If the intention of a questioner is simply to find agreement there is doubt about the whole point of the enterprise. — Amity
Questions are not always easy to form. Even well thought out questions with a view to reasoned discussion can lead down surprising avenues to explore, including others' reactions. — Amity
We aren't ideal, we have to deal with the unideal. And we ask unideal questions for all kinds of reasons. — Amity
Compared to the classroom experience, the 'new' part of learning in TPF environment is perhaps less about people showing or witnessing character but more about processing our own thoughts, feelings and attitudes. — Amity
Reason tends to fly out the window when we feel under attack. Initial sensations of dislike or discomfort can limit our ability to stand back and think 'straight'. — Amity
I don't mind being 'pissed off' or people being 'pissed off' with me. — Amity
It shows passion and action.
It is better than complete apathy or indifference. — Amity
A little bit of aggravation is good for the soul. Now is that 'wise' or not ? :chin:
I find a distinction between that which is wise, and the love of the pursuit of it for wisdoms sake. The former is simply being, and the latter is seeking the reason for it.
Socrates may deny being a wise man, but lets say we perceive him to be such. If he presented himself to an open forum, I would ask him questions to understand why he is or is not as I perceive him to be. If he wanted me to piss him off in the pursuit, I guess I could try to humor him. But he would have to tell me that, or I'd have to ask him: "Hey Socrates, how best can I get you to explain to me why I think you are wise? Should I piss you off, so you can show me I am wrong about you? Or should I just ask well-thought-out, probing questions?" But if he just wants to go be wise somewhere, I'll leave him alone. — Amity
Philosophy is, literally, the love of wisdom. — James Riley
If you were to visit most university philosophy departments the faculty would regard this claim as quaint. — Fooloso4
I suspect you are right. Drilling down on the word "love" might cause some discomfort. — James Riley
Do you conclude from this that all those professors getting paid to teach and write are not doing philosophy? — Fooloso4
his shows the problem with the question about the purpose of philosophy. People are engaged in different activities, and the only thing they all have in common is that they are called philosophy. — Fooloso4
For me, the purpose of Philosophy (quest for wisdom) is to figure out what's wrong-with-the-world, in order to do something about it. Mis-using Nature is one of those "wrongs". And "self-immiserating" is another. Also, frustrated Desires is just one more of the many ways that our natural & cultural world fails to be a perfect home for thinking & feeling creatures. Unfortunately, most creatures don't have the means (Reason + hands) to actually change the world, and the self, for the better. Science (applied philosophy) is how we learn to make the natural world better. And Philosophy (introspection) is how we learn to make the Self better. :smile:Do you know what the purpose of philosophy is? — Daniel Banyai
It is an aid to processing our own thoughts, feelings and attitudes when any character, other than the love of wisdom, takes a seat. Granted, no one is perfect, and the proof of that, in oneself, is in trying to carry another, especially when that other is looking for reactions instead of reason. — James Riley
Nope.You are a better man than me. — James Riley
I don't believe it is an either/or proposition. The vetting described is the demonstration of passion and action. I'm seeing it in you, now. — James Riley
[ Note: this and the original quote is that of @James Riley - not mine.[Socrates]...If he presented himself to an open forum, I would ask him questions to understand why he is or is not as I perceive him to be. If he wanted me to piss him off in the pursuit, I guess I could try to humor him. But he would have to tell me that, or I'd have to ask him: "Hey Socrates, how best can I get you to explain to me why I think you are wise? Should I piss you off, so you can show me I am wrong about you? Or should I just ask well-thought-out, probing questions?" — Amity
The true purpose of philosophy is to maintain nature's course---to make sure humans don't depart too much from it. That's it. — Daniel Banyai
Ah yeah, the age-old difference between living philosophically and making a living from philosophy (or philosophers and sophists). No doubt many academics have made contributions to philosophy worthy of much more than being ridiculed as sophistical pedants, but clearly not most. And almost none of the great philosophers were paid academics.This is close to my own practice and to how philosophy was practiced in the Socratic schools, but, as I am sure you know, this does not describe the practice of philosophy for much of the history of western philosophy or what is most commonly taught in academia. — Fooloso4
