The Phenomenology of spirit (1807) is the first book Hegel published, and certainly one of his most famous and debated work.
This year we will read the Preface. Written by Hegel after the whole work was completed, the Preface represents one of the most beautiful and major text in the history of philosophy. Here Hegel defines his philosphical method and polemically debates with the main previous figures (Descartes, Spinoza, Kant, Fichte and Schelling beside others).
The Phenomenology of Spirit, The Preface
Week 1 (21 October) §§ 1-3
Week 2 (3 November) §§ 4-10
Week 3 (17 November) §§ 11-16
Week 4 (1 December) §§ 17-21
Week 5 (15 December) §§ 22-29
Week 6 (12 January) §§ 30-39
Week 7 (26 January) §§ 40-51
Week 8 (9 February) §§ 52-62
Week 8 (12 February) §§ 63-72
Preface to the Phenomenology of Spirit (1807)The bud disappears when the blossom breaks through, and we might say that the former is refuted by the latter; in the same way when the fruit comes, the blossom may be explained to be a false form of the plant’s existence, for the fruit appears as its true nature in place of the blossom. The ceaseless activity of their own inherent nature makes these stages moments of an organic unity, where they not merely do not contradict one another, but where one is as necessary as the other; and constitutes thereby the life of the whole.
150 quotes from Hegel, linked to the context. — the only genuine source of Hegel quotes on the internet, where you can verify the quote and read it in its context.
I am going to start by using both Miller and Pinkard to see if there is much of a difference. — Fooloso4
Neat bud-flower-fruit metaphor. The numbering sequence escapes me. In Miller it is in paragraph 2. — Banno
To understand any book or text requires first that it be read - and understood. That's the task of this thread, and that is the only task of this thread — tim wood
With luck, 50-odd pages, maybe the thing can be done in under 50 - 100 posts! — tim wood
Cooperative approaches to humour.
What would this look like ?
Is it about the Cooperative Principle? — Amity
This paper concentrates on one of the widely used means to evoke laughter, telling jokes. Analysing the jokes in relation with Grice’s maxims show that most of the jokes used in media such as sit-coms, movies, and books are formed by violating Grice’s Maxims...
...The cooperative principle of communication assumes that the participants in a speech act share a common goal (or the conversation moves towards a tacitly agreed direction) and so each participant puts on a mutual effort to communicate successfully to reach this goal. This principle was put forth by philosopher Paul Grice. He formulates this as “Make your contribution such as it is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged” (Grice, 1989, p. 45). He further distinguishes four sub-principles called maxims (Grice’s maxims), under cooperative principles, that explains the process through which communication implications are generated. On the one hand, if a conversation adopts to these maxims then they contribute to a cooperative exchange, but on the other hand, wilfully violating these maxims creates joke...
The central question concerns the relation between the subjective conscious perceptual field and the objective perceptual field. Everything in the objective field is either perceived or can be perceived. Nothing in the subjective field is perceived nor can be perceived precisely because the events in the subjective field consist of the perceivings , whether veridical or not, of the events in the objective field
Git' is usually used as an insult, more severe than twit but less severe than a true profanity like wanker or arsehole, and may often be used affectionately between friends.
'Get' can also be used, with a subtle change of meaning. 'You cheeky get!' is slightly less harsh than 'You cheeky git!'.
The cooperative principle is a principle of conversation that was proposed by Grice 1975, stating that participants expect that each will make a “conversational contribution such as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange.”
The cooperative principle, along with the conversational maxims, partly accounts for conversational implicatures. Participants assume that a speaker is being cooperative, and thus they make conversational implicatures about what is said.
Philosophy is incredibly funny. Silly. Ridiculous. One of the funniest things in the world. Absurd. But that’s ok. The problem is not that it’s funny, it’s if you don’t recognize it’s funny. Philosophy is play – play with words, play with ideas. If your philosophy is not playful, it’s bad philosophy. — T Clark
Humor is always spontaneous. — T Clark
Play is aggressive and competitive. Play is also gentle and submissive, but humor is not. — T Clark
• Not all humor is positive. We need to avoid divisive humor such as sarcasm and sexist humor.
