My claim is that philosophers have to do better than mere subjectivity, otherwise their entire program turns to dust. — JerseyFlight
Then why are you insisting that your own subjectivity has any philosophical value? — Philosophim
I am going to assume that you must see this. — Philosophim
Someone else mentioned up thread, in a way better than I can recount from memory, how one of the founding principles of analytic philosophy was the rejection of system-building — Pfhorrest
So politically, I'm a socialist because I'm a libertarian, and I'm a libertarian because of my deontological normative ethics (something like the non-aggression principle that you're probably familiar with), and my deontological ethics hinges on there being things that are objectively right or wrong (if it's not actually wrong to aggress upon people, but just "unpopular" or "illegal" or something, then the whole politics falls apart), and that account of things being objectively right or wrong can't be explained without explaining what "right" and "wrong" (etc) even mean, which is an account of moral semantics, which of mine hinges on the concept of speech-acts, but in any case all moral semantics, being semantics, hinge on some linguistic concepts or other. — Pfhorrest
In Marx a split occurred, philosophy was brought back down to earth, rescued from the games and error of the supernatural idealists. There have been lots of philosophers who labor in the realm of relevant theory, as opposed to abstract idealism. — JerseyFlight
Clearly he (( Russell )) thought this activity had value -- in contrast to what, mere theory? — JerseyFlight
Whatever Analytic Philosophy is it is not concerned with politics and never pretended to be. — Janus
Popper sure seemed concerned with the political implications of his philosophy of science and etymology. — Pfhorrest
I have a very different view of philosophy, knowing it to be thought. But to answer you from the basis of your own premise: then what does philosophy tell you about Analytical Philosophy? Here you have already affirmed a distinction of value. — JerseyFlight
Sure, but Popper is both a philosopher of science and a political philosopher, and would not usually be considered an analytic philosopher since his main concern was not with language, semantics and logic. — Janus
Also, I think you meant 'epistemology' not "etymology". — Janus
Correct me if I'm wrong, but my understanding is that Popper is socio-historically located within the stream of analytic philosophers. I know this has been a topic of contention in this thread, but as I understand the term "analytic philosophy", it is not the philosophy narrowly concerned with language, semantics, and logic as topics, but the philosophy that approaches any of its topics, including things like political philosophy, in the manner pioneered by the Vienna Circle et al, with logical rigor, breaking things down into pieces analytically, hence the name. — Pfhorrest
You should not play this vapid game Banno. — StreetlightX
It's been reported to me that JerseyFlight has been harassing other posters with PMs. If you've been on the receiving end of one of these, kindly let me know. — StreetlightX
Like, for better or worse, Marx changed the course of history. — Olivier5
He¨s not throwing them aside as BS. What he says is that capitalism can be controlled, with institutions in a nation, limiting the possibilities for the market to ursurp the citizens, with laws and regulations. He specifically mention social democraties in western Europe to be successful examples.In other words, Popper is not dong motive questioning: he is not saying "Booh booh Marx was a communist, how dare he". He is instead comparing Marx and Hegel's historical theories with practice, using his criteria of falsifiability, and showing it's pure BS. Those guys essentialize history as some grand necessary trajectory that has nothing to see with reality. — Olivier5
He¨s not throwing them aside as BS. What he says is that capitalism can be controlled, with institutions in a nation, limiting the possibilities for the market to ursurp the citizens, with laws and regulations. He specifically mention social democraties in western Europe to be successful examples. — Ansiktsburk
I feel bad sometimes for studying philosophy. Other fields are focusing on actual problems like how to stop COVID or how to help countries with serious economic problems while philosophers shut them selves off from the outside world to go play in their own heads or provide extensive commentary on a long dead philosopher that no one cares to read and often requires a second language to fully understand. — BitconnectCarlos
One has to wonder about the complicity of this middle-management demand for 'value'. — StreetlightX
Exactly. This demand for (whatever) philosophy to justify itself in terms of its measurable value to society ought to be resisted.
I almost listed him... but went instead for his former lover, finding her more readable, more interesting and more palatable — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.