Welcome to The Philosophy Forum - an introduction thread Hey guys, my name is Kris.
I have been studying theology, philosophy and English literature for nine years at university (primary focus being philosophy for the past five years). I've always been driven by questions revolving around understanding. What does it mean to understand? Is this a term only to be used when "success" is evident - to understand is to understand correctly or there is no understanding at all - or is there such a thing as "wrong understanding"? Can we ever not understand something and if yes, what does that look like? What does it mean to understand a thought, a concept, an object, a series of events? What does it mean to understand another person? Can we ever understand an other (correctly, at all)? Should we even strive to? What does it mean to understand myself? How does my understanding of myself shape the possibilities I have of relating to an other? Why is it that our ability to relate to one another, the nature of any given relationship seems to hinge on understanding, its quality or the lack thereof? And what is there to learn in thinking about these questions in a philosophical way? Is there headway to be made? How do our answers to these questions influence the choices we're confronted with daily when in contact with others - war or peace, indifference or love, to understand or to leave be, freedom or commitment, communication? And are any of these admittely hopelessly naive and painfully insufficient questions even somewhat able to open up a line of inquiry that isn't doomed to eternal mediocrity or - even worse - a traditional academic career?
At least these questions have led me down various paths, including French and German existentalism, phenomenology, hermeneutics, philosophy of language and American pragmatism. I am currently working on papers involving Jean-Francois Lyotard, Martin Heidegger and Karl Jaspers. The last few years were mainly spent with these characters along with Emmanuel Levinas, Samuel Beckett, and some lesser known figures like Josiah Royce or Francois Laruelle (sometimes you just gotta get a little weird). Truth be told, it is difficult to find people interested in these authors, so I hope to find some companionship in this forum.
Apart from these things, my life is pretty boring. I spend my days mainly working in an administrative job to pay the bills, not get trapped in an ivory tower, and because I do not find any value in working for professors whose only concern in life is the furtherance of objective truth accompanied by a crusade against people who are of the opinion that "wrong understanding" is a thing and that weird Kant interpretations are usually far more interesting than Kant himself. My nights I spend at a bar, smoking and drinking way too much, hunched over some book, being asocial, surrounded by good people who are used to it, like me anyway, and for the most part have no fucking idea why the heck I'm doing all of this. Maybe some of you can sympathize a little more. ;)