Yeah, but it's not only other inmates of the zoo that matter, not by a long shot, especially if it's more like your
fundamental metaphor for reality
— plaque flag
that matters most. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, that's not bad. I've figured out what philosophy really is dozens of times, but I'm starting to think you can just not do that. — Srap Tasmaner
you could embrace the ephemeral nature of philosophical struggles and shortlived victories and take giddy pleasure in it -- after all, you needn't worry about having any lasting influence! — Srap Tasmaner
At any rate, if we can only deal with ideas as elements of some narrative, we might as well face up to that up front, even if there's no decisively privileged way to do that. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, that's not bad. I've figured out what philosophy really is dozens of times, but I'm starting to think you can just not do that. — Srap Tasmaner
That’s up to you. — Wayfarer
It's not though. That goes against the norms of reason we usually follow in argument — fdrake
All very interesting I'm sure, but what effect was the history of the history of ideas supposed to have on me? — Srap Tasmaner
So what flaming hoops did I fail to jump through? — Wayfarer
To which I pointed out that Peirce is often categorised as an idealist ... the idealist or metaphysical aspects of Peirce have become deprecated in favour of a broadly scientific (dare I say scientistic) attitude to philosophy. — Wayfarer
Relating this to the OP, Srap Tasmaner sounds to want philosophy to be an open and unstructured kind of thing. A pastime with no real purpose or stakes. It is talk that is free and not to be constrained by grand ends. — apokrisis
you could embrace the ephemeral nature of philosophical struggles and shortlived victories and take giddy pleasure in it -- after all, you needn't worry about having any lasting influence! — Srap Tasmaner
Absolutely. But why? Because we don't have any certainty to convey... — Srap Tasmaner
Certainly. When I was young, I read philosophy in a believing frame of mind, acquiring ideas I could endorse or not. Got older and for a long time have read philosophy with little interest in the 'doctrine' at stake. I enjoy Wittgenstein primarily because we have such an extraordinary record of an interesting mind at work. I just like watching him go, and I think I've learned from how he thinks. I've enjoyed watching Dummett at work because his command of logic is formidable and he sees things I have to work through slowly. Sellars also has an unusual mind. I even like the tortuous way he writes. He's every bit as intricate as Derrida, but not for the same reasons at all. — Srap Tasmaner
What I haven't heard yet from anybody is some sort of full-throated defense of, I don't know, 'decentering' philosophy in philosophical discussion, not taking its self-image seriously, and treating it instead as only a part of Something Bigger, something like the history of ideas, the Great Story of Culture, whatever. — Srap Tasmaner
Besides -- it sounded like you'd be disappointed if I thought what you said I did. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, that's not bad. I've figured out what philosophy really is dozens of times, but I'm starting to think you can just not do that. — Srap Tasmaner
Now I'm even more confused, because surely Wayfarer does not intend to claim that those who disagree him are behaving irrationally, but if their beliefs are rationally inferred then no historical explanation for their holding those beliefs is even possible. — Srap Tasmaner
As it happens, Wayfarer is hostile to explanations of an agent holding a belief in terms of causes of any kind; beliefs are explained solely in terms of reasons — Srap Tasmaner
The history of an idea can also show where a tradition when wrong in ways that simply looking at where the current tradition is today can't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You understand the historical development in terms of a simple realist vs idealist ontology. And you have picked a side that ought to be monistically the winner in the end. So you seek to assimilate Peirce to that reading of the necessary answer to final philosophy. But you don't really appreciate Peirce as in fact the step that finally helps resolve the realism vs idealism dichotomy in Western metaphysics. Your history telling is wishful rather than factual. — apokrisis
The history of an idea can also show where a tradition when [ went ? ] wrong in ways that simply looking at where the current tradition is today can't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
As it happens, that is very much my reason for invoking it. — Wayfarer
There's plenty of reasons to go into the history of ideas. Off the top of my head:
It's a good way to rebut appeals to contemporary authority or appeals to popular opinion. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If I'm arguing for x, and my interlocutor's response is that x cannot be true because of y, where y is some widespread, dogmatically enforced belief that I think is false, then it makes perfect sense to explain how y came to be dogmatically enforced. For one, it takes the wind out of appeals to authority and appeals to popular opinion if you can show that the success of an idea was largely contingent on some historical phenomena that had nothing to do with valid reasons for embracing that idea. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The book Bernoulli's Fallacy is an excellent example of this sort of argument. It demonstrates some core issues with frequentism, but it also spends a lot of time showing how frequentism became dominant, and in many cases dogmatically enforced, for reasons that have nothing to do with the arguments for or against it re: statistical analysis. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Fair enough. — fdrake
Apokrisis has adopted those aspects of C S Peirce which are relevant to biology (namely, semiotics) in support of an overall naturalist philosophy. To which I pointed out that Peirce is often categorised as an idealist or even as a metaphysical philosopher - according to the SEP entry, one in the 'grand tradition' of Aristotle, Spinoza, et al. This historical point is that at the time Peirce was active, metaphysical idealism was predominant in philosophy generally, both in the US and Britain, but that with the emergence of the 'ordinary language' philosophy, Russell and Moore's rejection of idealism, etc - all of which is or should be common knowledge - that the idealist or metaphysical aspects of Peirce have become deprecated in favour of a broadly scientific (dare I say scientistic) attitude to philosophy. — Wayfarer
The notion I take Srap Tasmaner's OP to be gently poking a stick at is exactly that missing step. Simply saying that idea y arose alongside, for example, an enlightenment rejection of the supernatural, says absolutely nothing about whether such coincidence was reasoned, accidental, or peer-pressured. That case is left entirely unmade. — Isaac
If you are making a counterclaim or counterargument, you should be able to explain how it undermines your opponent's point. In that regard, what specific claim does your appeal to the history of ideas undermine? What force makes your claim need to be addressed on pain of being unreasonable? — fdrake
The only guess I have is that you seek to portray an opponent's conclusion as a contingent event of thought; which it is, their thought just happened as part of the history of ideas. Nevertheless a claim can be a necessary consequence of another through rules of reasoning. — fdrake
Fair enough. — fdrake
Not really. — Isaac
While I've enjoyed the responses to the wider interest I expressed in starting this thread, it has been frustrating watching the narrow point of the OP be so thoroughly missed. That's on me, I expect, but I'm glad a few of you understood. — Srap Tasmaner
Let's say I believe we ought never to have given up belief in and worship of the Greek gods. — Srap Tasmaner
So here's the question: what sort of point are you making when you post something like this? Is it only sociological? — Srap Tasmaner
My view is that, regardless, there is something real and important in in religious consciousness — Wayfarer
Why did you choose that as a hypothetical example? — Wayfarer
Is it because you have me pegged as a religious-or-spiritual type, therefore this must be typical of the way that I think? — Wayfarer
My claim is that, from the outset in Plato, down to the end of the 19th century, there was a soteriological element in Western philosophy. — Wayfarer
The software runs on the crowd, enough of us always alive to not lose our progress in the game's attempt to understand itself. — plaque flag
I'll leave you to address the question in your own way — Srap Tasmaner
what effect was the history of the history of ideas supposed to have on me? — Srap Tasmaner
For purposes of this thread, I don't care what you think — Srap Tasmaner
The content of the argument is of no interest to me — Srap Tasmaner
Am I being clear enough? — Srap Tasmaner
They don't have to focus on the human element because you are the human element and if everything goes right, you'll be thrilled to head to campus or to the lab or to the site everyday because you get to do science all day! — Srap Tasmaner
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