What must reason exclude from conceiving reality as such – what is necessarily not real? — 180 Proof
But anyway, the is/ought thing is what humans find useful to hold true so as to make explicit the freedoms that are available because the Universe has no reason to care. But at the metaphysical level, or at least the natural philosophy branch of metaphysics, we engage with the finality that the Universe actually does embody. — apokrisis
I too, read books by Albert Ellis, and was impressed with his Rational-Emotive self-therapy. You could think of it as self-directed Philosophy, or merely as self-discipline. In a marginal note I wrote : "most people seem to think that emotions and reasoning are separate, un-connected processes. Whereas, in reality they mutually influence each other : emotions color our thinking, and thinking modifies our emotions". Perhaps Hamlet foreshadowed Ellis : "There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so". And Hamlet may be paraphrasing the Stoic philosopher Seneca : “Reason shows us there is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so.” :smile:A very helpful idea I encountered around 30 years ago was from Albert Ellis, a psychologist, influenced by the Stoics. He said - "You have considerable power to construct self-helping thoughts, feelings and actions as well as to construct self-defeating behaviors. You have the ability, if you use it, to choose healthy instead of unhealthy thinking, feeling and acting.” That idea changed how I deal with others and how I deal with any information I come upon. — Tom Storm
What is the "philosophical project" you are talking about? I wonder esp. because you are not using title capitals, and therefore it doesn't look a known subject or a work (study, book, etc.) by someone. I have found, e.g., "The Philosophical Project of Carnap and Quine" (book), "Descartes and Husserl: The Philosophical Project of Radical Beginnings" (book) and a lot of other "The Philosophical Project of ..."My hypothesis is that the philosophical project as such is, at its heart, metaphysical. — Pantagruel
If you think that there's no purpose in doings all this or you are not sure about it, why do you keep doing it? Would you run towards something if there's no reason for doing it? Would you start learning Mandarin if you have no use of it any reason for doing it?I try to cover as much ground as humanly possible, philosophy, science, anthropology, sociology, political theory. To what end? — Pantagruel
. A rule of thumb: metaphysics is about what is the case, ethics, about what ought be the case. — Banno
So, I would like to know whay are you doing all that, which rrequires an enormous and never-ending work. A Sisyphian task! — Alkis Piskas
Couldn't these localized expressions of freedom be part of the universal telos? — Pantagruel
Also, contexts (of freedom and law) are themselves the products of other contexts, in a nested-hierarchical fashion. It seems that freedom is something that emerges and is defined (ie. law-constrained freedom or practical freedom) through this emergent-evolutionary process. — Pantagruel
Stability emerges by the suppression of instability. — apokrisis
I concur with everything said, but the emergence of complex adaptive systems (and negentropy in general) is still something of a mystery. I wonder if instability is somehow being captured at the systemic level as a kind of 'power source'? — Pantagruel
The notion of a philosophical "project" with some statable goal misses what's going on. The moment a goal is stated, someone will formulate a counter-instance, adding a new piece that undermines that very goal. — Banno
My one liner is that the universe can exist because it is falling into its own heat sink. — apokrisis
It seems we agree that metaphysics does not have the special place in philosophy ascribed to it by — Banno
Again, it really all boils down to a definition of metaphysics. — Pantagruel
It's not what we define it as, but rather what has been done thus far. — Moliere
There's a sense in which "the universe can exist because it is falling into its own heat sink" begs the question - meaning it's premise assumes its conclusion — Banno
Only if you believe predicate logic to be more foundational than dialectical logic. — apokrisis
Only if you commit to a reductionist notion of linear cause and effect that has already been empirically trashed by the advent of quantum theory. — apokrisis
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