Comments

  • Is self reflection/ contemplation good for you?
    "To know thyself is the beginning of wisdom" - Socrates
  • Procedural Question
    and a reply in the post comment box at the end of the thread will refer to the original post only.
  • A first cause is logically necessary
    nature of existencePhilosophim

    What does that even mean? What do you mean by "existence"?
  • A first cause is logically necessary
    Look at the logic I point out about beingPhilosophim

    I looked at your OP several times and it is void of your understanding of "being" and "nature of existence".

    The notion of such a thing as a "logic of being" is interesting but hardly self explanatory. Many are likely to share an understanding of "logic" while not sharing an understanding of "being".

    Simply put, there is nothing in your OP that explains your understanding of "being" and how your understanding of being and your understanding of logic are related.
  • A first cause is logically necessary
    A first cause is not logically necessary.Banno

    I agree. But that does not mean a first clause is precluded.
  • A first cause is logically necessary
    But logic in general is our best tool to analyze whether ideas fit in with the nature of existence as we know it.Philosophim

    this only begs the question. Even if "our" best tool required a first cause, then that would only mean that "our" best tool required a first cause. There is no basis for asserting that being or the "nature of existence" (whatever that means) must conform to "our" best tools.

    Being is still not required to conform to logic even if logic is "our" best tool.
  • A first cause is logically necessary
    to say that "logic" necessitates a first cause is not the same as saying the "nature of existence" (whatever that means) necessitates a first cause. Being is not required to conform to our understanding of either logic or the nature of existence. Only we are.
  • There is No Such Thing as Freedom
    Determinism is a tautology. If everything were exactly the same, then everything would be exactly the same. This is philosophy as industry. The freshmen love it.
  • There is No Such Thing as Freedom


    If there is free will and you live as a slave to ego and conscience, then that is tragic.

    If there is no free will and you live as if there is, then you could not have done otherwise.
  • Defining the new concept of analytic truthmaker
    I take little comfort in the notion that truth is either that which we agree to be true or that which is arguably true. It strikes me very much as another garbage in/garbage out situation.
  • About definitions and the use of dictionaries in Philosophy
    I suspect that anyone unable to tell me what they mean by the terms they use does not know what they are talking about.
  • About definitions and the use of dictionaries in Philosophy
    The word sensation does not come from Latin sensus. It comes from French sensationLionino

    French is a Latin language.
  • Overcoming all objections to the Analytic / Synthetic distinction
    Quine seemed to disbelieve that words have meaning yet to even say this he had to use the meaning of words.PL Olcott

    I suspect Quine would consider the process by which words are attached to meaning is far more organic than people prefer.
  • Overcoming all objections to the Analytic / Synthetic distinction
    That is one reason why I am making sure to exclude themPL Olcott

    My bad.

    I mistakenly presumed your post was about "Overcoming all objections to the Analytic / Synthetic distinction."

    Good luck with that.
  • Overcoming all objections to the Analytic / Synthetic distinction
    that can be verified as truePL Olcott

    or verified as not true. Cats are rocks. An analytical statement that is verified false is still an analytical statement. And the same can be said of synthetic statements. So again, whether a statement is true/false does not determine whether it is analytic/synthetic. Instead and consistent with your original post, the true difference between analytic or synthetic statements is the need for sense data.
  • Overcoming all objections to the Analytic / Synthetic distinction
    We cannot have vagueness and ambiguity in the key terms that are being defined.
    We must stipulate their precise definitions.
    PL Olcott

    You misunderstand. I am not saying your "definition" of either the analytic statement or the synthetic statement is ambiguous. Instead, "tokens" of the statement "type" synthetic are more prone to ambiguity than "tokens" of the statement "type" analytic.

    A precise definition of "synthetic statement" will not render synthetic statements less prone to ambiguity than analytic statements. The world to which synthetic statements refer is more ambiguous than the world to which analytic statements refer. And you cannot define that difference away. You can try to account for it.

    And besides, I think the definitions implicit in your original post are precise enough.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    I believe turning the adjective into a noun-phrase does the heavy lifting for the dualist. But appending the suffix “-ness” to the word “conscious” doesn’t make a description of the thing a thing itself.NOS4A2

    Well said. But I suspect both materialism and dualism require "thing-ness". The "I" is subsumed by the "thing-ness" of the former while the "I" is ever more isolated by the "thing-ness" of the latter.
  • Overcoming all objections to the Analytic / Synthetic distinction
    you may be correct in that the reliance upon sense data to configure the meaning of a statement renders the statement synthetic. But the truth value of either analytic or synthetic statements is irrelevant to that point.

