The Astonishing Hypothesis is that “You,” your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behaviour of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules. As Lewis Carroll’s Alice might have phrased it: “You’re nothing but a pack of neurons.” — Francis Crick
An impersonal, unreflective, robotic, mindless little scrap of molecular machinery is the ultimate basis of all the agency, and hence meaning, and hence consciousness, in the universe. — Daniel Dennett
Reality is nothing but appearances — Janus
There seems to be a common will to fundamentalism — Janus
Is it the case that all isms are essentially nothing-but-isms? — Janus
There seems to be a common will to fundamentalism, to foundationalism — Janus
Is it the case that all isms are essentially nothing-but-isms? — Janus
Everything is nothing but something. You can't really define or describe something without saying what it is and what it is not. — T Clark
I think that's the context in which the criticism of 'nothing but' is cogent. The other examples can be couched in the same verbal formulation but I don't know how often they would be encountered, if at all. And to say that they're also examples of reductionism might be nothing but an example of 'whataboutism'. ('You say materialists are reductionist! What about some of those spiritual types/marxist historians/etc!') — Wayfarer
Isms are nothing but nothing-but-isms. — praxis
What is an appearance? Is the questioner implying that this person suffering because of some famine or some war is an appearance? Well that seems to take a lot away from what I'm experiencing. And likewise with selves being social constructions. Yeah, probably they are constructions, but we don't treat them as we would characters in a novel...
It's easy to say, but big problems remain with all of them by using "nothing but" or "just". — Manuel
:up:Yes. And depending on the prevalent fundamentalism of the time, you be metaphorically or literally burned at the stake for not falling in line. — Noble Dust
Depends on the scope used in the statement, no? — Shawn
Isn't "nothing-but" a pretty well-defined scope? — Noble Dust
Is it the case that all isms are essentially nothing-but-isms? — Janus
Only if all explanations, definitions, and theories are isms. — baker
I’m pretty much ok with that. All -isms are concerned only with the affirmation or negation of the essential root conception, right? — Mww
The intrinsic human need for certainty on the one hand, and the lazy folks’ intrinsic wish to have decisions ready-made for them on the other. Hence.....everything from the Logical Laws of Thought to the Planck Constant to expiration dates on consumables. And of course, the Ten Commandments and variations thereof. — Mww
You always seem to want to pass everything through the lens of your pet polemic between materialism and idealism, which you seem to see as a kind of struggle between the forces of good and the forces of evil — Janus
All -isms are concerned only with the affirmation or negation of the essential root conception, right?
— Mww
Yes, but as Daemon points out below, the exception might be pluralism. — Janus
Is it the case that all isms are essentially nothing-but-isms
Is it the case that all isms are essentially nothing-but-isms
Do you mean, all isms are nothing but nothing-but-isms?
I don't agree, that seems reductive — Count Timothy von Icarus
It was a question, not an assertion of my own belief. The point was, as I already stated, that isms becoming nothing-but-isms when they claim to be absolute, or independent of particular perspectives or domains of inquiry. Narrative becomes dogma; that kind of thing. — Janus
Without context they, even worse, become some kind of proselytizing or propaganda. Within the framework of their thought, then it's nothing but a contextual statement. No? — Shawn
Maybe, but I would treat pluralism as a singular conception in itself. Pluralism is still different than the myriad of separate -isms contained in it. If pluralism was a pot, it matters not to it, that there is something, or there is nothing, in it. — Mww
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.