No actually that is not what i intended to express. I was simply saying that the oil paintings should be studied as oil paintings and water color paintings as water color paintings. The problem is sometimes in philosophy because of the lack of unified meanings, oil paintings are compared with water color painting and it is absurd.But a philosopher worth reading is creative and brings new ideas into being, using old language and a few neologisms. It is as if you were to demand that all paintings be done in oils, and never watercolour. You would be ignored, but more seriously, you would miss some great art. — unenlightened
it might help. But we have the additional problem that we don't tend to agree in the meaning of most of the words we discuss. — Manuel
Exactly my point causing , which is causing chaos in the field. — Abhiram
I am not denying the importance of interpretations. Philosophical hermeneutics is a field of philosophy and no one is denying its importance. What i meant was there are intended meanings by philosophers and western philosophy has developed because of the criticism and critique of these intended meanings. It is kind of like a chain reaction . But it will be problematic [for example] if a secondary interpretation of Aristotle is compared to the primary interpretation of Plato . Then we need to pin down these concepts and have clear sense of what, why, when, how and where these concepts developed. I think that is proper way of doing philosophy.So how would one go about trying to "pin down" something as abstract and therefore open to interpretation as "truth"? — Outlander
I agree; hermeneutics, however, is only a method and not itself a language.Hermeneutics should [be] connected to the key concepts... — Abhiram
Why isn't 'the study of "the nature of" the study of nature' a "unified definition" for metaphysics?... unified definition of metaphysics is not possible. — Abhiram
Why isn't 'the study of "the nature of" the study of nature' a "unified definition" for metaphysics? — 180 Proof
unified meaning of concepts — Abhiram
You're quite mistaken, Abhiram. 'Metaphysics' literally is tà metà tà physikà (transl. the books after the books on nature)^^metaphysics is literally, beyond physics — Abhiram
That, I think, was the noble, but not particularly successul, idea behind Esperanto, although if you wanted to launch a philosophy journal in Esperanto, you should probably borrow my avatar ;-) — Wayfarer
Another point that you must note is that, Logic is not an effective tool for those folks who are psychologically motivated to push their own ideas to other folks. For them logical arguments and proofs would mean nothing for changing their biased views on certain ideas they wanted to push to other folks. They won't accept logical truths as truths. They will keep denying verified and proved truths as fallacies.
Reasonings and Logical proofs are only effective for those folks who are authentic and willing to accept truths as truths. — Corvus
I think it impossible to have a "unified" language where terms are fixed in meaning. — Judaka
Exactly the opposite of what philosophy aspires to, understanding of the nature of universals. — Pantagruel
You're quite mistaken, Abhiram. 'Metaphysics' literally is tà metà tà physikà (transl. the books after the books on nature)^^ — 180 Proof
For your question do we need a unified language in Philosophy? I would say No. It won't make difference what language or formal logic you use. If some folks are psychologically biased on something or some ideas, then no logic, no reasoning and explanation can change his views or enable them the point. IE psychology overrides reasoning in philosophy in some cases. — Corvus
Wrong. Apparently you didn't read (or understand) the links I've provided ...By after physics ,he meant that it isbeyond the physical one or comes after the physical. — Abhiram
Aristotle (d. 4th century BCE) never used the title "metaphysics" which was designated centuries later (1st century BCE).by the editor of his surviving works Andronikos. Again: the books after the books on nature (re: Aristotle's Physika is his book on nature (from physis² in Greek)).After the Physics ~Andronikos of Rhodes, not; "beyond physics" (woo-woo). :roll:
https://www.britannica.com/topic/metaphysics — 180 Proof
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