• Daniel
    458
    No one needs to repent.
  • Asif
    241
    @Daniel It's a joke. You know humour.
  • Daniel
    458
    It's a Philosophy forum.
  • Asif
    241
    @Daniel Philosophy precludes humour?
    Go back to sleep.
  • Daniel
    458
    Attack the idea, not the person.
  • Asif
    241
    @Daniel You call that an attack?
    Wow! As I said before the snowflake preachy philosophy is well represented. You get a cupcake for your wise cliche.
  • Daniel
    458
    Pardon my language. I meant, direct your words to the idea, not to the person. Attack was such a strong word.
  • Asif
    241
    @Daniel Sometimes the idea is an expression of the person.
  • Daniel
    458
    But not the person itself.
  • Asif
    241
    @Daniel What is the person "itself"! Some kantian abstraction!? Some ideas are an expression of a person.
    Or do you want to preach to me anymore how I Express myself?
  • Daniel
    458
    I agree, some ideas are. But when an idea is expressed by a subject and received by another, and when it becomes the object of discussion/debate, the idea is not the subject who expresses it, nor does it belong to such subject alone. All I am saying is that in a philosophical discussion/debate, words should be directed to that shared idea which is under discussion and not to the person or people who expressed the idea.
  • Asif
    241
    @Daniel It depends on the context and the idea expressed. You can say all you want. I said sometimes.
    You ignore the context and what I'm saying. I will conduct my responses as I wish. I dont need your hackneyed generalisms.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    I would say the 'proof' lies in making good decisions which enable one to achieve one's goals.ie the practicalities of the world align with one's description of the world. And yes it is subjective, but it is a subjectivity that can be shared by others.
    — A Seagull
    To this, Nazi Germany.
    tim wood

    Nazi germany! I rest my case! Pure kneejerk clicheism with no nuance patience or attempt to understand the posters intent or analysis.
    Let's be real. All truth/description is subjective/intersubjective. Doesnt mean all subjectivity is equal or agreed upon even accurate. Like a complete novice tim wood
    Asif

    What's your problem? Did you read Seagull's? Did you understand it? In what way is the reference to Nazi Germany inappropriate? It seems to me pretty close to a bull's-eye. If he did not mean what he wrote, maybe he should not have written it?

    And truth doesn't mean true? The truth might not even be accurate? What do you imagine truth to be? Oh, right, subjective/intersubjective - what does that mean? Or is that subjective/intersubjective too? - or does it just mean what you say it means, whenever you're pleased to say it? And if its all subjective, what does agreement matter? What even is agreement?

    Relativism is just nihilism with a dinner jacket. You've got yours half off. But you haven't thought it through. If it's all relative and you're right and I'm wrong, then I'm right and you're wrong. Right? Wrong? It's useless to ask you where you are, because you're nowhere and don't even know it.

    Any time you want to break into a reasonable discussion, I'm here, though my patience isn't what it used to be. And there's a real question as to whether you're able.
  • Asif
    241
    @tim wood Total strawman.
    Go read again. And how about asking for a clarification or asking how you have misunderstood my position.
    Knee jerk could get no jerkier.
  • A Seagull
    615
    The first task of philosophy is to describe the world. — A SeagullAnd how might you do that? You take for granted your concepts, not realizing that at different times and places people have held different concepts on how the world works and what it is.

    I would say the 'proof' lies in making good decisions which enable one to achieve one's goals.ie the practicalities of the world align with one's description of the world. And yes it is subjective, but it is a subjectivity that can be shared by others. — A SeagullTo this, Nazi Germany.
    tim wood

    Do you have a point? If so what is it?

    Or if you have a non-rhetorical question, I might try to answer it.

    PS It is well known in debating circles that the first person to brink up Nazi Germany is the loser.
  • Asif
    241
    Protagorus the most astute of all famous philosophers explained this common sense about reality some time ago...But the perversion of common sense by Plato and academic philosophy strawmanned Protagorus.
    Subjectivity does not equate to relativity.
    Some descriptions are better than others. Some are agreed upon. And some are inaccurate. Some are even holy lies and propoganda. How simple it is for those who trust their common sense and dont run in fear to the idolatry of the holy lies.
  • SophistiCat
    2.2k
    I've been on TPF and its predecessor for a middling long time, and it seems to me that we're awash at this time with an unusual number of posts from people who are confused about what philosophy is. This includes the ignorant and the stupid - I plead guilty to both, ignorance all the time and occasional stupidity. And these, ignorance and being stupid, our human condition, redeemed in the willingness to be corrected and the effort to learn. But here also many who are not willing, those who just want to rant and are oblivious or hostile to argument or even sense. Those agenda-driven whose methods are mainly Prucrustean; Trumpian who insist their nonsense is sense and have zero interest in real sense; woo-mongers interested in nothing but their own woo, impervious to reason. And those who do not understand, and aren't willing to. These appearing in every one of the main TPF categories.tim wood

    And then there are the bigots...

