The Sophists focused on the making of money and teaching what they thought was good; We know Socrates didn't like them very much. — Dermot Griffin
... philosophy (and the humanities in general) is broken down to the advocacy of the position of meaning or power ... — Dermot Griffin
:100: :up:... philosophy (and the humanities in general) is broken down to the advocacy of the position of meaning or power ...
— Dermot Griffin
They are not separable. For most of us, both ancient and modern, the art of living is not something that can be practiced cloistered and removed from the demands and necessities of life. — Fooloso4
The institution of philosophy is a bunch of people desperate to justify their own job, all the while pushing people to learn 'the art of publishing' which is not about new ideas, but learning to find what publishers are looking for as well as modern trends. Original ideas that are not forcibly tied to some other famous philosopher are discouraged and rejected. It is not a place of open thought, but stifled institutionalism. — Philosophim
In short, when philosophy (and the humanities in general) is broken down to the advocacy of the position of meaning or power, a very interesting conversation can begin. — Dermot Griffin
For most of us, both ancient and modern, the art of living is not something that can be practiced cloistered and removed from the demands and necessities of life. — Fooloso4
.I personally think that one can break the history of philosophy into two categories. These categories are the will to meaning and the will to power; Kierkegaard and Nietzsche were known for putting a focus on these, but I think the roots themselves go back to antiquity — Dermot Griffin
The reliance on excessive vocabulary and technical jargon is the desperate cry for relevance and convincing others of its own importance. The more one relies on esoteric vocabulary, the more unnecessarily complex the idea becomes. This can give the illusion of complexity and intelligence where it does not exist — Philosophim
For most of us, both ancient and modern, the art of living is not something that can be practiced cloistered and removed from the demands and necessities of life.
— Fooloso4
But then, most of us are not renunciates, sages, separated from the masses. Most of us are 'the they', das man, the man in the street. That's why traditional philosophy is extremely non-PC. — Wayfarer
Nietzsche didn’t speak of will to meaning but will to truth, a subset of will to power. His notion of power wasn’t some kind of concentrated energy possessed by certain individuals or institutions to be used for good or evil. He believed that all meaning is the effect of differential relations within a system of values. Each individual psyche is organized as such schemes, gestalts, matrices of inter-affecting vectors of drives competing with and altering each other. Social power works the same way, as differential forces flowing though and between persons in a culture, so that each of us in our practices reciprocally affect each other to form social systems and institutions shaped in certain ways, producing and changing the meanings that they have for us. — Joshs
modern philosophy appears above all as the construction of a technical jargon reserved for specialists — Dermot Griffin
The reliance on excessive vocabulary and technical jargon is the desperate cry for relevance and convincing others of its own importance. The more one relies on esoteric vocabulary, the more unnecessarily complex the idea becomes. This can give the illusion of complexity and intelligence where it does not exist. — Philosophim
Do you have any famous philosophers in mind here, or just the hoi polloi? — Joshs
Do you have any famous philosophers in mind here, or just the hoi polloi? — Joshs
I disagree. There is no word in any language that expresses "epiphenomenalism". From this fact, it is evident that there is a need for new words to be coined. Those new words quickly become jargon. — Lionino
Meaning is personal, and Power is communal. So, the pursuit of Meaning is Philosophical, while the pursuit of Power is Political. :smile:In short, when philosophy (and the humanities in general) is broken down to the advocacy of the position of meaning or power, a very interesting conversation can begin. — Dermot Griffin
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