I would disagree on the fact that all philosophy involves thinking, so long as we attribute thinking to be an individual endeavour. In fact, its fairly interesting to see that the more you read/comprehend philosophical books and what not, the more you indulge in their (their being the person who wrote the book) thinking, which eventually leads to a loss of personal inquiry — john27
knowledge production and transmission is a social project. "New" ideas, inventions, art works, scientific discoveries, etc. are built on the advertent and inadvertent contributions of others. That takes away nothing from those who hatch new work. — Bitter Crank
All philosophy involves thinking. — Xtrix
Not all thinking is philosophy. — Xtrix
What is thinking? — Xtrix
How would we know unless we do the appropriate analysis? — Agent Smith
I think the question ought to be, what is rational thinking, because by introducing reason you have at least some common ground to start with. Otherwise it's so broad as to not be meaningful, 'thinking' in the loose sense being simply all of the spontaneous activities of any mind. — Wayfarer
Thinking is generalizing, abstractive, associative, contextualizing, reflective,,logical, analogical, dialogical, dialectical, imaginative, conjectural, speculative. rational, irrational. — Janus
such that to think is, with sufficient grounds, to question (categorical) questions and/or to problematize (hypothetical) problems. — 180 Proof
I would disagree on the fact that all philosophy involves thinking, so long as we attribute thinking to be an individual endeavour. — john27
A little like a chess master vs someone naturally talented at chess: one is recognizing patterns/arguments and resolving them with tried and true logical pathways, the other is relying on his gifted logical capacities to guide him. — john27
As for "philosophy", this becomes terminological more than factual, and we tend to say that certain types of thoughts pertain to issues continuing to the beginning of humanity: what is a self, what is the will, what is an object, what is the right thing to do, what is experience, and so on. — Manuel
Thought is cognition by means of conceptions. — Mww
take a stab at what thinking is: it’s allowing thoughts to occur, to come to me. — Srap Tasmaner
I wouldn't say not all thinking is philosophy.
How would we know unless we do the appropriate analysis? — Agent Smith
I think the question ought to be, what is rational thinking, because by introducing reason you have at least some common ground to start with. Otherwise it's so broad as to not be meaningful, 'thinking' in the loose sense being simply all of the spontaneous activities of any mind. — Wayfarer
I don't think I'm fully understanding this point. Are you suggesting some philosophy takes place as a kind of instinctual activity? — Xtrix
No, although that is an interesting point. My point was that generally our thoughts aren't ours in a philosophical debate, which may or may not lead to an absence of "thought". The chess analogy was to demonstrate that the master is good because he's practiced recognizing specific solutions to a variety of situations, not necessarily because he's good at "chess". — john27
But isn't that like saying that everything we say is also not ours? — Xtrix
I think the chess master is a master precisely because he's not theoretical, as perhaps a beginner might start out being. Like a musician, in fact. Anyone who's learned piano knows that you start with simple steps and basic theory (scales, etc) -- but the expert piano player no longer has to remember any of this. — Xtrix
I wouldn't say not all thinking is philosophy.
How would we know unless we do the appropriate analysis?
— Agent Smith
Well I would say we're doing philosophy right now, in asking and analyzing "What is thinking?" But that doesn't mean that when we're not analyzing, we're not thinking. That would be like saying that all language is writing. I talk to myself all the time, and not all of it is philosophical -- in the sense of being reflective or asking basic questions. — Xtrix
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