Because then you have the problem of how purpose arises out of purposelessness. — Wayfarer
1) Does it mean that a baby, for whom language does not even exist at all, has no world, i.e. nothing exists for him/her? No pleasure in sucking milk? No sense of the warmth of his/her mother hug? No intimate connection with her? No recognition of objects? And so on ...
— Alkis Piskas
Yes, that is what Witt is working from; the world does not exist for them as yet. — Antony Nickles
Thus when the Tractatus tells us that 'Logic is transcendental', it does not mean that the propositions of logic state transcendental truths; it means that they, like all other propositions, shew something that pervades everything sayable and is itself unsayable. — Anscombe, G. E. M. An Introduction to Wittgenstein's Tractatus. 1971. G. E. M. Anscombe, pg. 166
This can be seen as coming from Wittgenstein's view of language as saying what can be said about my world and showing what cannot be said about my world. — Shawn
You have brought up a lot of thoughts (which I guess are attributed to Wittgenstein?) — Alkis Piskas
One of the characteristics of Buddhism is just the emphasis on meditation and cultivation of the spiritual life. — Wayfarer
But such principles can be realised through practice and may be known in that intuitive sense. — Wayfarer
As regards the idea of the Forms, it seems to me that most analytic and 20th C philosophy doesn't 'get it'. — Wayfarer
Thomist and neo-Thomist ... Aristotelian realism ... Jacques Maritain ... — Wayfarer
I'm asking if Wittgenstein's solipsist from the Tractatus even had a psychology? If he or she did, then what was it based on? — Shawn
Then the good is not the cause of everything; rather it is the cause of the things that are in a good way, while it is not responsible for the bad things. (379b)
the classical philosophical tradition — Wayfarer
But the fact that it's always existed doesn't validate it. — Wayfarer
... banishing the idea of any purpose other than mechanical interaction — Wayfarer
... the paucity of my education in the classics of ancient literature and philosophy.
But the 'sacred thread' that runs through Greek philosophy and the formation of Western culture is unique and important, and constantly under attack from degenerative forces, principally materialism in all its forms, which has hijacked the terminology of philosophy whilst rejecting its meaning. — Wayfarer
I want to know what use is there in reading those old books. — baker
not statements of factuality. — baker
Nothing in what he says suggests he had such ignorance. — baker
For I am conscious that I am not wise either much or little. (21b)
I am wiser than this man; for neither of us really knows anything fine and good, but this man thinks he knows something when he does not, whereas I, as I do not know anything, do not think I do either. I seem, then, in just this little thing to be wiser than this man at any rate, that what I do not know I do not think I know either. (21d)
“Human wisdom is of little or no value.” (23a)
“This one of you, O human beings, is wisest, who, like Socrates, recognizes that he is in truth of no account in respect to wisdom.” (23b)
Yes, and that's why I emphasized the pre-Socratics because with Plato the waters start getting muddy again, that is, mythos gets reintroduced or reemphasized in philosophy. — 180 Proof
Welcome, youth, who come attended by immortal charioteers and mares which bear you on your journey to our dwelling. For it is no evil fate that has set you to travel on this road, far from the beaten paths of men, but right and justice. It is meet that you learn all things — both the unshakable heart of well-rounded truth and the opinions of mortals in which there is not true belief. (B 1.24–30)
They talk, I listen. — 180 Proof
This is outrageous, and the section you refer to does not support it. — baker
Their being true is not a matter of opinion, but our believing that they are true is. In other words we cannot know with certainty what is true. Socrates' lesson is to learn to live with knowing that you do not know. — Janus
Whereas the ideas were originally acquired in a former state of existence, and are recovered by anamnesis (un-forgetting) ... Which is why Platonism is a rationalist philosophy. — Wayfarer
How would you, for instance, distinguish that claim from positivism? — Wayfarer
Do a priori truths inhere in the visible realm? — Wayfarer
Moral principles? If so, where? — Wayfarer
h. sapiens evolved — Wayfarer
The problem that leaves me with, is whether anyone knows anything at all. — Wayfarer
If all anyone has is opinions, then where is the lodestar? — Wayfarer
I also had the idea that opinion, doxa, concerned mainly the sensible realm whereas knowledge, noesis, concerned the realm of the ideas. Am I mistaken in so thinking? — Wayfarer
I wouldn't include it among primary sources for material of that era (which was in any case medieval rather than ancient.) — Wayfarer
Succeeding generations of philosophers wrote extensive commentaries on his works, which influenced thinkers as diverse as Aquinas, Spinoza, Leibniz, and Newton. (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/maimonides/)
Maimonides is a medieval Jewish philosopher with considerable influence on Jewish thought, and on philosophy in general. Maimonides also was an important codifier of Jewish law. His views and writings hold a prominent place in Jewish intellectual history.
