Yes. But that was politics, not philosophy. :smile:Socrates was put to death for a reason. He was, in essence, systematically demolishing all the cherished beliefs of Athenian society. In other words he was being critical rather than charitable and that didn't go down well with the Athenian populace. — TheMadFool
I'm floating a theory that philosophy, like all optional human activity, is primarily an emotional experience and that the intellectual content of philosophy is more of a cover story. — Hippyhead
My immediate thought is that if someone is quickly scanning through another's ideas simply to find fault in those ideas, then that person isn't very interested or open to considering those ideas in the first place. — AntonioP
As for my thoughts on the discipline of philosophy in general, I don't believe it is pointless just because people can't agree on everything. It is noble to search for the truth — AntonioP
Good point! Many philosophers seem to believe that their purpose in life is to find fault in other people's reasoning --- to be the annoying gadfly. But that attitude is a win-lose game, which serves self-interest without contributing to wisdom in general. If the Athenians has actually listened to Socrates' criticisms, they may have learned something valuable --- including, how to give & take criticism with grace, rather than a grudge.Human beings are not rational beings with emotions. We are emotional beings with rationalizations. — Philosophim
Many philosophers seem to believe that their purpose in life is to find fault in other people's reasoning --- to be the annoying gadfly. — Gnomon
What is the Gotcha Game really all about? — Hippyhead
That's good advice, thank you.Perhaps something more like the 'have you considered' game might prevent a defensive response and encourage an open forum for learning. — Friendly
Personally, when I point at logical contradictions, it's often because I feel annoyed at a certain facile nihilist approach to philosophy, which consists in disolving a given object of enquiry or concept in the acid of analytical doubt and not building or proposing any other concept in exchange. This approach I call purely destructive analysis, or 'deconstruction without reconstruction'.As previously mentioned, what is the primary agenda?
When I point at logical contradictions, it's often because I feel annoyed at a certain facile nihilist approach to philosophy, which consists in disolving a given object of enquiry or concept in the acid of analytical doubt and not building or proposing any other concept in exchange. This approach I call purely destructive analysis, or 'deconstruction without reconstruction' — Olivier5
It's a philosophy that destroys any possibility of doing philosophy. A philosophy sawing the branch on which it sits. — Olivier5
Welcome to TPF. We need more life-affirming philosophers me think. :-)I totally get this, I'm fairly new to this world and still want to retain some humanistic and spiritual depth to my philosophy. Art, music, love, I wont allow those to be broken down I to nihilistic logical arguements! — Friendly
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