Was Helena Blavatsky a philosopher? What about Aleister Crowley? What about other kinds of thinking, e.g. religious, or New Age? Was Ram Dass a philosopher? The Dalai Lama? John Lennon?
If you wish, you can claim most anyone of these individuals or others who "think great thoughts" are/were philosophers. — Ciceronianus
Why the fear of magical thinking? Can you prove that magical thinking is bad? — jas0n
Wouldn't be more apt to ask whether magical thinking is philosophy? — Ciceronianus
unfortunatelly people try to address their frustration by going over those limitations. — Nickolasgaspar
All three of which are antecedent to knowledge, or, which is the same thing, knowledge presupposes all three of those strictly human a priori capacities.
— Mww
-Obviously the dude who stated that has never studied other animals. — Nickolasgaspar
are you aware of a Non real world where we can not exercise them???? — Nickolasgaspar
I don't know why this is so difficult for you...you literally described the process. — Nickolasgaspar
you fail to practice when a concept isn't founded on knowledge. — Nickolasgaspar
Our ability to reproduce a concept plays no role to its validity lol. — Nickolasgaspar
I don't think so. I'm with Witt & Gadamer on this. We are loaded with prejudices, AKA culture. So we need them and yet they are in our way. Metaphors, pictures, myths. Is there a system without some unjustified master concept, some kind of grand narrative that's true for no reason? Look for an image of their hero, their ego ideal, their proposed what-we-should-all-be. I've never met/read anyone, including myself, without holes in their story, things they take for granted without noticing it, a roleplay of some version of the hero. — jas0n
I utterly reject epistemology for strictly logical and philosophical reasons which I am not prepared to divulge at this time. — jas0n
We are loaded with prejudices, AKA culture. So we need them and yet they are in our way. Metaphors, pictures, myths. Is there a system without some unjustified master concept, some kind of grand narrative that's true for no reason? Look for an image of their hero, their ego ideal, their proposed what-we-should-all-be. I've never met/read anyone, including myself, without holes in their story, things they take for granted without noticing it, a roleplay of some version of the hero. — jas0n
-because..they are not strictly human"conditions". Knowledge, wisdom and reason are mental abilities shared by other animals...in a lesser degree of course. Animals do gain knowledge from previous experiences and through basic reasoning they can take wise decisions thus inform their actions accordingly!Why would anyone study other animals when investigating strictly human conditions? Who gives a shit that dolphins appear to surf, when such appearance is a mere anthropomorphism anyway? Crows use tools? Big deal. No crow ever got himself to the moon. — Mww
-This is the demarcation point about knowledge, wisdom and reason? Of course you are kidding right?Big deal. No crow ever got himself to the moon. — Mww
-Unfortunately for you, your ideas on "real" can not be objectively demonstrated to be true.are you aware of a Non real world where we can not exercise them???? — Nickolasgaspar
Yep. So are you. And not so much can not, but simply don’t. But we probably have differing ideas regarding what it means to be real. — Mww
- You literary described the philosophical process and how it includes knowledge ...i quote:C’mon, man. If I literally described the process, how could it have been so difficult for me? But I didn’t describe anything; I just asked a question, which wasn’t answered. — Mww
-fractally wrong statement. Concepts are all based on what we know mixed with some magic, this is why we have anthropomorphic gods, Nature as a thinking agent...souls that resemble our conscious abilities etc etc.All that aside, a concept only arises in relation to what we don’t know, as a representation of it. — Mww
irrelevant statements. I am pointing out that concepts are nothing more than a phenomenon plus a magical claim for its ontology. Phlogiston, miasma,orgone energy , gods are some of the examples.You are confounding the inception of a particular from a general. — Mww
- I have answered your false assumption.It is equivalent to saying the conception of a thing arising because we know it isn’t that, and it isn’t that, and it isn’t that, ad infinitum, which is absurd — Mww
-Its a survival advantage to be able to communicate concepts. i.e."its dangerous outside". the concept of dangerous communicates essential information. Those who were able to communicate and comprehend and reproduce concepts improve the chances of survival of their population.You laugh, but also think we have an ability that reproduces concepts.
Why in the world would we need to reproduce a concept? — Mww
Where did the original go? — Mww
And the production IS the validity, otherwise there is no logical relation upon which a judgement could ensue. And don’t mistake validity for truth, for only experience can prove a conception valid. It’s how we know we got something wrong if experience shows a conception invalid. You know....like....lightning doesn’t really come from angry gods even though it was a perfectly valid conception that it did. — Mww
A central metaphysical idea, intuition, sufficient to explain why no one has to reproduce concepts.