    My thoughts on the middle east is that it is one of the places on the planet where civilization "as we know it" first appeared. But middle-easterners have been fucking it up from day one to the present. I've met middle-easterners; I've known middle-easterners; and it seems to me that being one is just a disease of intellect and spirit.tim wood
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    I would say the 'proof' lies in making good decisions which enable one to achieve one's goals; i.e., the practicalities of the world align with one's description of the world. And yes it is subjective, but it is a subjectivity that can be shared by others. — A Seagull
    To this, Nazi Germany.— tim wood

    Do you have a point? If so what is it?
    Or if you have a non-rhetorical question, I might try to answer it.
    PS It is well known in debating circles that the first person to bring up Nazi Germany is the loser.
    A Seagull

    Your prescription seems to fit Nazi Germany to a T - and other places. Which suggests to me there is something or things deeply wrong with it. That is, I say there is. You may differ. Do you care to defend your expression as it sits? Or can we both agree it's faulty, and leave it at that? Saving you the tedium of remediation.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    And how about asking for a clarification or asking how you have misunderstood my position.Asif
    My bad, I mentioned I cannot tell you and Judaka apart, but by now that's part on you, in that you both seem cut from the same cloth. And I have asked, repeatedly.

    Please explain - and per your own rules, no appeal to authority.tim wood

    And of course:
    What's your problem? Did you read Seagull's? Did you understand it? In what way is the reference to Nazi Germany inappropriate? It seems to me pretty close to a bull's-eye. If he did not mean what he wrote, maybe he should not have written it?

    And truth doesn't mean true? The truth might not even be accurate? What do you imagine truth to be? Oh, right, subjective/intersubjective - what does that mean? Or is that subjective/intersubjective too? - or does it just mean what you say it means, whenever you're pleased to say it? And if its all subjective, what does agreement matter? What even is agreement?

    Relativism is just nihilism with a dinner jacket. You've got yours half off. But you haven't thought it through. If it's all relative and you're right and I'm wrong, then I'm right and you're wrong. Right? Wrong? It's useless to ask you where you are, because you're nowhere and don't even know it.

    Any time you want to break into a reasonable discussion, I'm here, though my patience isn't what it used to be. And there's a real question as to whether you're able.
    tim wood

    So I ask and you don't answer. But then you tax me for not asking. Damned if I do, damned if I don't. Very clever, and original. And useless.
  • Judaka
    1.7k

    He really is the definition of a bigot, a word which has used a lot where it shouldn't be but its apt here. That quote you've given is definitely one of the worst things I've read on the forum. Now reading his argument to @A Seagull it is so fallacious, rude and classless. The OP is literally about how philosophy is about being good-intentioned and reasonable, I'm once again left astonished by what I'm seeing from @tim wood.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    And then there are the bigots...

    My thoughts on the middle east is that it is one of the places on the planet where civilization "as we know it" first appeared. But middle-easterners have been fucking it up from day one to the present. I've met middle-easterners; I've known middle-easterners; and it seems to me that being one is just a disease of intellect and spirit.
    — tim wood
    SophistiCat

    I'll take issue here. The request was for my thoughts, which I provided. But where's the bigotry? Am I mistaken that the middle-east is a place of original civilization? Can you say Ur? or Gilgamesh? Did ot the middle east basically preserve western civilization while it languished in most of Europe? But has not also the middle east been the site of wars and oppression for nearly all time, and even as we speak, even while other places seem to try to evolve away from that? And my personal experiences with middle-easterners is my own; but one example, the acquaintance of mine, here to become an engineer, who explained that friendship notwithstanding, were there a jihad he'd have to kill me, my not being Muslim. What do you make of that? And I should like to think that in many ways, the west is more desirably progressive than the middle east.

    The only account I can think of is that Islam is the younger by around 700 years, an account, maybe even an excuse, but not quite exculpatory.

    To my way of thinking bigotry is an offense against thought, being an illegitimate substitute for it. So if I offended, point it out.
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    But has not also the middle east been the site of wars and oppression for nearly all time, and even as we speak, even while other places seem to try to evolve away from that? And my personal experiences with middle-easterners is my own; but one example, the acquaintance of mine, here to become an engineer, who explained that friendship notwithstanding, were there a jihad he'd have to kill me, my not being Muslim. What do you make of that? And I should like to think that in many ways, the west is more desirably progressive than the middle east.tim wood

    To my way of thinking bigotry is an offense against thought, being an illegitimate substitute for it. So if I offended, point it out.tim wood

    Here is an illegitimate substitute for thought: discrediting the being of an entire region of individuals (“being a middle-easterner” as “a disease of intellect and spirit”) by the expressed thoughts of one person (or even a handful) from that region. We all would like to think that we are “more desirably progressive” than others, but generalisations such as these are the definition of an offence against thought, I would imagine. As an example, it has come to my attention that the US has enjoyed just 16 years of peace since its inception, and no more than a day since 1970 - a case of the pot and kettle? More desirably progressive? Not in this way, it would seem.

