Should I object that my use of "necessary" was pretty clearly circumscribed in what I wrote? — Srap Tasmaner
A lot of counter-intuitive facts disturb such anthropomorphic naïveté (e.g. inhabiting the surface of a spinning round planet moving around a sun that's eight light-minutes away, etc). Knowing trumps believing (C. Sagan).It should bother people who believe the universe wanted to have humans in it and that is the sole purpose of the universe. — Jackson
The universe can exist without us.
— Jackson
And did, practically forever.
Should that bother us? — Srap Tasmaner
Can you perceive of any purpose for the universe during this time apart from its happenstance progress towards a lifeform capable of asking questions? — universeness
Where is the universe?
Does the universe have a purpose? — Srap Tasmaner
the philosopher believes that the ordinary person is either unfamiliar with the distinction or fails to apply it properly, and that if they did they too would be in the pickle philosophers are, unable to bridge the gap. Most people just don't notice, or don't understand what a big deal this is, that's the mantra of philosophy. (The other example that leaps to mind also comes from Hume: how do you know the sun will rise tomorrow?) — Srap Tasmaner
(The other example that leaps to mind also comes from Hume: how do you know the sun will rise tomorrow?) — Srap Tasmaner
"It's quantum" has much the same utility as "God did it" — Banno
I think perhaps a lot of the time the philosopher is in the job of classifying the habits of thinking which accompany our particular forms of life — Isaac
The librarian noting that "How to make Curries" is a book about cookery is not discovering something about the book, they are classifying it, it's not a necessary part of the process, the book didn't need classifying to be understood, and used. — Isaac
You seem to have "bracketed", as they say, the issue of whether a classification, or a classificatory scheme, is "correct", in any sense. — Srap Tasmaner
You also imply that a classification is, shall we say, "external", "imposed" on the set: — Srap Tasmaner
The librarian has discovered that the book contains instructions for cooking; the predicate "... is a cookbook" is true of it, while many other predicates are not. It doesn't completely determine your final decision on how to classify the book (because there are many predicates you can use to partition your set, and many combinations of them), but it's now available. — Srap Tasmaner
Which is not to say that there aren't psychological explanations for my spider-watching available. Of course there are. But they don't count as reasons for me. (We are still very close to the prompting thread after all.) — Srap Tasmaner
curiosity is a clue, a retroactive experience of recognizing that you have already not understood something. It is a valorization of that failure as the proper starting point. — Srap Tasmaner
So why does the specter of Chidi/Hamlet in that ivory tower hang over philosophy? — Srap Tasmaner
A problem philosophers sometimes face is that they cannot come up with a viable alternative to the ordinary, or at least cannot show that their alternative is better than the ordinary. — baker
To be "ordinary", one needs to live in a very small world, have a small mind, have a dog-eat-dog heart. Many people live this way, and they seem to do just fine. — baker
What is my purpose in watching a spider build its web? If there's survival value in that, it's a long, long way away. I don't think it's there at all. I can do that, because of how natural selection built me, but that doesn't mean I am constrained to act in ways that enhance my ability to survive and reproduce. — Srap Tasmaner
A problem philosophers sometimes face is that they cannot come up with a viable alternative to the ordinary, or at least cannot show that their alternative is better than the ordinary.
— baker
Not sure what you mean. It seems you're referring to what artists/novelists do. — Jackson
A problem philosophers sometimes face is that they cannot come up with a viable alternative to the ordinary, or at least cannot show that their alternative is better than the ordinary.
— baker
Could be. 'The unexamined life is not worth living' resonates with some and doesn't with others. If you don't share that impulse and you are not exposed to examples of philosophy that pique your interest, why should you care? — Tom Storm
Is there evidence that philosophy is of benefit to individuals and how would that be demonstrated?
From my experience, there are many variations of an 'ordinary life' that do not necessarily involve a dog-eat-dog value system.
Do you have a view on where the boundary between reflection and 'proper' philosophy might lie? What I mean is, there are many people who reflect on their lives and purpose and values, without ever reading or learning philosophy - when does a partially examined life become actual philosophy?
Describe three. — baker
When one stops whining and being silly. — baker
Is there evidence that philosophy is of benefit to individuals and how would that be demonstrated?
If all you've ever eaten is cold pizza and you're closed off to the possibility of eating hot pizza, then the benefits of eating hot pizza cannot be demonstrated to you. — baker
Philosophically, it's hard to make a convincing case for why the old way of relating to people is better than the new one. — baker
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