We could do this all day, but I got post-winter lawn duty. Not high on my list of pleasures, but duty nonetheless. — Mww
the inclination to discount any assertion or argument because we can't really know anything since we're permeated with prejudices and "culture" should serve to end discussion as well as judgment. Why bother? — Ciceronianus
We are loaded with prejudices, AKA culture. So we need them and yet they are in our way. — jas0n
Shouldn’t we hold onto the framework until it begins to fail us? — Joshs
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/sartre/#TranEgoDiscInteThe streetcar is experienced as a transcendent object, in a way that obliterates and overrides, so to speak, the subjective features of conscious experience; its “having-to-be-overtaken-ness” does not belong to my subjective experience of the world but to the objective description of the way the world is (see also Sartre 1936a [1957: 56; 2004: 10–11]). When I run after the streetcar, my consciousness is absorbed in the relation to its intentional object, “the streetcar-having-to-be-overtaken”, and there is no trace of the “I” in such lived-experience. I do not need to be aware of my intention to take the streetcar, since the object itself appears as having-to-be-overtaken, and the subjective properties of my experience disappear in the intentional relation to the object. They are lived-through without any reference to the experiencing subject (or to the fact that this experience has to be experienced by someone). This particular feature derives from the diaphanousness of lived-experiences.
assumptions assumptions assumptions — Nickolasgaspar
can you prove our ability to produce concepts validates the existence of "originals". — Nickolasgaspar
You are posting metaphysical beliefs that aren't based on knowledge. — Nickolasgaspar
-"dude take care of that back...all this dodging might cause some issues..."Yep. Logically. — Mww
-There is only one brand of knowledge.(A claim that is in total agreement with current available facts with instrumental value).Yep. Your brand of knowledge anyway.
No apologies. — Mww
Glad you mentioned that. I love Gadamer on this.How do we know they are in our way except when we are ready to replace them? — Joshs
Gadamer also takes issue directly with this view of prejudice and the negative connotations often associated with the notion, arguing that, rather than closing us off, our prejudices are themselves what open us up to what is to be understood.
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...all interpretation, even of the past, is necessarily ‘prejudgmental’ in the sense that it is always oriented to present concerns and interests, and it is those present concerns and interests that allow us to enter into the dialogue with the matter at issue...
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The prejudicial character of understanding means that, whenever we understand, we are involved in a dialogue that encompasses both our own self-understanding and our understanding of the matter at issue. In the dialogue of understanding our prejudices come to the fore, both inasmuch as they play a crucial role in opening up what is to be understood, and inasmuch as they themselves become evident in that process. As our prejudices thereby become apparent to us, so they can also become the focus of questioning in their own turn.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/gadamer/#PosPre
The fact that understanding operates by means of such anticipatory structures means that understanding always involves what Gadamer terms the ‘anticipation of completeness’—it always involves the revisable presupposition that what is to be understood constitutes something that is understandable, that is, something that is constituted as a coherent, and therefore meaningful, whole.
...
Hermeneutics concerns our fundamental mode of being in the world and understanding is thus the basic phenomenon in our existence.
can you prove our ability to produce concepts validates the existence of "originals". — Nickolasgaspar
It strikes me that there's a point when the inclination to discount any assertion or argument because we can't really know anything since we're permeated with prejudices and "culture" should serve to end discussion as well as judgment. Why bother? — Ciceronianus
I think you missed it. — Tom Storm
Why should the average person "take on greater philosophical nuances and self-reflection"?
Why should the less educated folk "enlarge their perspectives"? — baker
In its proper application, the analytical mind exhausts itself. — baker
It wasn't sarcasm, it wasn't a jibe, it was an honest question. — baker
Seriously, can you answer that?
And is it even possible to answer that without sounding like yet another patronizing bourgeois? — baker
You made a deprecating remark about some people (apparently aiming it at me), then stated the obvious, and asked a loaded question. — baker
Why should the average person "take on greater philosophical nuances and self-reflection"?
Why should the less educated folk "enlarge their perspectives"? — baker
Perhaps you didn't see the answer — Tom Storm
But the fact remains, people are interested in complex ideas but can't always understand or gain access to them.
Why should the average person "take on greater philosophical nuances and self-reflection"?
Why should the less educated folk "enlarge their perspectives"?
Will they be happier then?
Will they suffer less?
Will they completely stop suffering?
Will they be more caring then?
Will the world become a better place?
Will they be safer?
Will crime and wars stop? — baker
...we have the capacity to judge and come to conclusions based on available evidence and consequences, which are not absolute and are subject to modification based on subsequent evidence and experience... — Ciceronianus
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