As you implied, philosophical pluralism seems to be related to political pluralism. Pre-civilized groups tended to be egalitarian. But as urbanized societies increased in complexity, their governing organization became more hierarchical, and top-down tyranny was the norm (e.g. Pharaohs). However, today, for our global civilization, interconnected by a cacophony of electronic communications, neither Athenian Democracy nor European Fascism are practical solutions to the exigencies of social order for eight billion people.So, I am asking how do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophical pluralism? Also, to what extent is reason a quest for reason, a search for personal meaning or connected to power balances or imbalances in social structures? — Jack Cummins
So, I am asking how do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophical pluralism? Also, to what extent is reason a quest for reason, a search for personal meaning or connected to power balances or imbalances in social structures? — Jack Cummins
So, I am asking how do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophical pluralism?
Also, to what extent is reason a quest for reason, a search for personal meaning or connected to power balances or imbalances in social structures?
So, I am asking how do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophical pluralism? — Jack Cummins
Everything is text is post-modernism's stance. However, starvation is a bitch. — schopenhauer1
The decentralization of knowledge is a paradigmatic moment history will remember — NOS4A2
Well, for starters, I'm numerate ... sophistry & dogma don't confuse me.So, I am asking how do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophicalpluralism[relativism]? — Jack Cummins
Please rephrase or reformulate this question.Also, to what extent is reason a quest for reason, a search for personal meaning or connected to power balances or imbalances in social structures?
now 55% are likely to be garbage instead of just 15% — Count Timothy von Icarus
truth is not necessarily advantageous for the survival and reproduction of digital information. There are tons of articles, memes, videos, etc. in our digital ecosystem. What reproduces and spreads to more hosts is not necessarily veritical information — Count Timothy von Icarus
He argues that, ' the postmodern condition can be described, in a nutshell, as a disillusionment with the great overreaching explanations of the world, including religion and science.' He argues that absolute truth has become questionable. — Jack Cummins
I see. The correction still confuses me, though differently. If philisophy is a form of reason (re: reflective), how is "a quest for reason", in this sense, anything but chasing its own tail (à la trying to lift oneself off the ground by one's own hair)? To my mind philosophy is a quest for understanding ...'is philosophy a quest for reason' — Jack Cummins
Given your question, Jack, it seemed to me more relevant to associate "competing" with relative (e.g. multiple dogmas) instead of complementary suggesting plurality (e.g. multiple versions of the same X). Then again, a "maze" consists of multiple paths, which complement one another, so "pluralism" after all. :chin:... competing 'truths' rather than these simply being simply relative.
”Let a hundred philosophies bloom"
The Hundred Flowers Campaign, also termed the Hundred Flowers Movement, was a period from 1956 to 1957 in the People's Republic of China during which the Chinese Communist Party encouraged citizens to openly express their opinions of the Communist Party. ___Wikipedia — Gnomon
Publishing companies don't tend to publish Holocaust denial literature for example and libraries don't tend to stock it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
random wackos ran plenty of newsletters about all manner of things before the internet existed, but they were difficult to access, didn't proliferate as quickly, and were far less common than social media accounts today. — Count Timothy von Icarus
it is much easier to become an author or republish — Count Timothy von Icarus
It was also easier to trace the source of information before. You could call publishers, find microfilm of old sources, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
it is also way easier to fake data in ways that are extremely difficult to detect. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's easily identifiable bullshit, but that goes right to my point. This stuff replicates because it is what people want to see, it appeals to emotions. It's the reason a stirring picture of disaster X in 2013 spreads like wildfire while being represented as from disaster Y in 2023. My basic argument is that information undergoes natural selection and that truth is not necessarily, or even normally a trait that benefits reproduction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Digital technology has made it less costly to reproduce information. Thus, there is less of an incentive to only duplicate quality information, to vet things before reproduction. This in turn changes the dynamics such that the share of veritical information goes down. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The reason why I choose pluralism, which is similar because it is more about competing 'truths' rather than these simply being simply relative.
So, I am asking what do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophical pluralism? Also, to what extent is philosophy a quest for reason, a search for personal meaning or connected to power balances or imbalances in social structures? — Jack Cummins
I think one's commitment to a philosophical position or way of life can be "based on experience" but "truth, reason or understanding", which constitute doing philosophy, are not themselves "based on experience".Thinking about it more, the way I see it is that truth, reason or understanding are based on experience. — Jack Cummins
While the aporia with which one's inquiries and thinking begin might be functions of, or related to, one's bio-social psychology, the "philosophical outlook" which might follow is no more dependent on, or validated by, how aporia are selected than a mathematical theorem is dependent on how its axioms are selected or a musical composition is dependent on how its scale, notes & key-changes are selected. That seems a genetic fallacy, Jack.Of course, each person is a unique person in an ongoing process of structuring a philosophy outlook but intersectionality is likely to have some bearing on this.
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