The National Gallery of Australia has commissioned an independent review of a major upcoming exhibition of artworks from the APY (Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara) Lands, following explosive allegations in The Australian.
The gallery said it was launching a review into the provenance and creation of works in its forthcoming exhibition Ngura Pulka - Epic Country after it was alleged that non-Indigenous arts workers painted parts of works by Aboriginal artists. — APY studios deny 'whitewashing' allegations as National Gallery launches investigation
It's illegal for non-indigenous people to pass their works off as indigenous, but indigenous people can make whatever they like and call it indigenous. — frank
How do you classify words? I think you could picture them in such a way that it's absurd to say they have the property of being definable. — frank
Well, I don't see how you would get a better insight into the relation between two traditions by rejecting one of them. — Janus
Rejecting a whole tradition as being wrong-headed seems itself to be wrong-headed, in any case. A balanced view sees all traditions as forms of life. I understand that AP is a form of life, that must yield some insight within a certain field of enquiry. — Janus
You won't get far in any field if you call into question the "usefulness" of the entire discipline. — Janus
I didn't say 'rejects', I said 'questions'. — Isaac
deciding in advance that 'better' only consists of answers which accept both traditions rather than question them — Isaac
Except, it seems the tradition that holds that some traditions are wrongheaded. That, apparently is the exception to your rule, which you proceed here to reject as wrongheaded. — Isaac
I don't see why not. Ruling out the possibility that the discipline is useless seems an entirely unnecessary shackle. — Isaac
Questioning some ideas within a tradition involves accepting the tradition overall and questioning it from within. — Janus
if you think a tradition is wrongheaded then there is no point attempting to discuss its ideas with those who think it is a good tradition because you will be off topic from the start. — Janus
So you think that, for example, you could advance QM by arguing that the whole discipline is useless? — Janus
Not at all. If one can question some of the ideas in a tradition (and find them flawed) it follows that one can question all ideas in a tradition (and find them flawed). There's no logical reason why every tradition must contain at least one non-flawed idea. — Isaac
The reason I made the distinction is that rejecting a tradition as a result of questioning its ideas is different to merely rejecting it dogmatically — Isaac
Yes, absolutely - assuming my argument has any merit (which I can't see how it would with QM), but it seems unarguable that if a discipline is useless, then arguing that case will advance that discipline. Finding out that it is useless is one of the possible end points of a field of enquiry. Phrenology, for example. — Isaac
What? You seem to be saying that disagreeing is off topic. That If I think something is bad, I'm off-topic when discussing it with people who think it's good. — Isaac
I want to say that the most interesting and famous philosophers have radically undermined or rejected the premises of their predecessors. If this is an exaggeration, it’s not much of one.
EDIT: should we, along the lines of Kuhn, distinguish normal and revolutionary philosophy? Maybe the analytic logic-choppers and the continental disciples of whichever big postmodern philosopher you care to mention are doing the former. — Jamal
A definition of a philosophical concept might be required at the beginning of a discussion only in the case that the term is equivocal… implies different things for us… [ and ] are poor substitutes for a skill, namely the ability to use terms successfully… — eat with a Jamal
but working together to see the breadth of our world in openly, seriously "producing" the terms the other is using, by creating examples and imagining a context where they are valid (as pointed out by plaque flag); to, as Socrates says, stand in the other's place, their shoes. I take this "unfolding", as you say, of our unexamined (shared) lives as the purpose and skill of the philosopher — Antony Nickles
If what you said were true we could find the whole of science or mathematics to be flawed. — Janus
Traditions tend to have their own premises, so to reject the entire tradition would be to reject the premises. But if you reject the premises of a tradition then there would no point entering into discussion with those who hold to the premises; you would just wind up talking past one another. — Janus
To reject a tradition is to reject its founding principles. Such a rejection is inevitably dogmatic, since premises are not supported by reason — Janus
No, I'm saying that if people are trying to have what to them would be a productive discussion in, for example, theology you barge in with what amounts to "theology is bullshit" that you will not be contributing to a productive discussion and you will be off-topic. — Janus
in any case even if the uselessness of a whole tradition could be established, that is not going to advance that discipline but rather will demolish it — Janus
Of course elsewhere he puts this "thing-in-itself" outside the reach of our knowledge, thus the lack of faith in our ordinary understandings — Antony Nickles
[In fact, in the realm of empirical reality—that which we can know—Kant is very much on the side of our ability to know, to directly perceive and to judge objectively. — Jamal
Indeed the whole point of that section of the CPR is to say that what works for mathematics is not appropriate for philosophy. — Jamal
You, I, Austin, Wittgenstein, and Kant are similarly sceptical about definitions in philosophy, claiming that we can use these concepts without such "mathematical certainty". — Jamal
Again, digressing, but Kant takes this as a failure and a tragedy for philosophy, rather than a fact that nevertheless doesn’t make philosophy less rigorous than science, less methodical, practical, relevant. — Antony Nickles
Well, this is the realm of science, not philosophy — Antony Nickles
we also fail to define the empirical, to Kant’s satisfaction — Antony Nickles
In creating “objectivity”, Kant cordoned us off from the world “directly”, unfiltered by us, though that was his ideal. — Antony Nickles
I don’t really want to do more of this exegesis, but I suppose it’s fair if what you’re saying is that I was mistaken in using Kant to back up my point. — Jamal
I still disagree with your angle on Kant but otherwise (I’ve read your first post in this thread) I think we’re in agreement. — Jamal
Maybe it does not matter, but we may disagree because I would say that we can define our concepts, after investigation, and it’s just that Kant’s understanding of, and requirement for, a “definition” is wrong. — Antony Nickles
Of course elsewhere he puts this "thing-in-itself" outside the reach of our knowledge, thus the lack of faith in our ordinary understandings
— Antony Nickles
In fact, in the realm of empirical reality—that which we can know—Kant is very much on the side of our ability to know, to directly perceive and to judge objectively. — Jamal
Yes, that's right, but only if a sound argument were given finding flaw in every single premise. That seems incredibly unlikely. Not so with a philosophical tradition. — Isaac
By "knowledge," Antony means knowledge of a mind-independent world. — frank
You, I, Austin, Wittgenstein, and Kant are similarly sceptical about definitions in philosophy, claiming that we can use these concepts without such "mathematical certainty". — Jamal
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