I think the cult of the "genius" is something that we can do without, and arguably often holds back progress. — Janus
Yet if the only form of tradition, of handing down, consisted in following the ways of the immediate generation before us in a blind or timid adherence to its successes, “tradition” should positively be discouraged. We have seen many such simple currents soon lost in the sand; and novelty is better than repetition. Tradition is a matter of much wider significance. It cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour. It involves, in the first place, the historical sense, which we may call nearly indispensable to any one who would continue to be a poet beyond his twenty-fifth year; and the historical sense involves a perception, not only of the pastness of the past, but of its presence; the historical sense compels a man to write not merely with his own generation in his bones, but with a feeling that the whole of the literature of Europe from Homer and within it the whole of the literature of his own country has a simultaneous existence and composes a simultaneous order. This historical sense, which is a sense of the timeless as well as of the temporal and of the timeless and of the temporal together, is what makes a writer traditional. And it is at the same time what makes a writer most acutely conscious of his place in time, of his own contemporaneity.
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What happens is a continual surrender of himself as he is at the moment to something which is more valuable. The progress of an artist is a continual self-sacrifice, a continual extinction of personality.
There remains to define this process of depersonalization and its relation to the sense of tradition. It is in this depersonalization that art may be said to approach the condition of science.
Absolutely. So rationality is just a way of harnessing collision the collision variety. — plaque flag
A profound spiritual experience might also come up in a conversation as an explanation for why someone quit drinking or got rid of most of their property. — plaque flag
To me the 'real' esoteric stuff, which is important to me, is properly a secret in a circle of trust. — plaque flag
The genius for the alienated beginner is a vague hope, a promise shining in the distance, a magical father figure, a gleaming token in the fallacy of argument from authority. — plaque flag
I think the importance of major thinkers consists in just a very few insights central to the human condition, and the rest, all the arguments designed to justify those ideas are relatively tedious, obsessively driven filler. Of course, I am speaking only for myself.
When I read, and I do read a lot, but in a very scattered fashion, I read mainly for aesthetic pleasure. I need a story, rather than a complex argument, to hold my attention; I just have little confidence that following along, sloggin' it, with a complicated argument will yield any fruit worth the effort in the end. Life is short... — Janus
Of course that's true, but the experience itself cannot be definitively explained. — Janus
For me the esoteric can be, has been, interesting, but I think it is mostly, to distort Shakespeare, full of secret unsoundness and innuendo, signifying nothing. — Janus
signifying nothing. — Janus
I think the importance of major thinkers consists in just a very few insights central to the human condition, and the rest, all the arguments designed to justify those ideas are relatively tedious, obsessively driven filler. — Janus
This is very interesting to me. I tend to read to catch up with things and I think my reading for aesthetic pleasure is over for the time being.
My view of complex arguments and 'high theory' is that they make almost no difference to how I live my life. I am not an academic, nor do I feel the need to remain up to date. I also don't have the disposition to follow complex arguments across scores of intractable pages. I find I'm more interested in people's presuppositions rather than the vast edifices they often erect upon these foundations. — Tom Storm
So 'my ecstatic vision' has a 'truly private' aspect, and that private aspect is likely to be by far what matters most to me. But this is also as mundane as the feel of hot water in the bathtub which is not itself just concept. — plaque flag
I think we have a somewhat different conception of the esoteric. I'd include heraldry. I'd include stars-and-stripes, hammers-and-sickles, swastikas, muted post horns, any kind of excluding symbol. Even sexism has an esoteric aspect, brilliantly emphasized in Lynch's version of Dune. Race is often (usually?) discussed/experienced esoterically. My genitals, my skin, is a 'magical' organ, giving me transrational access to Insight. So to me the esoteric is as big as the shadow cast by the ideal communication community, which is to say that it's the rule rather than the exception. — plaque flag
A little playfully but also seriously, I'd say the world itself is most entirelessly without substance. — plaque flag
To me the justifications are scaffolding that we can be rebuilt as needed. The main thing is to get it said.
I think you are right that there aren't that many necessary insights. But I experience myself as a painter or composer in the world of concept, so I treasure the variety and the complexity ---to some degree but it's so satisfying to find the grand patterns in it and harmonize the chaos. — plaque flag
I think we are speaking about different things. I have in mind the idea that there is hidden knowledge which can be transmitted from master to acolyte. — Janus
For me it's poetry, painting and music, all of which I see as being more sensorially and feeling oriented. — Janus
the presuppositions and basic insights to be found in philosophical works being more interesting than the vast edifices. — Janus
Yes, your version is more prototypical, and mine is a generalization. To me the main is idea is the closure and exclusiveness.
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I do think statements like God is love intend a truth about the world. I wouldn't call such a statement esoteric so much as ambiguous. What metaphor is isn't easy to say. I'd probably have to use metaphors. — plaque flag
:up:such a thing could never be demonstrated to be so either empirically or logically, so it would seem to be discursively useless. — Janus
As a great comedian once said, "I couldn't possibly fail to disagree with you less". — Janus
So….it’s fine to disbelieve in Kantian transcendental logic, which presupposes a fair understanding of what it is, but how is Hegel’s logic any less transcendental?
Heh. You're asking the wrong person. Tobias would be a much more sympathetic voice if he's willing to pipe up on Hegel.
