if someone wants to explore the meaning of Dasein and a hostile party butts in with, say, Adorno's excoriating analysis of Heidegger's abuse of language and celebration of irrationality? Would that be philosophical? — Jamal
That is to say, when the engineer of language is tinkering and tuning.The confusions which occupy us arise when language is like an engine idling, not when it is doing work. — Wittgenstein, PI
It says "we ought use the term this way and here's why". That can be disputed. — Isaac
imported into English with a vast baggage. — Banno
EDIT: actually you did say that the definition of art I gave might be useful. — Jamal
Personally I wouldn't mind if we used 'existence' for 'Dasein,' or something like that. — plaque flag
The point is that words with a history are less suspect than those invented in the comfort of one's armchair.Isn't English crammed with imports though ? — plaque flag
We check understanding of a concept by checking that it is used as expected. — Banno
The analysis of existence that followed from the work of Frege and Russell is to my eye far better than that given by the Germans. I would not be happy to have it befuddled in this way. — Banno
Earlier I was thinking about people who'd say 'nothing is true.' I use to like this kind of radically open-minded aphorism. — plaque flag
Makes me think of Adorno's one: "only exaggeration is true". — Jamal
WHy? From what little I've seen he seems to fall into the same problems. — Banno
Yes, the failed definition is also a success. It's a metaphor. As a matter of style, it's offered exclusively. But perhaps the speech act should be interpreted as a gift, as a good place from which to peep at a complex phenomenon for a moment. — plaque flag
Only exaggeration is true. — Adorno
Art is magic delivered from the lie of being truth — Adorno, Minima Moralia
Fair question. I'm a fan of Austin, who's method involves the close and detailed analysis of the terms of our language, the "tools of trade"; I use that sort of analysis in my own considerations, having the OED and various etymological dictionaries at hand. This is quite a different process to mere stipulation, seeking an understanding of the historical development of terms and their interrelationship. Rather than closing the conversation off, this approach invites further commentary and comparison. — Banno
But it doesn't go down well in a forum. such as this, where if any attention is paid at all it's in order to point out how irrelevant it is. — Banno
A term such as Dasein is stipulated. It's what folk now call a term of art, a neologism, having no history, or rather not relating to any etymology, imported into English with a vast baggage. It's no good to reject the use of Dasein, so one might look to the use; but notice that the place the word is mostly used is in discussions of what it means... These are grounds for suspicion. — Banno
I gave the example above of using a definition at the commencement of an argument. That's not problematic, indeed it is setting up the furthering of the discussion by admitting the limitations of context, and so inviting critique — Banno
Your comments had me puzzling over the difference between an artist and an artisan. I had thought of this previously as a difference in the narrative, but if one takes your definition, there is something of ritual involved as well - magic involving ritual. — Banno
I think perhaps a philosophical discussion needs a linguistic hierarchy of three classes of words. Most words being working class, taken for granted, over-worked and underpaid attention to; then some middle-class words, pedantically defined, and always following the rules of logic; and finally some few aristocratic words that are what the discussion is all about.
Which might suggest that one's philosophical instincts in this discussion are somewhat indicative of ones' class loyalties. Or it might just be a big tease. — unenlightened
it shows something about art nonetheless, and not really or entirely by analogy. — Jamal
It's hard to see what you could be meaning by 'value' here. Even if you wanted to gain a 'better' insight into phenomenology, or post-structuralism by your question, deciding in advance that 'better' only consists of answers which accept both traditions rather than question them indicates that you've already decided others are not as capable as you of determining what is and isn't the case, as such the enquiry seems disingenuous. — Isaac
Someone else who wants to make this thread all about me. :grin: — Banno
Then Banno stuck his nose in in his usual smug, bullshit, lazy way. He pretends he's involved but he doesn't put any effort in. — T Clark
Art uses the root "ar-", as in articulate, armour, arm, article... "to fit together". Artisans and artists fit stuff together. Artisans work with metals and stone and paint, artists with the more refined stuff of the muses - history, poetry, comedy, tragedy, music, dancing, astronomy. Hence Bachelor of Arts.I don't know. Sometimes it works. — Jamal
An article I am reading, from the AAP review, has as its topic differentiating rationality from normativity (probably paywalled). It commences with an extended exposition on the way both terms have been used historically, going on to deny that rationality is identical to normativity. Given that the topic is the use of these terms, the article could hardly avoid going in to some detail, offering this up for critique. It would be silly if the article instead stipulated, ("make it clear exactly what I intend the meaning of specific words are for the purposes of that particular discussion" — ) rationality and normativity and then claimed "look, they are different", refusing to have anything to do with further discussion of their use. Such a process closes of any criticism - "youa re just using the word differently"you can probably imagine a better example — Jamal
Well, yes, indeed. It's that same point of methodology. Dare I say that part of the reason the Germans are considered difficult is their stipulations close off criticism; their terms construct a linguistic bubble for themselves, separated from the rest of us; not unlike the artists and the artisans mentioned above....you're just calling into question the very project of trying to understand Being and Time. — Jamal
I had a brief chat with an economist yesterday about art. There is an amusing fiasco emerging in Australia's art business in which it seems that white fellas have been "guiding" indigenous artists so that they produce more saleable work... — Banno
It's called "dots for dollars." — frank
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