• Moliere
    4.7k
    Heh. Fair.

    What?! My wonderings are off-topic? Never! :D

    Good and interesting thread either way. I'm enjoying it.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.8k


    :up:

    I suppose I was thinking in terms of metaphysics and a more general notion of goodness. You know, a plague spore would be "better" than a prion, or a hurricane "better" than a rock.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.8k


    point is that we shouldn't be beguiled by the idea that a loss of connection with a particular older tradition renders the entire discipline incoherent. Make Philosophy Great Again? I don't think so.

    I don't think this is MacIntyre's point. He goes into great detail on why he thinks the collapse into emotivism happens with a series of case studies. The thesis isn't that "only the classical tradition is coherent and so moving away from it results in incoherence." Rather it is "these developments led to incoherence because of x, y, and z (with particular attention to and affirmation of Nietzsche's critiques of ethics)," but these problems do not apply to the tradition.

    But then the sub-thesis is that the abandonment of the tradition has helped lead to this incoherence precisely because our moral vocabulary was developed in the context of the old tradition, and we continue to lean on this vocabulary even when it has been uprooted from the context where it makes sense. For example, he talks about equivocation in lists of the virtues in philosophers, but also in Jane Austen, Benjamin Franklin, etc., and the further equivocation as vice becomes the "vices" of the "vice unit" (i.e. primarily prostitution, gambling, drugs, and alcohol) and virtue becomes a sexually loaded term for women.

    I think it's a very similar to the arguments that Deely makes in "Four Ages of Understanding," and the "Red Book," re the shift in epistemology, the philosophy of perception, and semiotics in the early modern period and on. The claims are similar; terms like "objective" and "subjective" come to take on meanings that are in some ways the opposite of their original meaning and which lead to incoherence because their original framework has been not only abandoned, but forgotten. Some parts might be stronger than others; Deely seems to be on particularly solid ground on the points relating specifically to the philosophy of signs and signification.

    I think you could probably write a similar book about metaphysics and terms like "substance."

    Such historical arguments can of course be biased or oversimplifying, and they become less plausible when they rely significantly on relatively recent "new readings" of old thought.

    Heidegger makes this sort of argument going way back with the "ontotheology" thing, and I think that, even if it fails as a historical piece, we might consider that it applies to much philosophy, if not all the philosophy he thought it applied to. Gadamer has a pretty good critique of why Heidegger's history might be thought to fail a bit (basically, it assumed that the late scholasticism with which Heidegger was most familiar—e.g. Suarez—was representative of all scholasticism or even the whole of "classical metaphysics," but it isn't really.)

    Then you have your out and out polemics, such as Weaver's "Ideas Have Consequences." These can still have value, but tend to run into much more simplification and bias. Another example here might be the many attempts to frame Aristotle and Plato as essentially representing the empirical/rationalist (Anglo/Continental) divide, when they really don't fit these neatly at all.
  • J
    626
    Yes, this is a good corrective to my somewhat peremptory rejection of MacIntyre's claim, as I understand it. But at the same time, isn't his whole argument based on a supposed "incoherence" in some monolithic thing called modern ethical philosophy? Is a "collapse into emotivism" supposed to be characteristic of how current moral philosophers think about ethics? That would be news to Bernard Williams or Thomas Nagel or Martha Nussbaum. That's what I meant when I said he was engaged in a degree of cherry-picking, naming approaches he particularly dislikes and making them exemplary.

    the further equivocation as vice becomes the "vices" of the "vice unit" (i.e. primarily prostitution, gambling, drugs, and alcohol) and virtue becomes a sexually loaded term for women.Count Timothy von Icarus

    Sure, that's exactly what they are -- equivocations, with a highly political purpose. But incoherent? I don't feel I have any trouble understanding the competing meanings of a term like "vice," nor do I think it affect my ability to engage in ethical thinking that is independent of the Aristotelian framework.

