We often hear that courage is doing something even when one feels afraid.
What is fear?
I have exposed myself to fearful circumstances that were highly foolish and irrational. I do not consider doing so to be virtuous. Often, the motivations driving me in those moments seemed to come from some kind of clinging or resistance to change. I was trying to find some way to have control over the unraveling of events and circumstances that were already in motion. I might have then mistakenly thought that this was admirable or some quality to be appreciated but in reflection of those actions now, I see that this was only ignorance underneath the guise of courage. We can tell ourselves anything to justify behavior if we are determined to hold on to those belief structures. These were resistances to the flow and those actions put me in real danger that was harmful to myself and those around me.
I have likewise acted consciously and mindfully, choosing to move in a direction that seemed unfamiliar and thus was perceived as frightening when in reality, there was little real threat or danger and the outcome was more beneficial, healing and useful overall despite my resistances to traveling in that unfamiliar territory. In those circumstances, what I thought was fear was my mind distorting and attempting to predict an outcome which was unknown to me. Allowing myself to explore, remain curious and do something outside of my comfort zone even though I felt what I perceived to be fear required an inner strength and willingness that might resemble courage. — Universal Student
I think that my meaning is that an authentic quality of virtue is true. — Universal Student
"Reveals" implies that the virtue was always there, within the wisdom. — Universal Student
Dormant perhaps, to be awakened and brought forth into potential. — Universal Student
Maybe the point is preciously that we are tempted by them? How could virtue exist, without the opportunity to restrain from temptation of the corresponding vice? It seems like we need contrast and comparison to maintain a balance of these existing things. — Universal Student
This could be a possibility, only that I don't undestand what do you mean by "the ground on which knowledge stands". :smile: An explanation and an example would allow me to undestand it ... — Alkis Piskas
BTW, your very interesting topic will offer me the opportunity to learn soon more about the foundation of knowledge, a subject that I had never considered studying up to now. Thank you for this! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
Syād, post-Agrippa('s trilemma) life has been tough for dogmatists. The quest to find a firm foundation for knowledge, the epistemic bedrock as it were, is an ongoing enterprise and the 3 approaches (infinitism, foundationalism, coherentism) still don't qualify as safe harbor. Instead of solving the problem, they merely ignore it. It's kinda like a patient who visits a doctor complaining of a headache, and the doctor, instead of prescribing medication, tells the fellow that, despite the pulsating waves of pain, there's no headache! :snicker: — Agent Smith
Use theorems, proofs and axiomatic systems (i.e. indefeasible reasoning). — 180 Proof
One should not understand this compulsion to construct concepts, species, forms, purposes, laws ('a world of identical cases') as if they enabled us to fix the real world; but as a compulsion to arrange a world for ourselves in which our existence is made possible:we thereby create a world which is calculable, simplified, comprehensible, etc., for us.
Our cognitive apparatus is not organized for 'knowledge.'
[T]he aberration of philosophy comes from this:instead of seeing logic and the categories of reason as means to the adaptation of the world to ends of utility (that is, "in principle," for a useful falsification) men believe to possess in them the criterion of truth or reality.
