbing a doll with a knife, with a trained surgeon excising a tumor. You're claiming the actions are essentially the same. That's nonsense. — fishfry
Okay. IMO, that's (an) aptitude - necessary but not sufficient. By courage I understand the competence - as Spinoza says '"intellect and will" are one and the same' - to judge that's acquired - adaptively disciplined - by taking considered (physical and/or psychological) risks in decision-making in which facts-of-the-matter push-back hard against judgments. I think of "mindfulness" and "curiosity" more as dispositions, or stances, towards experience rather than competences, and thereby applicable to any intelligent endeavor, but not unique to 'doing philosophy'. "Sapience" alone seems to me too disembodied, or disinterested, for 'LOVING Wisdom' (i.e. OPTIMIZING - via ecstasis/alterity - Agency). :death: :flower:But this is not a faculty separate from sapience, rather only the refinement of it: curiosity is just more mindfulness to that of which one is unsure, and courage is just more willfulness toward that of which one is afraid. — Pfhorrest
. . . but the kinds of things you need are the same, differing in quality, not kind. — Pfhorrest
It's not nonsense to say that what you need to do both is eyes, hands, a knife, and the ability to coordinate what you see with your eyes and the knife in your hand. You have to be much better at that to be a surgeon than to be a kid stabbing a doll, but the kinds of things you need are the same, differing in quality, not kind. — Pfhorrest
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