    The irony here, for me, is that I actually rely more on virtue ethics than any other semi-systematic theory. I just don't feel it needs the kind of support MacIntyre wants to give it.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k
    terms like "objective" and "subjective" come to take on meanings that are in some ways the opposite of their original meaning and which lead to incoherence because their original framework has been not only abandoned, but forgotten.Count Timothy von Icarus

    This is the vision of cultural transmission as a game of "telephone". @Wayfarer frequently makes such suggestions.

    Two questions though:

    (1) Is the original message necessarily the most important? (Dewey, for a counterpoint, talks about philosophical problems not being solved but abandoned, passed by, because they are no longer "live" to later generations.) The word "necessarily" provides an easy out; make it, why should we think the original is important at all, except as a matter of historical interest?

    (2) How much time-place-language-conceptual-scheme-culture relativism are we committed to? Just enough that certain people "no longer understand" the old ways, but not so much that the dedicated scholar can't "recover" or "reconstruct" what has been lost?

    (2) is particularly "fraught," as the kids say. When you dip into such a debate, you'll first read someone claiming that the original meaning of such and such was this, because in their conceptual scheme blah blah blah. And you think, wow that's really interesting, and the shift in perspective is exciting. But then you find out that every little detail is subject to endless debate among specialists, and it gets harder to believe anyone really knows the "original". -- And all that comes before considering whether you're even capable of entering into the worldview of a thousand or three thousand years ago, given a mind stuffed with 20th- and 21st-century ideas. How alien are the ideas you're supposed to be able to grasp? How can you know you've done so, that you haven't just played another round of "telephone"?
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.8k


    I think you might be misjudging the sense in which these terms become "incoherent." MacIntyre does take a very broad approach, which has some deficiencies, but his paradigmatic criticism of Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment ethics is Nietzsche, whose attack on ethics is particularly broad, but which has also generally been accepted as applying broadly (i.e., a serious challenge, even if it can be overcome).

    He is not claiming that all modern ethicists are emotivists. This would be a silly thing to try to argue, because of all the counter examples that exist. He is claiming that the emotivists, or those reducing ethics to power, etc., actually have very strong arguments vis-á-vis contemporary ethics. It is indeed a weakness of the book that it doesn't really get into these critiques as much as one might hope. I don't think MacIntyre initially imagined how popular it would become, and probably figured people would be familiar with the references. But then another feature of modern ethical debate he focuses on to make his point is the inability of people to agree on almost any principles, and how this differs from earlier thought


    In terms of contemporary thought, he looks to the analytic tradition a bit, focusing on Moore for a while, but since he was a Marxist, Marxism comes in for particular critique. The contemporary example he uses towards the end of the book is how the debate between partisans of Rawls and Nozick is interminable because of the historical issues he traces through Hume, Kant, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche.

    I think Charles Taylor's "A Secular Age," is a useful corrective here because of the dominance of what Taylor calls "subtraction narratives" of the emergence of secularism. These basically say: "We inherited all sorts of maladaptive, superstitious dogmas. Secularism is just what emerges when you cut all that garbage out." Taylor's main point is that this is a false narrative. Secularism was positively constructed, and in particular it was positively constructed on religious grounds in a theologically informed context. This is relevant to the idea that the problems of modern ethics—their shape and structure—were in some way inevitable once the "historical baggage weighing us down" was jettisoned. But the book also takes a broader look at how notions of human flourishing evolved in ways that make doing ethics difficult.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k
    That's what I meant when I said he was engaged in a degree of cherry-picking, naming approaches he particularly dislikes and making them exemplary.J

    I think there's a real question whether supposed views of the past are ever really in play in a contemporary debate, or are people staking out contemporary positions in that debate but using the past to give their position the lustre of authority.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k


    Or, on the other hand, to associate the position you oppose with the past well lost.
  • Patterner
    1k
    saying something is more complex is different to saying it is of greater worth.
    — Banno

    Curious then that murder charges apply only to the killing of humans. Although that may be an inadvertent illustration of the consequences of a flattened ontology.
    Wayfarer
    If it was because of complexity, I suspect there would be a chart on which all living things are placed in order if complexity, with different punishments for killing members of different levels.

