"Philosophy can be said to consist of three activities: to see the commonsense answer, to get yourself so deeply into the problem that the common sense answer is unbearable, and to get from that situation back to the commonsense answer.” - Wittgenstein — Paul
Obviously I can't speak for Wittgenstein, but substitute intuitive sense for common sense and the whole paragraph makes intuitive sense.At this point I feel the need to ask, what is common sense? Also, most importantly, is Wittgenstein's observation on philosophy something someone just using common sense would say? I'd say if everything is simply a matter of common sense it takes a person with an uncommon sense to notice it - someone like Wittgenstein for example - and that amounts to self-refutation. — TheMadFool
Obviously I can't speak for Wittgenstein, but substitute intuitive sense for common sense and the whole paragraph makes intuitive sense.
Common sense does not mean in German what it means in English. In English, it means the sense that is common to all. Which is in itself an impossible proposition in most cases. In German (and in Hungarian, coincidentally, as in most other European languages) common sense is expressed as "reine Vernunft", or tiszta esz, in Hungarian, or Nyezhdravanskoye Nyiho in Russian: pure reason, pure brain, pure thinking. A sober mind. That sorta thing, nothing to do with consensus. Thus, Wittgenstein's uncommon sense is dictated by his personal intuitive thought, which is different from mine or yours; but the slavish stupid fucking asshole translators are incapable of bridging some differences in lingual constructs. — god must be atheist
Oh, what's the point? Thanks — TheMadFool
You asked what common sense was. I explained it. That's the point. "Common sense" in the quote by Wittgenstein is nothing but a bad translation that alters the effective meaning of his point — god must be atheist
but the slavish stupid fucking asshole translators are incapable of bridging some differences in lingual constructs. — god must be atheist
I'm reminded of something I wrote in the intro to my own philosophy book:
"The general worldview I am going to lay out is one that seems to be a naively uncontroversial, common-sense kind of view, i.e. the kind of view that I expect people who have given no thought at all to philosophical questions to find trivial and obvious. Nevertheless I expect most readers, of most points of view, to largely disagree with the consequent details of it, until I explain why they are entailed by that common-sense view. Many various other philosophical schools of thought deviate from that common-sense view in different ways, and their adherents think that they have surpassed that naive common sense and attained a deeper understanding. In these essays I aim to shore up and refine that common-sense view into a more rigorous form that can better withstand the temptation of such deviation, and to show the common error underlying all of those different deviations from this common-sense view."
I guess as much as I dislike Wittgenstein's attitude, we have more in common than I often think. — Pfhorrest
That seems like a strange way of putting it. I would agree that the definition of “common sense” is something like “something that has a broad consensus”, in the sense of being large uncontroversial. But the specific philosophical principles that I think rightly enjoy that broad uncontroversial consensus do not include anything like “whatever enjoys a consensus is probably right”, if that’s what you mean. That would actually violate the second example of a common-sense view that I gave, that somebody (in this case a majority) just saying so doesn’t make it true. — Pfhorrest
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