~Nietzsche — Pantagruel
I agree with Habermas, extending this reasoning, that in the context of this "transcendentally-logically conceived pragmatism" there are a wide array of "knowledge-constitutive and knowledge-legitimating interests" beyond the merely logical and technical. — Pantagruel
We cannot put forth foundationalism with certainty. — Manuel
we have a certain mechanism or capacity to acquire knowledge, yet we do not know what these mechanisms are. — Manuel
So we have to begin with consciousness as that with which we have the most confidence of existing and must merely do the best we can with what we are given. — Manuel
e.g. Neurath's Boat — 180 Proof
It's not a "seeming" (= apparent, appearing) inability. It's a logical statement and proposition. He said, "I cannot doubt of my existence while I doubt". Which is true, i.e. one cannot reject that. — Alkis Piskas
Descartes didn't use that statement "as a foundation of knowledge" or any kind of foundation for that matter. You and other people do. This statement became --I don't know when, but long after Descartes has made it-- "a fundamental element of Western philosophy, as it purported to provide a certain foundation for knowledge in the face of radical doubt." (Wikipedia). See, it is thought of (by people) as a certain foundation for knowledge. So, all that are interpretations. (The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy does not even talk about any kind of "foundation for knowledge".) — Alkis Piskas
Wisdom, on the other hand, may sometimes express misanthropic ideas. — Agent Smith
My perspective is that aspects of wisdom are a threshold that once reached, resonate within the soul in such an way that virtue naturally will follow. — Universal Student
true qualities of virtue lose their authenticity. — Universal Student
Virtue can be traced back to wisdom and wisdom reveals virtue. — Universal Student
I think that within the territory of virtue and wisdom, the innate qualities of the soul flourish in varying degrees of clarity. Examples of this would be honesty, integrity and resilience, to name a few.
There are other capacities involved in realizing full human potential. — Fooloso4
I have knowledge already, there are things I know. Whether I have a philosophical foundation for this knowledge is irrelevant. I don't need a theory of knowledge to explain how I know things, instead I need to understand the phenomenon of "knowing". — IntrospectionImplosion
A universal theory of knowledge requires certainty about things I don't think we can be certain about — IntrospectionImplosion
The term "state" can be misleading. It is not a condition. It is the realization or actualization of a capacity. — Fooloso4
Not blurry at all. There are no lines here either. Two things that are related are not each other, they are not one and the same thing. And that is the crux of the matter which you so adamantly don't want to see. — god must be atheist
It is not that wisdom is the state of human excellence, but that someone who has achieved human excellence is wise. It might be possible, for example, to be wise but in poor health. — Fooloso4
A big subject, indeed the biggest. I would like to advise against taking the Cartesian "Universal Doubt" as a criterion for anything. You'll have noticed that there are all sorts of things which it never occurs to Decartes to doubt; that knowledge is possible, that "truth" and "error" are absolute categories, and that other beings exist, for example. He applies his own criterion in a very partial and disingenuous way. — alan1000
Descartes' cogito argument uses a well-known, time-tested, method of proof viz. reductio ad absurdum. I wonder if his argument makes any sense in paraconsistent logic or within a dialetheistic framework. :chin: — Agent Smith
I sense a pattern here (in the classical logic sense). The idea is to come up/discover a proposition whose falsehood would entail a contradiction. The cogito does just that. I have one viz. there are some truths. — Agent Smith
Pure gold, but it is not clear why you think this approach is primarily "practical", and does not form the basis of ALL knowledge? — alan1000
But not everyone seeks knowledge of the good. They simply assume that what they seek, what they desire, is good. If, however, they were to seek the good rather than whatever it is they desire, then they would seek knowledge of the good. Or to put it differently, their desire would be to know the good. — Fooloso4
Yes, but knowledge is not a passive possession. It is the active state of the virtuous person who is wise. — Fooloso4
Virtue is a mode of behaviour; wisdom is a mode of knowledge.
Behavour does not equal knowledge.