    I think, rather, what makes us unique is the reason the charge of murder applies uniquely to us.
  • Leontiskos
    3.1k
    Btw, it was started to give you a platform for explicitly discussing and defending an idea you often mention in passing, an idea you feel is often rejected out of hand.Srap Tasmaner

    In that case, my difficulty with the OP is that we are trying to get degrees out of the substance/mode binary. Maybe that can be done, but at face value it is implausible. Unless there are only two degrees.

    The further purpose was to specifically not reject the idea out of hand and encourage others not to, and to set an example by trying to make sense of an idea I don't naturally have much affinity for, in my own clumsy way, of course.Srap Tasmaner

    And I appreciate that, too.

    I find that sort of thing awfully interesting, but this thread is about what sort of existence properties have, whether things that have more property-types have more existence, and whether there's a truer realm beyond this one.Srap Tasmaner

    Okay.

    Don't tempt me. I'll start a thread in your honor next.Srap Tasmaner

    :grimace:

    Really, though, I've been egging you on to start a thread on logical pragmatism for awhile now. I am willing to oppose that, and you also have a stake in it.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k


    What's in it for me? (See what I did there?)
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k
    my difficulty with the OP is that we are trying to get degrees out of the substance/mode binary.Leontiskos

    Which btw I didn't see coming. I think that comes from @Wayfarer's stuff about the 17th century.
  • jgill
    3.9k
    In that case, my difficulty with the OP is that we are trying to get degrees out of the substance/mode binary. Maybe that can be done, but at face value it is implausible. Unless there are only two degreesLeontiskos

    True enough. But I wonder if some of the oddities coming out of quantum theory might lie in that nebulous zone between the two extremes. My thoughts range from virtual incredulity at action at a distance to speculating that somehow mathematics materializes in a strange way.

    Which brings up a question. How is logic related to definitions of reality?
  • Wayfarer
    22.6k
    I think that comes from Wayfarer's stuff about the 17th century.Srap Tasmaner

    Which, recall, originated in the discussion about whether and in what sense philosophy can be considered "higher" (and why the scare quotes around the term.) Which then leads to the question, along what axis, what dimension, is that distinction meaningful? Higher in what sense? So, rummaging through my grab-bag of things I've read, that statement about degrees of reality in Liebniz et al came to mind: 'the less dependent a thing is on other things for its existence, the more real it is'. That maps against my hazy conception of 'the unconditioned' as the domain of absolute truth.

    I still find it interesting that ordinary people routinely think truth can land on a spectrum, that there can be more or less truth in what you say.

    And in a similar way people describe ideas, accounts, views, as more realistic or less, on a spectrum like accuracy (which fdrake brought up).

    I find that sort of thing awfully interesting, but this thread is about what sort of existence properties have, whether things that have more property-types have more existence, and whether there's a truer realm beyond this one.
    Srap Tasmaner

    Like 'folk wisdom'? I'll own up that one of the books that considerably influenced me was Alan Watts' last book - The Book: On the Taboo against Knowing Who You Are. Later there were other books in popular Vedanta - Vivekananda, Yogananda and Ramana (and let's not forget The Beatles). They are strictly speaking outside the bounds of philosophy proper, at any rate, outside the Western philosophical corpus. But they have the distinct advantage of still being a living philosophy, propagated by living adherents, not confined solely to glass museum cases or library shelves. And I also think they're a strong implicit influence in much of contemporary discussion about philosophy of mind and consciousness.

    Anyway, that's where I think the idea of self-realisation comes from. And the salient idea there is indeed that that of a 'truer realm', which is what 'the sage' has come to realise (in both senses of understanding to be true and bringing to fruition.)

    But that sits awkwardly against talk of 'what property-types have more existence'. Nevertheless I think it's the implicit background for the idea expressed in the 'great chain of being', which is where this started.

    Even in pre-modern western philosophy the outlines of similar ideas can be discerned - like one of those satellite photos where archaeologists can make out the outlines of an ancient city which is no longer visible on the ground. The hoi polloi, the ordinary man (i.e. you and I) is distracted by passions and petty concerns, bickering over opinions and thirsting after pleasures. Through the philosophical ascent we 'come to our senses', as it were, and begin to 'see truly'. (I notice that one of the interesting cross-cultural scholars I read, Raymond Panikkar, did one of his three PhD's on a comparative study of Thomas Aquinas and Ādi Śańkara.)