Hegel is certainly a German Idealist. — Moliere
Hegel on the other hand is an absolute idealist, meaning that there is no 'thing in itself', that is itself a contradictory idea. There is nothing laying 'behind' our sensibility and the distinction sensibility and understanding cannot be made. ... Saying for instance that a door knob is not really really a doorknob, but instead a bundle of intuitions from some noumenal world, is nonsense for Hegel. A doorknob is a doorknob is a doorknob. There are just no god given doorknobs, they are a product of our interaction with the world. That is not a transcendental but an immanent logic. — Tobias
Hegel on the other hand is an absolute idealist, meaning that there is no 'thing in itself', that is itself a contradictory idea. There is nothing laying 'behind' our sensibility and the distinction sensibility and understanding cannot be made. Instead the world as it is necessarily confirms to the world as we understand it. The understanding is what is the world (The rational is the real). That is oftentimes read as something very exalted or esoteric, but I think it means nothing less than that something can be a certain something at all is because the way we understand, perceive, handle, interact with that certain something. Saying for instance that a door knob is not really really a doorknob, but instead a bundle of intuitions from some noumenal world, is nonsense for Hegel. A doorknob is a doorknob is a doorknob. There are just no god given doorknobs, they are a product of our interaction with the world. That is not a transcendental but an immanent logic. — Tobias
The so-called Münchhausen trilemma—that is, that all attempts to discover ultimate foundations result in either logical circularity, infinite regress, or an arbitrary end to the process of justification—can be overcome by moving from the level of semantic analysis to the level of pragmatics and recognizing that some presuppositions are necessary for the very possibility of intersubjectively valid criticism and argumentation. — plaque flag
Kant takes the function of the sense organs for granted, yet the sense organs we can know anything about are only given in appearance, and yet this appearance is made the source of appearance. If space is just in our head, why would we think sense organs mediate an 'outside' (things-in-themselves, presensuous urstuff) ? — plaque flag
which is given to us through the combination of the categories through the schematism into the sensible intuition which we all share. — Moliere
Just to be clear, I don't at all question your knowledge of Kant. I'm just pointing out what I find problematic in his work. I hope you experience the challenge as an opportunity for fun. — plaque flag
My gripe against a tendency in Kant and a certain tendency in Husserl is what I see as their unwitting semantic cheating. — plaque flag
What is sensible intuition supposed to be if not the 'input' of the sense organs ? — plaque flag
So the worldly experience of sense organs, along with the worldly social experience of normative-discursive subjectivity, making a unified stream of experience meaningful in the first place, are smuggled in to a theory that thinks it can construct the world from inside out. — plaque flag
Hence my OP which makes the ICC* our glorious fundamental ontology's 'necessary being' --an enworldled community of 'ontologists' sharing its founding intention.
*The notion of an “ideal communication community” [ICC] functions as a guide that can be formally applied both to regulate and to critique concrete speech situations. Using this regulative and critical ideal, individuals would be able to raise, accept, or reject each other’s claims to truth, rightness, and sincerity solely on the basis of the “unforced force” of the better argument—i.e., on the basis of reason and evidence—and all participants would be motivated solely by the desire to obtain mutual understanding.
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jurgen-Habermas/Philosophy-and-social-theory — plaque flag
At the very least I think you'd have to say it's what all our sense-organs do with respect to a sensible-intuition. — Moliere
I should stress that I am miles away from being an orthodox Hegelian. But I love certain passages in him, but I largely enjoy him transformed and in some ways purified by Kojeve, Brandom, and Heidegger. Braver's A Thing of This World is a tale of the journey of ICS, the impersonal conceptual scheme, at it set sail from Kant and only got freer and looser and finally fused with the world, so that this conceptual scheme was simply the conceptual aspect of the lifeworld, not some mediating image internal to a person or even a community. In Hegel, who managed the fusion mentioned above, it was evolving toward a goal. In the later Heidegger, the fusion is maintained, but it (now the lifeworld's way of being) drifts aimlessly.But I don't think he's as guilty of stepping out to construct the world as much as Hegel is. — Moliere
It's just the "foundations" part I'm questioning. — Moliere
we can come to see that philosophers start from different places through the humble method of comparison and contrast after having read the philosophers. And that's why I have doubts on ultimate foundations: seems like there's a lot of possible foundations to go around claiming as ultimate foundations. — Moliere
In case it's unclear (and to further the conversation on fun stuff ) I'm a nondualist direct realist — plaque flag
The point is that autonomy really is almost apriori. Will you ask me to justify my claim that justification, in a context of freedom, is necessary or foundational ? Is this not merely enacting an ICC ? Is the state of peaceful tolerant conversation another way to put it ? Are we afraid to begin to explicate dogmatism (defining the ICC is the same as defining its negative) ? Will we dogmatically forbid such articulation ? — plaque flag
Sure. To me what you are missing is your agreement with me. Which is to say that you yourself are offering a founding assumption. 'We should apiori rule out foundationalism. — plaque flag
The metaphor of foundation is, in this context, a metaphor for that which enables. — plaque flag
Having no method at all is a fantasy that, in my view, evaporates with a grasp of our being as thrown projection. — plaque flag
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