His works swiftly caused considerable controversy, especially concerning the relations between reason and revelation. Indeed, scholarly debates continue on Maimonides’ commitments to philosophy and to Judaism as a revealed religion. However, there is no question that his philosophical works have had a profound impact extending beyond Jewish philosophy. For instance, Aquinas and Leibniz are among the non-Jewish philosophers influenced by Maimonides. (https://iep.utm.edu/maimonid/)
And also a polemic seeking to reconcile arcane theological terms with recondite philosophical argument. — Wayfarer
In the examination of one's life, there must be constants and variables, there can't be only variables. — baker
I summon you — baker
You need to be more specific, so that your formula cannot be applied to what would generally be considered cases of psychopathology. — baker
Now, the question is, what in particular is good, just, and noble. — baker
... you rated sophist, statesman, and philosopher at the same value, though they are farther apart in worth than your mathematical proportion can express. (257b)
Then it begs the question of what is truth, morality and justice? — Harry Hindu
However, the method of argument is neither more nor less concerned with the art of medicine than with that of sponging, but is indifferent if the one benefits us little, the other greatly by its purifying. It endeavors to understand what is related and what is not related in all arts, for the purpose of acquiring intelligence; and therefore it honors them all equally and does not in making comparisons think one more ridiculous than another, and does not consider him who employs, as his example of hunting, the art of generalship, any more dignified than him who employs the art of louse-catching, but only, for the most part, as more pretentious. (227a-b)
where Socrates corrects Simmias,.with a more true description of "tuning" — Metaphysician Undercover
“Therefore it follows from this argument of ours that all souls of all living beings will similarly be good if in fact it’s similarly the nature of souls to be this very thing - souls.” (94a)
You are refusing to accept Socrates' correction — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, that's the whole point, in that theory, the one offered by Simmias, there is no outside agency. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you not grasp the "ing" suffix on "tuning"? — Metaphysician Undercover
...the tuning is something invisible and bodiless and something altogether divine in the tuned lyre ... (Phaedo 86a)
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/tuningnoun [ U ]
the way an instrument or a string on an instrument is tuned:
The tuning on this piano is awful.
However, there is still a need for an "efficient cause", as the source of activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Philolaus presented a medical theory in which there was a clear analogy between the birth of a human being and the birth of the cosmos. The embryo is conceived of as composed of the hot and then as drawing in cooling breath immediately upon birth, just as the cosmos begins with the heat of the central fire, which then draws in breath along with void and time from the unlimited.
In the case of the cosmos as a whole, as we have just seen in Fr. 6, Philolaus argues that three starting points must be assumed, limiters, unlimiteds, and harmony, as a third element to hold these two unlike elements together.
Nature (physis) in the world-order (cosmos) was fitted together out of things which are unlimited and out of things which are limiting, both the world-order as a whole and everything in it. (Fr. 1)
the requirement of something else acting on it is discussed, throughout 94 — Metaphysician Undercover
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/philolaus/#HarLimiters and unlimiteds are not combined in a haphazard way but are subject to a “fitting together” or “harmonia,” which can be described mathematically. Philolaus’ primary example of such a harmonia of limiters and unlimiteds is a musical scale, in which the continuum of sound is limited according to whole number ratios, so that the octave, fifth, and fourth are defined by the ratios 2 : 1, 3 : 2 and 4 : 3, respectively.
Philolaus presented a medical theory in which there was a clear analogy between the birth of a human being and the birth of the cosmos. The embryo is conceived of as composed of the hot and then as drawing in cooling breath immediately upon birth, just as the cosmos begins with the heat of the central fire, which then draws in breath along with void and time from the unlimited. Philolaus posited a strict hierarchy of psychic faculties, which allows him to distinguish human beings from animals and plants. He probably believed that the transmigrating soul was a harmonious arrangement of physical elements located in the heart and that the body became ensouled when the proper balance of hot and cold was established by the breathing of the new-born infant.
Fragment 1:
…since these beginnings [i.e. limiters and unlimiteds] preexisted and were neither alike nor even related, it would not have been possible for them to be ordered, if a harmony had not come upon them… Like things and related things did not in addition require any harmony, but things that are unlike and not even related … it is necessary that such things be bonded together by a harmony, if they are going to be held in an order.
In Fragment 6a Philolaus goes on to describe this harmony and what he describes is a musical scale, the scale known as the Pythagorean diatonic, which was used later by Plato in the Timaeus in the construction of the world soul. This scale provides Philolaus’ only surviving explicit example of the bonding together of limiters and unlimiteds by a harmony.
In the case of the cosmos as a whole, as we have just seen in Fr. 6, Philolaus argues that three starting points must be assumed, limiters, unlimiteds, and harmony, as a third element to hold these two unlike elements together.
I already explained how this interpretation is faulty. "The tuning" is the act which tunes. — Metaphysician Undercover
... the tuning is something invisible and bodiless and something altogether divine in the tuned lyre ... (Phaedo 86a)
You continually ignore Socrates' reference to the activity of the soul — Metaphysician Undercover
... our body is strung and held together by warm and cold and dry and wet and the like, our soul is, as it were, a blend and tuning of these very things, whenever, that is, they're blended with one another in a beautiful and measured way. (86c)
Harmonia here does not mean a harmony in the sense of melodious sound
It isn't these men I mean but those whom we just now said we are going to question [the Pythagoreans] about harmony.
They do the same thing astronomers do. They seek the numbers in these heard accords and don't rise to problems, to the consideration of which numbers are concordant and which are not, and why in each case. (Republic 531c)
Knowledge of harmonic movement is not auditory, in is intelligible, it is knowledge of the ratios. What all harmony, whether it is music or parts of the soul or body or city, has in common is proper proportions of the parts or elements. It is not just a mixture or an ordered arrangement, it is a properly proportioned arrangement, one with the correct ratio of parts. — Fooloso4