    Is this version any more accurate than MacIntyre's?J

    I think the fragmentation and pluralism of today's world is necessary and inevitable. It's a consequence of the globalisation of knowledge and culture. Another of the Eastern philosophy books that impressed me was subtitled 'seeking truth in a time of chaos'.

    ”Water is an undividable primitive" is the sort of supposition that is open to empirical investigation. No doubt, we could easily reformulate these models (or something like them) using new, ever smaller primitive elements, as materialists did. In some sense, they are unfalsifiable in that we can always posit ever smaller building blocks at work in a "building block ontology," but we might have other empirically informed grounds to reject such a view.Count Timothy von Icarus

    From a very high level of description, isn’t what happened, in the aftermath of Descartes’ division of mind and matter, that res cogitans was to become rejected as an oxymoronic conception, a ‘spiritual substance’, a ghost in the machine? Leaving the other half of his dualist model, extended matter, which proved so amenable to prediction, control and manipulation through the emerging new mathematical physics, that it came to be seen as the only real? And that is what finally precipitates the loss of the vertical dimension and with it the hierarchy of values. What is of value then becomes a matter for the individual conscience.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k
    Alan WattsWayfarer

    My oldest son and his friends have read it, along with Nietzsche, Marx, Camus. The hippy reading list is alive and well in some quarters.

    the salient idea there is indeed that that of a 'truer realm', which is what 'the sage' has come to realise (in both senses of understanding to be true and bringing to fruition.)Wayfarer

    it's the implicit background for the idea expressed in the 'great chain of being', which is where this started.Wayfarer

    Through the philosophical ascent we 'come to our senses', as it were, and begin to 'see truly'.Wayfarer

    I think you're right to see all these dots as connected, and right to think people reject the whole package because they reject a particular dot, for they see them as connected too.

    I think we should have a conversation about the truer realm, because that intuition -- that this world isn't all there is -- is so persistent across cultures and ages. In the modern world, we've mostly corraled it into religion, but the intuition itself is interesting.

    So here let me ask you: my hunch is that this intuition, that there's something else, something more, comes first and beliefs about the other realm after. Do you think that's right? Or do you think that people, maybe a smallish number, have experiences that are, well, unusual, that they take as experiences of another realm -- that such experience comes first? I could see either. What do you think?
  • Wayfarer
    22.6k
    So here let me ask you: my hunch is that this intuition, that there's something else, something more, comes first and beliefs about the other realm after. Do you think that's right? Or do you think that people, maybe a smallish number, have experiences that are, well, unusual, that they take as experiences of another realm -- that such experience comes first? I could see either. What do you think?Srap Tasmaner

    You're on the mark with the observation about it having been 'corraled into religion'. That is why there is a taboo about this subject. But then, for a lot of European history, the consequences of challenging ecclesiastical orthodoxy were extremely serious. 'Orthodoxy' means 'right worship' or 'right belief', and the penalties for straying were severe. This has left a kind of shadow, something like a repressed memory, in the European consciousness, which affects much of what is said and thought about it.

    About there being other realms, I would say cautiously yes. But there is a principle in Mahāyāna, that Nirvāṇa and Saṃsāra are not separate realms, but the same realm viewed with different eyes. Through the lens of clinging and aversion, the world is fragmented and suffering (dukkha). Through the lens of insight the same world is seen as interdependent, luminous, and spontaneous. Not that this is easy to realise in practice, and popular presentations of Eastern wisdom have often turned out to be another means of self-deception or ways to exploit the gullible. But it retains a kernel of truth.

    I think there is such a thing as revelation in the sense of an intuitive vision or insight into the real nature of existence, and that the Buddha did possess such an insight, which is why (perhaps contrary to secular interpretations) his was a revealed religion. There are others as well (Parmenides comes to mind), but notice in Buddhism the emphasis on insight, as opposed to belief, which is why the first article on the eightfold path is 'right view', a subtly different thing to 'right belief'.