They can both be good, but that does not make them equal. — god must be atheist
the set of actions is a proper subset of the set of thoughts — Agent Smith
Our actions may have unintended consequences. We may think doing this or that is good, but if the result is harm and suffering then is the action good? — Fooloso4
Rather than something achieved,the idea of human excellence is something to aspire to, like the just city/soul in the Republic, an image in speech. And, as with the discussion in the Republic, it depends not simply on an equilibrium, but the right balance of the parts, each seeking its own desire. — Fooloso4
What is good is not limited to what is virtuous. — Fooloso4
The good, according to Plato and Aristotle, is what we all seek. We do not, however, always agree on what the good is. In distinction from others, the philosopher seeks the good in the sense of inquiry into the question of what the good is. — Fooloso4
Although we cannot control the consequences of our actions, we are not indifferent to them, they matter. — Fooloso4
The Greek term translated as virtue is arete. It means the excellence of a thing. Human excellence is the realization of human potential. Someone who has attained human excellence is wise. — Fooloso4
Rather than goodness being what gets one closer to that telos, what gets one closer to that telos is what is good, what is in accord with human nature. — Fooloso4
If we look at the act itself we might regard it as good, but that does not mean it is a virtuous act — Fooloso4
If what we regard as good in the act is not what was intended then the act was not virtuous even if the consequences are regarded as good. — Fooloso4
It requires continued work in order to maintain:
a stable equilibrium of the soul, — Fooloso4
The effort is to maintain a stable equilibrium of the soul. It is in this state of being that we are most likely to make good choices. This is not a state of knowledge. What the right choice is, is in many cases not something we know. Aporia is the condition for moral deliberation. — Fooloso4
But that is not what Plato and Aristotle thought. — Fooloso4
But for the purpose of this discussion, what is meant by knowledge is not justified true belief. — Fooloso4
It means, as 180 Proof pointed out that hexis is a matter of praxis of active doing rather than a passive condition. It is not as if one attains a state of knowledge from which one can then act virtuously based on that knowledge. There is still, in particular situations, the need for moral deliberation. — Fooloso4
but to make the right choice in an attempt to do what is best. — Fooloso4
Human experience is not the sort of thing that can be stepped into and/or out of to begin with — creativesoul
so it makes no sense at all to claim that doing so is needed for anything else at all. — creativesoul
Understanding how language creation and/or acquisition happens leaves no room at all for serious well founded doubt regarding whether or not an external world exists. — creativesoul
As I see it, this is a language trap. That it is impossible for one to step out of subjective experience is not an empirical hypothesis. It's just a lesson in metaphysical English, an articulation of how concepts tend to be used together by a particular, eccentric community (us), often mistaken for facts about immaterial entities like consciousness and knowledge and sensations. — Pie
Children can learn virtues — Athena
they lack the years of experience required for wisdom — Athena
moderation must go with courage or you get a nut case with very bad judgment such as someone who has gone berserk. — Athena
he first discovers what sort of thing a virtue is by observing that the goodness is never in the action but only in the doer. — Fooloso4
Socrates makes the point that knowledge can never be a mere passive possession, stored in the memory the way birds can be put in cages. The word for that sort of possession, ktÎsis, is contrasted with hexis, the kind of having-and-holding that is never passive but always at work right now. Socrates thus suggests that, whatever knowledge is, it must have the character of a hexis in requiring the effort of concentrating or paying attention. A hexis is an active condition, a state in which something must actively hold itself, and that is what Aristotle says a moral virtue is. [emphasis added]
Knowing is not enough because unless one acts one does not get rid of the phobia — Tobias
one cannot see that colours are essentially seen. That is a self-evident truth of reason, not something we are aware of sensibly. — Bartricks
But, hey, you still didn't answer me! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
Because unless our sensations resemble the world they are telling us about - and tell us about it in that way - they will not constitute perceptions of the world. — Bartricks
We do perceive an external sensible world. — Bartricks
If our sensations were merely providing us with information about the world, then we would not be perceiving the world by means of them (that was the point the air traffic controller example was designed to illustrate - acquiring information about a matter is not the same as perceiving it). — Bartricks
Sensations can only resemble other sensations. — Bartricks
You can, but would that be virtuous? It hibk that in this ethical scheme the right thing to do is to try to get rid of this phobia — Tobias
Regarding the myth of recollection ( anamnesis ) if one does not already have some sense of virtue how can it be recognized? If virtue is completely absent then it cannot be taught. It must in some sense already be present in a person. — Fooloso4
This desire for predictability and consistency comes from a need for the consequences of our actions to be known in advance; that, with knowledge, we could act and always be judged correct or right. Without meeting those requirements we are "soothsayers" or "prophets", simply guessing. — Antony Nickles
Are these 4 virtues internally consistent? — Agent Smith