primarily, philosophy for me is – apparently, you as well, Fooloso4 – experienced as an contemplative practice and, therefore, is better understood intersubjectively (i.e. mutually recognizable, shared experiences of fellow (dialectical) autodidacts) than objectively (i.e. a reductive, subject/pov/language–invariant, algorithm). — 180 Proof
Intersubjectivity is a term coined by social scientists as a short-hand description for a variety of human interactions. For example, social psychologists Alex Gillespie and Flora Cornish listed at least seven definitions of intersubjectivity (and other disciplines have additional definitions):
people's agreement on the shared definition of an object;
people's mutual awareness of agreement or disagreement, or of understanding or misunderstanding each other;
people's attribution of intentionality, feelings, and beliefs to each other;
people's implicit or automatic behavioral orientations towards other people;
people's interactive performance within a situation;
people's shared and taken-for-granted background assumptions, whether consensual or contested; and
"the variety of possible relations between people's perspectives".[1] — wiki
I answer only as broadly as I needed to in order to convey my experience of studying, practicing & discussing philosophy which some may recognize as similiar to their own experience. — 180 Proof
wiki is a reliable prompt, can't let it become a crutch — 180 Proof
I don't know what you mean by 'carrying' another. — Amity
However, others might want to poke you and your thoughts with a pointy stick. — Amity
Thoreau talks about this in Walden:
There are nowadays professors of philosophy, but not philosophers. — Fooloso4
He was an activist involved in the abolitionist movement on many fronts: he participated in the Underground Railroad, protested against the Fugitive Slave Law, and gave support to John Brown and his party. Most importantly perhaps, he provides a justification for principled revolt and a method of nonviolent resistance, both of which would have a considerable influence on revolutionary movements in the twentieth century. — SEP article: Thoreau by R. Furtak
Thoreau urges his reader not to “underrate the value of a fact,” since each concrete detail of the world may contain a meaningful truth (“Natural History of Massachusetts”). Note the phrase: the value of a fact. Thoreau does not introduce an artificial distinction between facts and values, or between primary and secondary qualities, since he understands the universe as an organic whole in which mind and matter are inseparable. When we perceive sights, sounds, and textures, we are not standing as disembodied consciousness apart from a world of inanimate mechanisms; rather, we are sentient beings immersed in the sensory world, learning the “essential facts of life” only through “the perpetual instilling and drenching of the reality that surrounds us” (Walden, II)...
Contemporary philosophers are increasingly discovering how much Thoreau has to teach—especially, in the areas of knowledge and perception, and in ethical debates about the value of land and life. His affinities with the pragmatic and phenomenological traditions, and the enormous resources he offers for environmental philosophy, have also started to receive more attention—and Walden itself continues to be encountered by readers as a remarkable provocation to philosophical thought.
— SEP article: Thoreau by R. Furtak
The love of this process is a love of the process itself. I think it was yGasset who said “I do not hunt to kill. I kill to have hunted.” Answers are nice, but ancillary to the process, the struggle, the honing of one’s edge upon hard stone, the being a hard stone upon which others might hone their edge. Hard does not mean being an asshole. There are other venues where that may be a good thing. But being an asshole buries the process, the hunt, within another process, obscuring the first, and obscuring the process which the lover of wisdom loves. — James Riley
All the best with your eye surgery — James Riley
Socrates talks about the desire for wisdom, a passionate pursuit for something you do not possess. — Fooloso4
"You" as the general "you"? — god must be atheist
I think wisdom is a set of accumulated insights ... — god must be atheist
If I was wise I would know what it is, but I ain't. (...) I don't think anyone else is wise either. — Fooloso4
So the language has a word with no meaning and no application. — god must be atheist
... you categorically deny that anyone possesses this quality. — god must be atheist
ergo, you can't know whether you are in possession of wisdom, or else if you are wise, or not. — god must be atheist
Saying you don't know what "wise" is, but you'd know if/when you were wise, is not logical. Inasmuch as it could be true, or not be true, but is not necessarily true. — god must be atheist
since you deny any knowledge by anyone to know what being wise is, you can or anyone else could, be wise, and nobody would recognize he or she is, because there is no knowledge what it is, therefore there is no way of recognizing it when encountering it as someone's quality in real life. — god must be atheist
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