    Anyway enough of a digression into points East, but that explains a bit about why I came at the question from the angle I did.
  • J
    626
    Thank you for your patience. I'll have to reread AV. Your engagement with it is deeper than mine, and I suspect more accurate as to the arguments. I liked Whose Justice? Which Rationality? very much, though.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k
    the same realm viewed with different eyesWayfarer

    I like this.

    Through the lens of clinging and aversion, the world is fragmented and suffering (dukkha). Through the lens of insight the same world is seen as interdependent, luminous, and spontaneous.Wayfarer

    That certainly has the ring of truth!

    It does also sound like the sort of difference that you might attribute to affect or mood.

    But that can go either way: you could also say that your mood derives from "which world" you're seeing.

    intuitive vision or insight into the real nature of existenceWayfarer

    There's just too much literature on all this for us to do more than scratch the surface.

    I'll add something else, which is a little closer to your point about self-realization. There's another sort of insight which maybe concerns something like freedom. I've acquired a sort of homegrown Buddhism: when I'm worried about something (and there is so much to worry about), I tell myself "This is just a thing that is happening" and I can let go of the feelings I attach to those worries. I tell my son, "You gotta be Taoist about this shit." -- Henry Miller used to talk about being a happy rock, that the river flows over but cannot move or change.
  • J
    626
    I think there's a real question whether supposed views of the past are ever really in play in a contemporary debate, or are people staking out contemporary positions in that debate but using the past to give their position the lustre of authority.Srap Tasmaner

    Another possibility: Some (not all) of those who make arguments using the past, want to persuade us of a narrative in which society (almost always Western society) as a whole has gone down the tubes since whatever the Golden Age was supposed to be. In this version, the decline in philosophy doesn't stand on its own, but is part and parcel of a decline in values, culture, and spirituality. We're meant to see the latter sorts of decline as obvious ("Just look around!"), and infer from this that the older philosophy must have been better too. We might even see a causal connection. I suppose if you have a grand narrative in which the West has declined, this doesn't fit well with a belief that philosophy has progressed, or at least not gotten worse.
  • Srap Tasmaner
    5k


    Absolutely. And it can go the other way -- you can guilt-by-association traditional philosophy, art, religion, anything of the past if you think society is so much better now than it was in the bad old days.

    I should add, I don't think it's a matter of "reducing" someone's philosophy to their politics, or their aesthetics, or vice versa. But I do believe William James was right to sense that there were different temperaments, I guess we could say, and that attitudes toward various things tend to come in clusters. Or if not temperaments then styles, different ways of approaching things, of defining and trying to solve problems.
  • Wayfarer
    22.6k
    And it can go the other waySrap Tasmaner

    Quite! And very pleased to have established some rapport.
  • J
    626
    And it can go the other way
    — Srap Tasmaner

    Quite! And very pleased to have established some rapport.
    Wayfarer

    Yes. One of those other ways is what some call "whiggish" -- when we make moral judgments about people in the past as if they should have had the same (obviously correct!) attitudes we have today, in our enlightened age.
  • jgill
    3.9k
    Back to the OP momentarily, I think a spectrum of reality is a better approach then degrees of reality, the latter implying a sort of ranking.

    Eastern mystical practices, like Zen, revolve about experiences of enlightenment rather than philosophical discussions. Although enlightenment may be ineffable, it would help if more responses on the site were about personal experiences than speculations and searching out what the Greek ancients had to say. I realize this goes against the grain of this site, and that also there may be very few instances of personal revelations, but the discussion is getting nowhere with regard to its title. However, if this is OK with the few participants, and digressions are acceptable, I stand down and watch. Just my opinion.
  • frank
    15.8k

    As a child, I was convinced that there's something behind the world I can see, as if it's all a veil and whatever is behind it is "more real.". When I later came across Plato's allegory of the cave, I was a little shocked because it seemed so familiar.

