What is the use of reading something that the author himself has made illegible? — David Mo
You mean like Kant? — A Seagull
This is a very serious matter. It involves what philosophy is and should be.But perhaps you were not asking a serious question, but just feeling frustrated.... — unenlightened
This is a very serious matter. It involves what philosophy is and should be.
In my opinion, philosophy is meant to clarify, not to hide. However, there is a constant tendency towards "esotericism" - as you call it - in the history of philosophy. Why? — David Mo
So you can score brownie points with your peers by coming up with a new interpretation of the text, duh. — darthbarracuda
To sort out the wheat from the chaff and then watch the chaff complain about it. — StreetlightX
Because it lays the foundation for modern knowledge theory. I share in essence his critique of metaphysical thought.Why do you think that? For Kant meets the criteria for obscure and writing. — A Seagull
One day, when he left work, he went into a bookstore. Having overcome his fear of being taken for an intruder (which he was), he took a random volume of philosophy and read a page from which he understood nothing. This must be the culture, he thought, so he bought the book, went home with it and started reading it on the sofa, in front of the mute TV. Within half an hour he was exhausted. Although the book was written in his own language, it had a multitude of words that he did not understand. After deciding that the next day he would buy a dictionary, he closed the volume and turned on the television, on whose screen the drugging caterpillars corresponding to the day and the hour began to flow at once. The man put his legs on the table and let himself be invaded by the sweet evil.
When he had been invaded he looked at the closed volume and had a revelation: the book, even if he did not understand it, was life, while the television, which he understood, was death, so he got up, took the device off the shelf and hid it under the sink, next to the dishwasher. Then he began to read those pages slowly, moving his tongue inside his mouth, without understanding anything. And the less he understood, the wiser he was. Who can explain it to him? — Juan José Millás
And how do you distinguish the wheat from the chaff? Do you have some objective process for this or do you rely on popular opinion? — A Seagull
Kant's ideas are not obscure. Or not as dark as they seem at first glance. The proof is that they have not provoked great disputes about their primary meaning — David Mo
There may be discussions about isolated points, but the commentators I have read agree on the fundamentals.Although to say that Kant scholars dispute the meaning of what he wrote isn't saying much. — SophistiCat
To sort out the wheat from the chaff and then watch the chaff complain about it. — StreetlightX
That is the question: What is the use of reading something that the author himself has made illegible? — David Mo
One criteria is anyone who thinks Kant is hard to read. — StreetlightX
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