    "Cats are plants" may be an incorrect analytic statement but it is still an analytic statement. Similarly, the statement "there is a cat in my living room" when there is no cat in my living room may be an incorrect synthetic statement but it is still a synthetic statement.

    The truth value regarding analytic/synthetic statements detracts from your central point. It is a classic red herring that only illustrates what is already known, i.e., synthetic statements are more fraught with ambiguity.
  • About definitions and the use of dictionaries in Philosophy
    You cannot navigate without some kind of reference, point, line, star, compass reading, lighthouse, mountaintop, whatever. Definitions, then, at some point, essential.tim wood

    We are not bound by the already existing definitions created by others. We can use existing definitions, we can modify existing definitions, or we can create new definitions. A (the?) primary goal of philosophical discourse is to deepen understanding, not define it.
  • There is No Such Thing as Freedom
    There is freedom because nobody is slave to ego or conscience. Please note I offered as much support for my refutation as you did for your claim.
  • Nietzsche: How can the weak constrain the strong?
    First, Nietzsche did not say it worked. And second, there are more weak than there are strong.
  • What is real?
    are you talking about the actually real, the really actual, the really real, the truly real, the really true, the actually true, the truly true? Please clarify clearly or at least clearly clarify.

    The term is inherently imprecise and any consensus regarding its meaning would render it useless.
  • Absolute nothingness is only impossible from the perspective of something
    I think if there's nothing there, there's no time.frank

    I agree.
  • Science is not "The Pursuit of Truth"
    "the pursuit of truth"Judaka
    and
    "a pursuit of truth"Judaka

    are not the same. I would agree that science is not "the" pursuit of truth.
  • Science is not "The Pursuit of Truth"
    Agreed. The purpose of science is to tell us what it can about nature, not to define it.
  • Dualism and Interactionism
    be all of that as it may, the manner in which relation, or interaction, or whatever you want to call it still needs to be explained. And I am not a dualist. I am simply pointing out that changing one form of substance ontology for another or calling it "relating" instead of "interacting" explains nothing.

    And I certainly look forward to your putting this centuries old issue to rest once and for all. Good luck with that.
  • Dualism and Interactionism
    Interaction requires two or more things to interact. If we are one thing, which seems pretty obvious, this mis-states the question, and bad questions lead to bad answers. We can ask what is the relation between intentional and physical actions without assuming that that relation is an interaction. That is a sensible question and has sensible answers involving the origin and nature of such relations, not interactions.Dfpolis



    Because explaining how mind "relates" to entities not having the characteristics of mind is so much easier than explaining how mind "interacts" with entities not having the characteristics of mind?
  • Dualism and Interactionism
    Really? How contemporary is contemporary? Most people are monists these days, no?bert1

    When you say "most people" do you mean most "people" or most "philosophers of mind"? Either way, it seems to me that most "philosophers of mind" (including monists) accept the need to address the "interaction" between mind and entities not having the characteristics of mind.

    Substituting one form of "substance" ontology for another does eliminate the issue?
  • What does it feel like to be energy?
    I suspect that any feeling is an example of what it does "feel like to be energy."
  • Why is rational agreement so elusive?
    there's a strong streak of "Let's find the ultimate truth about everything" in that tradition.J

    Agreed. And therein is the Chimera (ultimate truth). In a sense, Plato's idealism is premised upon the notion that we are incapable of any certainty regarding "the ultimate truth."
  • Why is rational agreement so elusive?
    Some interpret it to mean that we can transcend the cave, but others that we remain in it. Some despise Plato because no matter how deep they go they find only questions and not answers, others love him for the same reasonFooloso4

    Exactly. Disagreement is inherent to some issues. There would be no philosophy without it.
  • To what extent can academic philosophy evolve, and at what pace?
    Interesting question. What do we even mean by academic philosophy? when I was an undergraduate, I mistakenly presumed academic philosophy was primarily the teaching of students regarding philosophy.

