Doubt is overrated.
You can only doubt against an indubitable background. You might doubt anything, if you like, but you can't doubt everything. — Banno
Cogito ergo sum. — Descartes
Doubt is a verbally expressible, informed, justified wavering between two options. When you doubt, you waver between A and B, and you know your reasons for doing so.
Worries, uncertainties, anxiety are more general, often not even verbally expressed/expressible. — baker
I don't think it's necessary doubt to be always about only two options. — dimosthenis9
Worries, anxieties, uncertainties etc just plant the seed for doubt.
As to correct my previous post, they aren't exactly the same but surely they are extremely connected and in most cases doubt involves them.
Absolutely. We can and do live in doubt. Doubt is not denial. Doubt is the negative form of wonder. Doubt is compatible with belief.I was wondering what are the thoughts of the community about this, let me know:) — Lea
There's no extant text from Pyrrho. Read the Outlines of Pyrrhonism (aka the Outlines of Skepticism in a recent translation) by Sextus Empiricus.Read Pyrrho. He allegedly walked into the path of an oncoming wagon because he wasn't sure of the report of his senses and yet... — TheMadFool
There's no extant text from Pyrrho. Read the Outlines of Pyrrhonism (aka the Outlines of Skepticism in a recent translation) by Sextus Empiricus. — Cabbage Farmer
Cogito ergo sum.
— Descartes
Let the people suppose that knowledge means knowing things entirely; the philosopher must say to himself: "When I analyze the process that is expressed in this sentence, 'I think,' I find a whole series of daring assertions that would be difficult, perhaps impossible, to prove—for example, that it is I who think, that there must necessarily be something that thinks, that thinking is an activity and operation on the part of a being who is thought of as a cause, that there is an 'ego,' and, finally, that it is already determined what is to be designated by thinking—that I know what thinking is.
Yeah, it's a bit of a language issue. I agree we usually define "thinking" as involving a "doer", and that is probably the most practical way. As for your question, Nietzsche remarks later in the same book that he considers thoughts as something that happen to you, rather than actions per se. He presents the observation (purely anecdotal) that often we think something before we realise that we are thinking (or something to that effect). But that's probably for a different post :) — the affirmation of strife
I think, therefore I am — René Descartes
As for the topic of doubt, I think that doubt is healthy in moderation (like most things... all things?) but we should not fail to consider the extremes. Can we "live in doubt", well, the imprecisions of language are evident here again... We can live with doubt, certainly, I would say it is even necessary. But sometimes enough is enough, we will never have perfect information all the time and too much doubt is, like you say about suffering[1], incapacitating.
[1] Despite my response in the other thread, I don't completely disagree about that either... — the affirmation of strife
We can doubt anything and eveeything. That's how it is I'm afraid. — TheMadFool
Sure, but I read the OP as questioning how much we should doubt. Maybe that's too much interpretation. — the affirmation of strife
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