• Women and men frequently have different approaches to humor. Men’s humor is often competitive, while women’s is usually cooperative. When we understand these and other differences, we can harness the power of humor to benefit everyone. — Dr. Morreall
Nope, it was the Atlanta City Council that first used that bird. They thought it up themselves. — Hanover
I think the war was partly caused by a lack of humour in both the Germans and the British and an acute failure to understand some profound insights into the human condition. I think, for example, that one reason the war broke out was because the peoples of Europe failed to get the jokes of that much maligned and misunderstood philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche — Damian Flanagan
Now look whose being humourless :rage: — StreetlightX
The seal of the City of Atlanta actually includes the phoenix for that very reason. Maybe you knew that, or maybe you're just the smartest person in all the world. — Hanover
He's funny! He makes fun of everyone and everything, and does it with gusto. He wields sarcasm like a rapier, and it's just deliciously clever humor. — StreetlightX
I broke those few words into 55 deep south syllables and spoke with my distinctive drawl, taking a good 10 minutes to finally conclude. I wore my Colonel Sanders outfit, leaving the collar unbuttoned, just to maintain some enticing man sass. — Hanover
That's what I love about this place - the deep cultural intercourse.I must admit I'd never heard of a git until you mentioned it. — Hanover
It could be but like you get to choose from specialist sources such as wiktionary, urban dictionary - so many shun-aries. Spoiled for choice really.It must be a British insult, probably used with the word bloody — Hanover
Funny the spell-whatever-thingie here changes it to But or bit, or Got depending on its bloody mood.My spell check changes it to got, which means it's not a real word as far as spell check is concerned. — Hanover
You know I find that sexy.I therefore rule it not a word. — Hanover
Hah. Well you got that wrong. But there's nothing quite like anticipation, except perhaps participation.Anticipating you'll object to my ruling on stupidity grounds — Hanover
The House of Commons or UK Parliament is full of useless tossers and grumpy old gits who use arcane language such as Right Honorable Gentleman when it is apparent there is no such entity.The House of Commons has previously ruled similarly when it ruled the word unparliamentary language: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unparliamentary_language . I find myself in good company. — Hanover
I knew it. Just when a girl says she is closing down, someone comes over all seductive.Carry on. — Hanover
Definitions
— Amity
I am reminded of Arthur Koestler's definition: "the systematic abuse of a terminology specially invented for that purpose." — Fooloso4
The philosophical quest for definition can sometimes fruitfully be characterized as a search for an explanation of meaning. But the sense of ‘explanation of meaning’ here is very different from the sense in which a dictionary explains the meaning of a word. — Anil Gupta
Kind of like when a newborn's diapers fail and they have to rely on their personal knowledge of hygiene. — Baden
What is really lacking is any kind of opposition to Trump in the Republican party. — ssu
invoking the heroism of an army that defeated the British in the 18th century in part because “it took over the airports”. Lol: behold, the ignoramus president.
— Amity
Reading of a teleprompter is so difficult. How could we assume the President of the United States to be able to clearly read out from a teleprompter a prepared speech. :razz: — ssu
It seems that Trump gets away with anything.Anyway, where ever Trump stumbles on any issues or speeches doesn't matter. — ssu
I'm brain dead
— Amity
Let's hope that's an exaggeration. — Bitter Crank
I suspect that many philosophers probably are humorless gits. This is probably associated with their low appreciation of being embodied beings--creatures of flesh and blood with all sorts of drives which which are "in charge" a good share [or all?] of the time. — Bitter Crank
Confidently embodied people understand that their rational facilities are subservient to their emotions--like it or not. (It's emotional drives that sends people to college to study philosophy which foolishly elevates rationality over emotionality.) — Bitter Crank
To avoid misunderstanding... I'm in favor of people being rational. But we discount and ignore our emotional drives at our peril. — Bitter Crank
People too wrapped up in their cogitations can't afford to laugh at their ridiculousness. — Bitter Crank
When we understand these and other differences, we can harness the power of humor to benefit everyone.
— Amity
Harnessed humor is not humor anymore. On TV they try to harness humor using laugh tracks. As someone else said on this thread, humor is play. You can't harness play either. You can stop it, but that's as far as you can go. — T Clark
----Using real examples, lots of visual materials, and interactive exercises, John shows audiences how:
• Play is not the opposite of work. Companies like Southwest Airlines which have put play and humor into their corporate culture have soared to the top of their industries.
• Physically and mentally, humor is the opposite of stress.Laughter lowers blood pressure, increases blood circulation, reduces muscle tension and pain, and boosts the immune system.
• Humor fosters mental flexibility, blocking negative emotions and allowing us to think our way through problems instead of feeling our way through them. It makes us more creative and better at coping with change.
• When we have a sense of humor about ourselves, we see ourselves more objectively, "as other people do," to use the words of the old Candid Camera jingle. That makes us less defensive and more cooperative.
• Sharing humor is essential to building and maintaining teams. It's a kind of emotional intelligence.
• Humor serves as a social lubricant. It improves most kinds of communication, especially potentially threatening messages such as warning, evaluating, criticizing, and saying no. With humor we can complain without bitching.
• Because humor short-circuits conflict, it is useful in coping with difficult people.
• Not all humor is positive. We need to avoid divisive humor such as sarcasm and sexist humor.
• Women and men frequently have different approaches to humor. Men’s humor is often competitive, while women’s is usually cooperative. When we understand these and other differences, we can harness the power of humor to benefit everyone. — Dr. Morreall
The Fourth of July military spectacle did not accomplish what he hoped it would, it did not bring him the kind of admiration he seeks to legitimize himself — Fooloso4
It is not enough that his followers adore him, the numbers are too low, — Fooloso4
It is a confusion of your own making. Undo it yourself.
I know you can
— Amity
Ok. Thanks. :smile: — TheMadFool
Ok. Thanks. :smile: — TheMadFool
Au contraire! Philosphers can be kinda funny:
Rene Descartes goes up to the counter at Starbucks. “I’ll have a scone,” he says. “Would you like juice with that?” asks the barista. “I think not,” says Descartes, and he ceases to exist. — Relativist
Now, I'm confused. If you don't mind can you untangle this mess? — TheMadFool
It is not that the irony or humor is hidden but that it is just not seen. — Fooloso4