But I don't want to derail the thread. — Wayfarer
First, I am an artist who knows a lot of art history. So, I am interested in what art you do like, which seems to be 19th century art. — Jackson
And please explain what you mean by, "in the ealy 20th century, the art world fell victim to slave morality." What does any art have to do with slave morality? — Jackson
You mean Christianity? — Joshs
Lol. That was closer to the third century up to about the 18th. — Merkwurdichliebe
I should note I love Chalmers, even if this sounds disparaging. He's definitely one of my favorite living philosophers. — Moliere
Common reality between two parts (entities) --two persons, a person and a group, two groups etc.-- is based on agreement between the two parts. And vice versa: different reality is based on disagreement. Communication is based on agreement. Understanding is based on agreement. Knowledge is based on agreement. In fact, our whole existence is based on agreement.Agreement? Disagreement? Why did that matter in the first place? Not sure. — Moliere
You just gave me a good reason for not being interested: Marxism. I have left it behind me and never looked back since about 50 years ago! :smile:its just marxism. You could do it if you had the patience, but I don't blame you — Merkwurdichliebe
question without real value or use --for me, of course-- the answer to which is more than obvious — Alkis Piskas
3. Art - What is it, and why is it needed? — Philosophim
Art is largely founded on the subjective, so pulling out an objective result faces its own challenges. — Philosophim
Some people think that the continued interest in Plato and Aristotle is regressive. I do not agree. — Fooloso4
Most philosophy departments offer classes in ancient Greek philosophy. — Jackson
Philosophy is very different from science. In science people do not talk about past science. In philosophy, people still talk about Plato and Aristotle as live topics. — Jackson
And some regard it as nothing more than quaint and misguided ideas that are primitive and from which he have progressed.
I think Heidegger was on the right track when he said that in the movement of thought some things are occluded. Hence the importance of retrieval. — Fooloso4
Smolen is a big fan of Leibniz. He has pointed out that it is only fairly recently that scientists have ignored or disparaged philosophy. He points out that scientists of Einstein's generation had more than a passing interest in philosophy. — Fooloso4
Best statement on the topic of progress in philosophy: " philosophy is its own time comprehended in thoughts." (Philosophy of Right, Hegel, preface). — Jackson
If philosophers today really do "comprehend their own time in thoughts", does that mean they also comprehend how our own time and its thoughts were arrived at? If you want to say they do, would this be all philosophers, or only some, and if only some, then which ones? — Janus
I don't know if philosophers today would agree with Hegel. Especially the science based ones. — Jackson
Philosophy today is much more comprehensive overall than in the past, but it is fragmented into myriad schools, each of which in their main focus and central concerns seem to have little understanding of, or interest in, the others. — Janus
↪Jackson I don't think we disagree in this connection either.
↪Joshs So, would you say the Logical Positivists, and the Analytics whose main concern is with propositional and modal logic, are the odd ones out (are there others?) islands cut off from the diverse mainland of philosophy? — Janus
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