    I for one thought you were better than this, Tim.

    Now, hopefully everyone can swallow their pride long enough to return to a meaningful discussion of the topic - which I was enjoying before it descended into accusations of inciting war and oppression....

    The goal of the original philosophers, according to Pierre Hadot, ‘was to cultivate a specific, constant attitude toward existence, by way of the rational comprehension of the nature of humanity and its place in the cosmos. This cultivation required, specifically, that students learn to combat their passions and the illusory evaluative beliefs instilled by their passions, habits, and upbringing.’Wayfarer

    ‘Combat’ here may be the wrong term - not to ignore, isolate or exclude, but to increase inter-subjective awareness, connection and collaboration with a diversity of evaluative beliefs in relation to passions, habits and upbringing, such that this ‘rational comprehension’ doesn’t limit itself to avoid uncertainty.

    For me, philosophy is more about the questions than the answers, more about existence than humanity, and more about awareness than exclusion. But I do recognise that it takes both approaches to render philosophy productive as such. So I will continue to challenge ignorance, anthropocentrism and claims to certainty, and expect to be challenged myself on clarity, context and purpose.

    The day that everyone agrees on ‘the nature of humanity and its place in the cosmos’ is the day philosophy is obsolete.
  • David Mo
    960

    In general, I agree.
    I would change "Ethics" for "Morality".
    The philosophy of morality is valid for me and is generally called "ethics".
    It's true that there is some ambiguity in these names. That's why it's good to clear it up.
  • David Mo
    960
    The day that everyone agrees on ‘the nature of humanity and its place in the cosmos’ is the day philosophy is obsolete.Possibility

    Does this mean that the essence of today's philosophy is free and rational debate? That's a good point... to start a philosophical debate.

    The first point would be: What is rational?

    (The day the history of philosophy ends, we can leave it for the moment. These things are usually simple provocations to debate and do not have much scope. You know what happened with Fukuyama and the end of history. What was left of him was taken away by the pandemic).
  • SophistiCat
    2.2k
    I'll take issue here. The request was for my thoughts, which I provided.tim wood

    Their intellectual temper is (as everyone remarks) the reverse of dogmatic, in fact pleasingly modest. They are quick to acknowledge that their own opinion, on any matter whatsoever, is only their opinion; and they will candidly tell you, too, the reason why it is only their opinion. This reason is, that it is their opinion. — David Stove
  • Asif
    241
    @tim wood Your problem is you are way too fond of sweeping generalisations and unfounded assumptions and then when you cant understand a nuance you resort to your prejudicial generalisations even further.
    You have enough in this small thread to identify your bad habits and inaccuracies.
    Seriously,read back this thread carefully and honestly and you will see what is meant.
    I'm all for banter and humour but your stuff is just strawman caricatures and misrepresentations.
    What I find funny is your critique of subjectivity said with all your subjective fervour!!! I wouldn't mind but you seem unaware and unwilling to acknowledge your subjectivity.
    Oh well,maybe platos subjective opinions will help you realise what subjectivity really is.
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    Does this mean that the essence of today's philosophy is free and rational debate? That's a good point... to start a philosophical debate.

    The first point would be: What is rational?
    David Mo

    Not debate: more dialectics. The aim is not for one side or another to win or be conclusive, but to arrive at a relatively shared sense of reality. To relate to, without subsuming, an alternative perspective of truth (as distinct from a statement of what is true) enables us to speculate on the limitations of our own perspective.

    Often it is our rational process itself that is challenged in relation to inter-subjective experience, and we may currently have insufficient information between us to resolve it. As modern philosophers, I think we need to work with this uncertainty and be open to inter-subjective collaboration and speculation, rather than retreat into excluding uncertain information on the grounds of its subjectivity. ‘Someone must be essentially right’ inspires far less philosophical progress than ‘somewhere between our perspectives must exist the right answer’ - or at least the right question...

    Unless your philosophy is open to adjustment, you’re not doing philosophy. It’s rational process in free play with imaginative speculation.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead. — Thomas Paine
    Naming TPF names isn't really necessary, is it?
  • Mww
    4.9k


    Guilty, I know. But shameless, I think.
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