    I can't avoid reading my childish ideas into Plato and all the other philosophers who seem to echo the same thing. At this stage I think "more real" is a metaphor.
  • jgill
    3.9k
    I practiced meditative exercises 60 years ago, thanks to Alan Watts and others and the "Zen Boom", along with existentialism. Then later followed Castaneda's Art of Dreaming instructions with amazing results altering my understandings of reality.
  • Wayfarer
    22.6k
    My search, as it were, began one winter afternoon in the local park, by myself, about to head home for dinner, aged late childhood. At that moment, I had a sudden and inexplicable realisation of the foundational nature of the 'I'. Not myself, as a particular individual, but THE self, the 'I AM' for whom the world exists, without which there is no existence. It suddenly became clear to me that this 'I am' is foundational to reality. Around the same period I had a similar realisation, of having once known the one thing one had to know, like a key to happiness. There was a sense of having known it long, long ago, 'before this life' as it were. Both those moments of realisation were swift and ephemeral, in that they passed very quickly, but they had a sense of certainty about them. Around that time I wrote (or was dictated) a poem about having lived before - only recall two fragments, 'that which speaks to you is you, once heard in death, now heard in life', and 'a new seed falls to ground, unsown'. Subjectively I felt these were significant, but on an outward level - so what? I still had to cope with all of the regular adolescent stuff of school and family life, and all the rest. They certainly didn't have any signficant outward effect, other than this sense that I had to pursue and understand what I thought I had learned.

    Not longer afterwards, probably mid- to late twenties, is when I started to read popular Eastern mysticism - Teachings of Ramana Maharishi, Autobiography of a Yogi (which Steve Jobs had distributed at his funeral, by the way) and Krishnamurti Reader. Alan Watts Way of Zen, D T Suzuki - all popular authors in the late 60's and early 70's. At that time, there were still Adyar Bookstores, long since drowned by the Amazon, but they smelt of sandalwood and had heaving bookshelves of these materials.

    The best overall book I ever bought from Adyar was To Meet the Real Dragon, by Nishijima-roshi. I did endeavour to practice zazen along Buddhist lines for a long period, from around mid 2000's until about 4 years ago, but it's fallen away, and it's a hard row to hoe. Self-mastery was never a strong suit. (I am endeavouring to re-start that practice, but, you know, road to hell paved with good intentions...)

    Anyway, that's a bit of autobio on the topic, but I'm also reminded, by your 'spectrum of reality' remark, of Ken Wilber's first book, 1977, Spectrum of Consciousness, which was very much about this. But then, millions of people are going through these states and stages at this point in history, as mythologised in Age of Aquarius and other new-age sources.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.8k


    (1) Is the original message necessarily the most important? (Dewey, for a counterpoint, talks about philosophical problems not being solved but abandoned, passed by, because they are no longer "live" to later generations.) The word "necessarily" provides an easy out; make it, why should we think the original is important at all, except as a matter of historical interest?

    Point 1 totally depends on the ideas in question. Deely for instance is making a case for a particular sort of answer to the epistemic issues that have plagued modern philosophy. He thinks he has found the solution, which his why he markets C.S. Peirce (his principle inspiration) as the first truly "post-modern" thinker. A lot of his work doesn't rely on the historical framing. Nonetheless, the historical framing is crucial to his project in that he is trying to get other people to see the value in the fairly obscure and technical work of late Scholasticism (e.g. thinkers like John of St. Thomas).

    Like I said, I think we can affirm a "better reading" as "better," even if cases where we think it diverges from the author's intent. For instance, I like Robert Wallace and Gary Dorien's "Hegels" more, but I am not convinced that they are truer to the text/intent than other readings. Likewise, someone with a view like Popper's might buy into Rosen's view of the Republic even if they remain skeptical that everyone around Plato misread him.

    (2) How much time-place-language-conceptual-scheme-culture relativism are we committed to? Just enough that certain people "no longer understand" the old ways, but not so much that the dedicated scholar can't "recover" or "reconstruct" what has been lost?

    For the second and third points, I think it just depends. On some of the more radical readings of Wittgenstein in the direction of the "conceptual relativism" thesis, you can't really communicate across time and space. It seems fair to me to discount this as implausible and pursue a sensible via media here.

