Reviving the short story competition seems a good idea to me as long as admins are allowed to participate. :up: — Baden
I thought that Baden's post offered technical guidance. This doesn't make it wrong, of course, or unhelpful either. Your OP targeted writing, but also specifically referenced creative writing. All the technical help in the world won't make us creative. But, I suspect, creativity can't be learned. We can sharpen up many aspects of our writing with technical stuff, even the most creative of us (?), but they won't enhance our creativity. I think this is why there are so many good writers, but also why so few of them are truly creative. Creative writing is a rare skill. I can think of few who are truly capable. Alan Watts is the best example I can think of, although (perhaps) his greatest skill is in the spoken word. He can explain stuff that others can't seem to, in a spellbinding way. The creative bit is not the explanations, which are exemplary, IMO, but in the spellbinding bit. His words are entrancing, and his use (and choice) of words as good as any poet I have ever read. — Pattern-chaser
Why not expand this into a "Short Story" writing contest? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Here's one path you could make use of in writing a philosophical article:
1) Formulate a rough thesis...
— Baden
I would be interested to hear about how we progress from critical reading, thinking to creatively writing.
— Amity
The technical aspects of writing are important, just like brush techniques are important for an artist. We need to learn these techniques before we can create writing or art, but they aren't sufficient. Creativity is infinitely more than mere technique. — Pattern-chaser
I keep notes when discovering by thinking. I than take those notes and try to get other people to comment on them, so I can think more clearly and develop my thoughts further. — Josh Alfred
Writing is powerful. Poetry is something I never considered until I took a class in college, though it is what lyrics are. There's so so much to explore. — Drek
If my memory serves me right, I had the Submit an article for publication discussion pinned at the top of the forum for a year or more, and we got almost nothing. — jamalrob
1) They need to be pretty good to be published.
2) We don't promote the articles section enough.
3) It takes a fair degree of commitment and effort to write a philosophical article. — Baden
Why not conversations On Writing ?
— Amity
Good idea. — Baden
We'll be setting up a thread here on the forum for artistic work, and we don't intend to publish poems or stories on the Articles site, at least to begin with. Our vision is of a philosophical journal tackling issues in academic philosophy, but one that is accessible to educated lay-people and sometimes relevant to topical concerns. If we do decide to publish poetry or stories in the future it will be in the context of a site that has built up a solid archive of substantial philosophical articles.
As for length, between around 2000 and 5000 words is good, but that won't be strict: the first article, published two days ago, is over 6000 words, and I can imagine shorter pieces being sometimes suitable too. — jamalrob
It kinda got to be popular too... — Drek
Blog maybe? That would be worth it. — Drek
I know what you mean about asking the author. The whole process is foreign to me. — Drek
That's a good idea to turn what you've read into an essay... — Drek
I would say classifying will power as an energy thing dismisses it's complexity. — LuckilyDefinitive
For some philosophy is a way of life, what Socrates calls the examined life. — Fooloso4
is it as simple as picking up a book and reading it? Is there any other mystery behind it? Do you test yourself or summarize? — Drek
I read and take notes (Evernote) and try to study the notes periodically. — Drek
This is amazing! Gobble Gobble. — Drek
A related question is who it is that you wish to defend them to and against? — Fooloso4
Seems like a lot of people have a Master's in philosophy or more, but can anyone give me some laymen books in order to argue and defend my beliefs? Intellectual self-defense?
I have an AA in Liberal Arts and an AS in Business... that's the extent of my formal education. I've read a few basic critical thinking books, and had 3 Philosophy classes (Logic, critical thinking, and Ethics). — Drek
Unfortunately, some of my earlier threads on Schopenhauer's WWAR or the Tractatus died out. I hope, therefore, to propose a reading group thread where we can have an active discussion about what new books to read or talk about. — Wallows
There are so many indictments of character made in varying levels of subtlety that make me think I am not just being sold a bill of goods but am reading a diagnosis. — Valentinus
a person can get conflicted within, torn up and undecided. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whenever philosophy is biased towards anything other than truth, it is not true philosophy.
— Tzeentch
This looks to me like epistemic and value claims hiding within a tautology hoping to go unnoticed.
Either we ignore it and some notion of truth self-justifies by refusing to scrutinize itself further or we're off to the races with "What is truth?" and "What is the value of truth?". — John Doe
Will and desire are not he same. The will is free, but desire is driven by some underlying condition — Metaphysician Undercover
That said willpower is an ingredient to ''greater'' success because success isn't something you get right the first time. There will be many failures and you need willpower to sail you through the difficult times. — TheMadFool
What would be the difference between "will power" and "the power of the will"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Socrates called himself a physician of the soul. The first psychologist? — Fooloso4
Socrates says the he speaks differently to different men depending on their needs. — Fooloso4
Augustine considered this problem quite extensively. How is it possible that one can know what is good, and even decide to do the good action, yet still proceed to do the contrary? I believe that this is the root of his division of the human mind into three parts, memory, intellect, and will. It is an extension of Plato's tripartite soul. With this division, the will does not necessarily follow what the intellect. Later, Aquinas discusses the relation between intellect and will. Although the will is generally seen to follow the intellect, in the absolute sense will is prior to intellect. This is how we can uphold Augustine's conception of free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think will-power has to be an energy, otherwise why would we refer to it as a 'power'. I consider it as intent or the impulse to cause — BrianW
My point is willpower is a just a gimmick. There'a position A, where you are. Then there's position C, where you want to be. But there's this position B, which you have to cross to get to C.
If B is a pleasant place there is no need for willpower.
If B is an unpleasant place then we need willpower.
My point is all you wanted was to get to C and willpower is nothing more than an intermediary to achieve an objective. The goal-oriented nature of it diminishes its value. We have willpower only to achieve happiness or joy and that's something everyone wants. So, what's the difference between the strong-willed and weak-willed people? — TheMadFool
Is weakness of will is like physical weakness? Do you judge yourself for your physical limits or judge others for theirs?
There are things I am not capable of no matter how much I train and try. In addition, my willingness to train and try may not be very great to begin with. Is that a lack of willpower or simply a limit of my will? — Fooloso4
it may be that the whole notion of willpower is wrong. There may only be various and sometimes competing desires. It is not weakness of will that fails to stop me from eating cake, but that at this moment the desire for cake is stronger than the desire to lose a few pounds. But this is too simplistic. The story of competing desires is not an accurate description of the complex physiological and psychological things going on within me. — Fooloso4
For me to respond to that, you would first have to present a definition of spiritual depression. — Tzeentch
If you are thinking of a spiritual depression, what do you consider would be the causes and cures ? — Amity
depression is the domain of spirit — Tzeentch
Thank you,and anyone else I might have missed, for responses. I hope to reply later.
Next year perhaps :) — Amity