Yes I noticed. I chose it -- philosophy must have it, along with epistemology. Whitehead can be an example, but should not be the only example.Interesting to note nobody chose "metaphysics", which can't be right on a forum of this size. I think the example of Whitehead might be too polarizing, — Manuel
For my own interests, mostly the "manifest image" of everyday life, I think there's a lot of interesting ground that could be covered by an epistemological oriented metaphysics, as exemplified by C.I. Lewis and more recently by Raymond Tallis. — Manuel
Whitehead was my personal preference, because I happen to think process philosophy is a powerful concept. — Pantagruel
Yes, that is one work I couldn't disagree with.The Concept of Nature, is better, or to be more accurate, I preferred. — Manuel
I'm interested in what people think best exemplifies philosophical thought. — Pantagruel
So would it be fair to say you see philosophy itself as kind of enlightened humanism? — Pantagruel
to the extent philosophy is tempted to remove our responsibility to ourself — Antony Nickles
Kant is concerned with demonstrating the general conditions of cognition. He does this in part by drawing attention to the distinction between finite human being and the abstract subject reduced to what is sometimes called an epistemic placeholder. Kant’s theory depends on a non- or even anti-anthropological conception of the subject variously described as the transcendental unity of apperception, the original synthetic unity of apperception, and so on. — Tom Rockmore, Fichte, Kant and the Copernican Turn
Kant erased real human individuals from the picture in favour of an abstraction, the transcendental subject: — Jamal
The context is what exemplifies philosophical thought — Mww
Real human individuals, in the form of “finite human beings” never are alone sufficient for that which exemplifies philosophical thought — Mww
[ the ] transcendental unity of apperception is established as the absolute requirement of experience — Jamal
So “us” may have referred to philosophers — Jamal
I was referring to "us" as the condition of human uncertainty faced (or ignored) by each person, making philosophy our ticket to seeing our part (and with others), thus bettering our response, ourselves. — Antony Nickles
I think this is the basis for a kind of meliorism.... — Pantagruel
Quite literally, the term "philosophy" means, "love of wisdom." In a broad sense, philosophy is an activity people undertake when they seek to understand fundamental truths about themselves, the world in which they live, and their relationships to the world and to each other.
What type of philosophy most exemplifies what philosophy is or should be to you? — Pantagruel
But i say again, it is the way of how philosophy should achieve this combination that makes all the difference.That's the "juice" and the real question I think. — dimosthenis9
So maybe, is there some core thing to which all of these various areas of interest contribute mutually, whether individually or in concert? Time and again the answer seems to be the self or... the sefl-in-sociey — Pantagruel
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