    And it varies by topic. "Reconstructing what Christ's disciples thought of Jesus while he was still alive?" Probably impossible. But "we cannot know," isn't selling and books. "What did Kant think about his potential dualism problem and how folks like Fichte would end up reading and extending his work?" We can grapple with that a lot better because his correspondence records his thoughts on just this "problem." There are trickier middle grounds. For example, might be worth trying to see if you can read Aristotle's Physics and the Metaphysics as intentionally organized pieces instead of just chalking up difficulties to the work of compilers and potential note takers or linear development in Aristotle's thought, even if the issue can't be decided decisively.



    I think it's possible to find Macintyre guilty of the sin, so common in contemporary academia, of staking out a provocative and maximalist thesis as a means of grabbing the readers' attention. I don't think this trivializes his argument however. It may make things difficult for proponents of his view though, in that they either have to retranslate the thesis (hard work) or get trapped in a sort of motte and bailey argument. I mentioned Peter Redpath earlier, and he is great on some things, and his claim that "most philosophers have become sophists," is perhaps a good deal less radical once you realize what he means by it, but that's probably a more egregious example where it seems like the immediate risk is that you end up only preaching to the choir by alienating people.

    But I think such arguments can be very plausible, and Deely is a great example because he spends a lot of time on a very specific area, signification and signs. It seems pretty clear that most philosophers were simply ignorant of all the work done in this area. They seem unaware of it and don't mention it in contexts where it would make a good addition to what they are saying. Locke coins the term "semiotics" while in a bit of a brainstorm on a new science of signification, and doesn't seem to be much aware of the doctrina signorum. Even modern studies often introduce Peirce as the creator of the tripartite model (1,600 years old by the time he was working with it). Wittgenstein is probably idiosyncratic in the degree to which he has a historical blind spot, but it's interesting that PI is framed in terms of a St. Augustine quote when Augustine is generally considered the "father of semiotics" and has a theory of "meaning as use" that doesn't get into view at all.

    Plus, to 's concerns, we need not presuppose any sort of difficulty in understanding past work, just inattention. D.C. Schindler's two (eventually three) volume work on notions of freedom lines up very well with part of what Macintyre is saying, but the basic thesis "freedom in the modern era became defined in terms of potency, the ability to 'choose anything,' as opposed to the ability to actualize the good," and this: "A. cashes out in freedom as arbitrariness or unintelligible drives (Hegel's point); and B. radically destabilizes ethics." The point here isn't so much that people cannot understand the past, just that they haven't paid sufficient attention to it.
  • frank
    15.8k
    Then later followed Castaneda's Art of Dreaming instructions with amazing results altering my understandings of reality.jgill

    Cool!
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.8k


    Ha, I still have a copy of that from my hometown's public library that I forgot to return. I was 16 when I found a copy of Journey to Ixtlan and I was extremely taken with it. I remembered thinking, "why don't I get to have a shamanic coming of age ritual? I turned 16 and all I got to do was shoot a handgun and take driver's ed..."
  • Janus
    16.3k
    I experimented intensively with hallucinogens from the age of 17 to about 19 and first read The Teachings of Don Juan at around 16-17 and subsequently all his books the most evocative of which was The Art of Dreaming.

    I tried to find my hands in my dreams but the only time I ever did, I was sucked into a kind of deathly vortex which seemed to be a state of paralysis between waking and sleep. Lucid dreaming never worked for me, but I have always had the most vivid and bizarre dreams usually involving people I have never met and places I have never been in real life.

    I believe our unconscious is always trying to tell us stuff about our lives, but it is all imagistic and hard to fathom. I have come to the conclusion that it is best to draw no ontological conclusions about such imaginative experiences, because wishful thinking is always knocking at the door and can only be a source of confusion and pseudo-knowledge.

    I also spent 18 years participating in Gurdjieff groups and practiced meditation every day. This led to several powerful experiences which are impossible to describe but were, despite their short duration, as or even more compelling than my experiences with mind-manifesting substances.
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