That depends. With the advent of technology and modernity there has been a division produced in culture. There is popular culture - the media, TV, Hollywood, etc. and then there is the real culture, which is quite often ignored and forgotten. The kind of politically enforced culture would be the popular one. Whosoever escapes the popular culture can freely dwell in the real culture. It's just popular culture that would be restricted and controlled. That's the kind of politically enforced view that I would accept to live under.There'd be a paucity of philosophical literature; and if you found yourself capable metaphysical speculation you would either have to keep it to yourself or risk censure and perhaps prosecution, incarceration, or even execution, depending on how prohibitive your society was and how severe your heresy was seen to be. — John
Obviously not... >:O Common man, philosophy is frowned upon in popular culture... do you see folks like Miley Cyrus interested in philosophy?! That's popular culture. Popular culture is empty of content anyway - it's a culture used to brainwash idiots to consume more, and give in to their base desires...Do you include philosophical literature under the 'popular culture' heading? — John
I have never finished the Phenomenology, most of my knowledge of Hegel comes indirectly from secondary sources. I've read for example Yovel's translation + commentary on Hegel's Preface to Phenomenology, I've read his interpretation of Hegel as a Spinozist (although an improved version of Spinoza) in Spinoza and other Heretics, I've read parts of Frederick Beiser's Hegel, I've read Macherey's comparison/discussion of Hegel and Spinoza (in Hegel ou Spinoza), and I've started to read the Phenomenology beyond the Preface but have never finished it. Oh and I've started to read the book you have suggested after I "stole" it from online O:)What are you reading of Hegel? If this interpretation comes from reading the Phenomenology, can you cite some passages in support of it or at least provide some references to page numbers? — John
Okay I'm moved by them - for a few seconds, minutes or hours, and then back to planting potatos in the garden :P The potatoes don't plant themselves you know, and man does not live on spirit alone. It seems that my place is still in the world - planting potatoes - everything else is just an escape from that, is it not?The insight I am referring to is personal insight of a kind which cannot be inter-subjectively corroborated. It's just like the insight of the artist, musician or poet which can be expressed only evocatively. What the artist, musician, poet or mystic is 'speaking' about, cannot be explained in propositional language..Painting, sculpture, music, poetry and religious and mystical literature are all like this; it moves you or it does not. If you are not moved by the arts or mystical literature then that says more about you than it says about the arts or mystical literature. — John
Spinoza gives a completed system, Hegel gives a Phenomenology - the process of completion of the system. Spinoza is more difficult to learn and understand though, since he doesn't show how his system is completed in the first place. Understanding some Hegel (or Schopenhauer), does help in understanding Spinoza though. — Agustino
Okay I'm moved by them - for a few seconds, minutes or hours, and then back to planting potatos in the garden :P The potatoes don't plant themselves you know, and man does not live on spirit alone. It seems that my place is still in the world - planting potatoes - everything else is just an escape from that, is it not? — Agustino
There's deeper problems than just balancing I think. First even the need to balance is anachronistic - work should be a creative and fulfilling activity in and of itself. The fact that it isn't and there needs to be a separate time for creativity means that one is living a divided life, and probably doing both half-heartedly. In addition, if you honestly play the scenario in your mind that you don't have to earn a living anymore, and you can just do whatever you want, you'll see that you'd get amazingly bored, and so you'd still return to some form of work. That's why I eventually want to get involved in politics and my community, because otherwise there's not much that you can do apart from work work work - which, combined with study, is pretty much all I'm doing now...There is practical life (in the sense of earning a living) and then there is contemplation and study and creative pursuits. Not always easy to balance — John
Would not recognition of a "higher philosophy" be itself a 'higher' recognition and thus necessarily be a supra-rational process? Wouldn't it be something like the gnosis of the mystics, or the abhijñā of Buddhism? If such a process is possible and if it yields genuine insight into the nature of reality, then surely it must a 'higher' intuition, perhaps we could say an intellectual intuition, that transcends logic and defies rational explanation. — John