    Now it seems more like an employment program for those with advanced degrees. I never hear anyone say "teach or perish."
  • Why is rational agreement so elusive?
    I don't want to derail the topic but the Socratic tradition does not promise Truth.Fooloso4

    I agree. There is a reason The Allegory of the Cave comes early in the study of philosophy.
  • Why is rational agreement so elusive?
    Philosophy is not easy. Even posing the issue raises issues. For example, I am unconvinced that "rational agreement" is elusive. Certainly, adherents of idealism (as opposed to realism) agree that idealism is correct. In that sense, there is significant rational agreement in most areas of philosophy.

    What is lacking is consensus. Yet in some sense, a significant issue for which there was rational consensus would cease to be a philosophical issue. To some degree (perhaps a significant degree), argument is the essence of philosophy. If a consensus is ever agreed to regarding an issue, the argument is over and philosophy will (of necessity?) move on to other issues.
  • Where Philosophy Went Wrong
    I genuinely believe that philosophy is good for an education.Moliere

    I agree. My original undergraduate major was political science with a minor in philosophy. But the residency requirements at the school I was attending required me to remain 2 more semesters even though the actual number of credits needed was satisfied. So I turned my minor into a second major and spent the next 2 semesters studying only philosophy. It was the best academic decision I ever made.
  • Where Philosophy Went Wrong
    So then, not as minimal as you claimed?Fooloso4

    And how minimal did I claim it to be? I was referring to the historical body of written philosophy which does not indicate that contemplation of the beauty and the good were somehow the central themes of philosophy either before or after Plato. And I am certainly not arguing against either as legitimate subject matter for philosophy.

    How can any of us even say philosophy went wrong without having some shared understanding of what we mean by philosophy?
    — Arne

    And yet it is a term you have been using. You even claim:

    Philosophy is not an end in itself, it is a tool.
    — Pantagruel
    Fooloso4

    This confuses me. I do not know who you mean by "you." I am not both Arne and Pantagruel. But if you are addressing me, it would be unreasonable to expect me not to use the term "philosophy" when responding to a post about how philosophy "went wrong." In addition, it is not my post so what the poster means by the term strikes me as the appropriate question. I already know what I mean by the term.

    And just to be clear, none of us is any more qualified than the other to talk about those philosophical contemplations that were not committed to writing. That is just kind of a non-starter.

    I do not disagree that more philosophical contemplations regarding the good and the beautiful may be good. But nobody's permission is required.
  • Where Philosophy Went Wrong
    On what basis do you claim that contemplation of the beautiful and the good" is actually quite minimal? Philosophical practice did not always generate or result in writings.Fooloso4

    You may rest assured I speak only to those philosophical views that resulted in writings. How could I possibly speak to those that did not result in writings? As for those that did result in writings, the philosophy writings in the libraries I visit are not dominated by contemplations of the beautiful and the good in general or in a historical timeline. And as far as I know, aesthetics and ethics are still lively subject matter.

    Are you suggesting that philosophy should be more limited in its subject matter or that it would become so if not dominated by the academy and/or industrial forces?

    What is philosophy and who are philosophers anyway? Is there an agreed upon understanding of what philosophy is and/or who qualifies as a philosopher? How can any of us even say philosophy went wrong without having some shared understanding of what we mean by philosophy?

    What do you mean by philosophy?
  • Where Philosophy Went Wrong
    Contemplation of the beautiful and the good pushed aside as being of no practical use. The question of how best to live replaced by the problem of how to secure the right to live as one wants.Fooloso4

    I am not convinced that the above is anything new. Such tensions have always been in philosophy. The actual amount of historical time in which philosophy per se was about "contemplation of the beautiful and the good" is actually quite minimal as are the philosophers who pushed such notions. As worthy as the "contemplation of the beautiful and the good" may be, it was never a philosophical paradigm.

    Similarly, there has always been philosophy as industry. The democratization of higher education has simply made the industry larger.
  • If Kant is Right, Then We Should Stop Doing Rational Theology
    It is the case that if Kant’s Prolegomena claims that we cannot know anything of God (or other supernatural things for that matter) through rational thoughtClayG

    is this any different than saying "those who do rational theology should disagree with Kant's claim that we cannot know anything of God through rational thought"?

    And my guess is that such people would disagree with Kant.