To piggyback on what others have said: philosophy (mostly) consists in reasoning to better, or more probitive, questions; when answers to such questions are decidable, even in principle, by cumulative data (evidence), they can be treated as problems to be solved aka "sciences" (as Banno points out); until then, at the mercy of undecidable answers, philosophy proposes ways of 'cultivating well-being' in spite of lacking decidable answers aka "uncertainty" (as Foolos4 points out). And so philosophy "progresses" only in so far as philosophers discover / invent new questions and refine less probitive questions into more probitive questions. IMO 'reducing misuses/abuses of ignorance' (speculatively and/or dialectically and/or methodologically) is the philosopher's Sisyphusean stone. — 180 Proof
To piggyback on what others have said: philosophy (mostly) consists in reasoning to better, or more probitive, questions — 180 Proof
Questions about how we ought to live, on a personal, social, political, and geo-political level. — Fooloso4
I'm yet to read of a single one, rather tragic really. Plato outlined the most important problems in philosophy around 2500 years ago, and we are yet to solve one, we haven't even made progress.
Is progress in this domain even possible? If not, why not? And if not, why bother? — forrest-sounds
Sorry, but you gave an insufficient answer. The task is not what the questions are; but how those questions elicit us to act in the absence of an answer. You have a very strong sense and incredibly strong command of ignoring my points when you are cornered. — god must be atheist
Some examples:
Physics, psychology, linguistics, mathematics, logic, chemistry, biology... — Banno
Since the human mind is incapable of accessing reality in any substantive way, people make-up all kinds of non-sense that changes, changes, changes with the winds that blow in every direction. — synthesis
there is one modern problem that has been solved actually, substance dualism, the view that Descartes argued for. — Manuel
‘Can someone name a single solved scientific problem?’.
— Joshs
...he typed on his laptop... — Banno
I don't know that any of the questions concerning the natural world (the domain of science) were ever philosophical in nature. — forrest-sounds
Just pointing to the progression... that'll do me. — Banno
Look: there are tons of thinkers in my life who are not like your calibre. I can take from a number of my friends, debating partners and acquaintances, that they genuinely misunderstand me or not understand me. From you, I don't think I should accept that. No, I don't want miracles from you, but you are more intelligent and more learned than I am, and therefore I sense (not know, but sense and I believe my gut feelings in those instances) that you are trying to slide out of giving me a straight answer, and you instead waffle or talk about irrelevant things.I do not think that I am cornered. Is that what you intend? To corner me? — Fooloso4
Plato outlined the most important problems in philosophy around 2500 years ago — forrest-sounds
Didn't Xeno's Paradox get solved? — RogueAI
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