First even the need to balance is anachronistic - work should be a creative and fulfilling activity in and of itself. — Agustino
I'm trying to relate the idea of a 'higher teaching' against philosophy, specifically Western philosophy, and metaphysics. — Wayfarer
(Anyway, speaking of making a living, we are both seeking work right now, and finding it extraordinarily difficult, we think mainly cause of age. Dear wife has an excellent career record and a Masters degree, but has been working full-time on job applications since July last year; I'm vying for contracts but Sydney is one of the most expensive, therefore most competitive, markets in the world. So at times like this I have to fight the voice that asks me whether I've wasted far too much time on philosophy.) — Wayfarer
I really don't think that's correct MU. The equations of matter work for matter in a generalised sense, it doesn't matter which type. The whole point about Aristotelean 'substance' is that it is a complex concept, and isn't really part of modern natural philosophy, except by analogy. — Wayfarer
That sounds like a worthwhile and interesting project. — John
I like to think of the Biblical quote "Take no thought for the morrow, for sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof" — John
Mass is a measurable property of matter. The duality, or complexity, of substance is inherent within Newton's laws, because it is assumed that there is matter, and it is assumed that matter has mass. These are two distinct things, matter and its quantifiable property, mass — Metaphysician Undercover
I hate to be disagreeable, but I really think you're mistaken about this. It's a question for history and philosophy of science, of course, but how could there be (for instance) such a division in Cartesian substance dualism, where there are two kinds of substance? The whole point about Newtonian and Galilean substance was reduction to those attributes which could expressed in numerical terms. The distinction that emerged was not between 'matter and property' but between 'primary and secondary qualities', where the latter were associated with the observing mind (colour, etc) and the former (including mass) were primary attributes of the object of measurement. — Wayfarer
LOL I get this from just about everyone, including most friends and relatives (I only have probably 2 friends I can discuss philosophy with properly). They all think philosophy is useless because they say you can't "do" anything with it - as in what does your knowledge help you with? So when I tell them that there are some things which we do in order to obtain other things, and then there are things which we do for themselves, they don't understand. Even if I explain that we can't always do X in order to get Y, because if everything we did had to be done in order to get something else, then we'd have an infinite regress of do X to get Y, get Y to get Z, etc. So we must stop at something, which we do for its own sake. Even after this "proof" people still protest about it, without of course relating with anything of what I've said, or recognising that their ends-in-themselves are different from mine, and at least a priori, no better.I do get this about philosophy though "Isn't it just a waste of time, it doesn't seem to answer anything" from some of my very smart, yet predominantly practically and hedonically oriented, friends, though. — John
For me I find it currently creative and interesting for the simple reason that I'm still learning a lot everyday. I'm relatively new still in this kind of business. But I imagine that after practicing it for 3-5 years, I'll pretty much know everything inside and out. I'm lucky I got the chance to switch fields. I hated working for someone else, and as an engineer I found I pretty much can only work for someone else... >:O at least in Sapientia's great country, Britain.I have always found my work, "creative and interesting" — John
You are lucky in that. I prefer self-employed compared to work under a boss. But I was unlucky because my degree didn't really allow me to work as self-employed straight off. As a civil engineer you're pretty much fucked if you want to work on your own immediately after university :PI have been self-employed for pretty much my entire working life — John
But certainly there's always repeat business? I mean for me, I got in by first having done work for a family friend who had a small business, then he recommended me to others, etc. and by today I have a good set of a few clients. Even if no one new comes, there's always repeat work - or maintenance work - from these people. And then if all that disappeared, I'd advertise more aggressively, or I'd do some freelance work, etc. There's a lot of possibilities as self-employed if you're willing to think about them and try them. But if you're stuck in a job, there's pretty much no possibility for movement and change there...uncertainty about where the next job — John
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