Yes. And that's a way to show Heiddy's relevance... — creativesoul
But are those in fact our gods? They're more the gilding of a god dauntingly out of reach. — ZzzoneiroCosm
there is a fundamental craving in all of us for a peace-girding wisdom. It's what draws me to the Stoic pursuit of noble-mindedness and the Skeptic recipe for ataraxia. — ZzzoneiroCosm
In my mind it's crucial to draw a distinction between philosophy-as-position-making and philosophy-as-pursuit-of-wisdom. The former has nearly consumed the latter - no doubt the source of your dis-ease vis-a-vis the well-scoffed, cartoonesque abstractiphaster. There is nothing cartoonish about a sober devout pursuit of wisdom. Philosophy is banal insofar as it excludes it.
Wisdom and intellectual peace are still valuable and valued. — ZzzoneiroCosm
The notion of being well-informed has gotten almost inscrutably complex. — ZzzoneiroCosm
In this climate of information crisis, better to be over- than under-critical. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Self-criticism should be as pointed and unforgiving as criticism of others.
A dovetailing or synergy of other-criticism and self-criticism can serve to purify and personalize our understanding of a difficult point or position. — ZzzoneiroCosm
The universe is a collection of quantum particles. Again: What causes a collection of completely unpredictable particles to exhibit highly predictable behavior? — GeorgeTheThird
Trusting clocks is not always automatic, to be as clear as possible. — creativesoul
hat is rather my point - maths with its definition of a point having zero extents - flaunts its own rules - there is an insistence in maths that both of the following are true:
1. 1/0 = UNDEFINED
2. There is an infinite number of points on a line segment length one
That equates to a belief in both of:
1. 1/0 = UNDEFINED
2. 1/0 = ∞
You see that obviously both [1] and [2] cannot hold at the same time... unless UNDEFINED = ∞ ... which is my belief. — Devans99
No. That's precisely the point. You already believe it is, otherwise you could not possibly trust it as a means to tell the time. — creativesoul
I don't think assumptions count as beliefs. After all, if you look at a clock to form a belief about the time, are you really checking to see if the clock is working? Don't we check it because we expect it to be working?
And how about its accuracy? Do we check its accuracy? How do we do that? Do we check with a verifying source -- another clock? And, then, I may ask, what source you used to verify the accuracy of the first verifying source -- and so on ad infinitum. — fiveredapples
I am sorry, but the passage in and by itself is nonsense. At least I see no sense in it. — god must be atheist
Man possesses a human nature; that “human nature,” which is the conception of human being, is found in every man; which means that each man is a particular example of a universal conception, the conception of Man. In Kant, this universality goes so far that the wild man of the woods, man in the state of nature and the bourgeois are all contained in the same definition and have the same fundamental qualities. Here again, the essence of man precedes that historic existence which we confront in experience.
Atheistic existentialism, of which I am a representative, declares with greater consistency that if God does not exist there is at least one being whose existence comes before its essence, a being which exists before it can be defined by any conception of it. That being is man or, as Heidegger has it, the human reality. What do we mean by saying that existence precedes essence? We mean that man first of all exists, encounters himself, surges up in the world – and defines himself afterwards. — Sartre
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant-moral/#CatHypImpIt is categorical in virtue of applying to us unconditionally, or simply because we possesses rational wills, without reference to any ends that we might or might not have. It does not, in other words, apply to us on the condition that we have antecedently adopted some goal for ourselves. — link
The effects of an action are, well, inconsequential. There's "something" immoral about telling untruths whether they have bad or good consequences. What that "something" is is probably unexplained but Kant had his categorical imperative rule which taps into the collective intuition on morality and never outputs an action that violates this intuition as permissible. — TheMadFool
When we say that man chooses himself, we do mean that every one of us must choose himself; but by that we also mean that in choosing for himself he chooses for all men. For in effect, of all the actions a man may take in order to create himself as he wills to be, there is not one which is not creative, at the same time, of an image of man such as he believes he ought to be. — Sartre
Deliberate misrepresentation of one's own thought and belief. — creativesoul
But it's impractical to expect Bob to check every premise before he can justifiably make a claim. — Andrew M
But in case you're simply asking if a false belief ever counts as knowledge, then the answer is no. — fiveredapples
That Bob looked at the clock is what justifies his claim that it was 3pm. He didn't just guess or make something up. I think that, with Alice, we would normally be satisfied with his justification.
If so, then Bob's claim was justified even if the clock were broken and it was really 4pm. In which case he would have had a justified but false belief.
If the clock stopped exactly 24 hours prior and it really was 3pm, then he had a justified and true belief. But he didn't know that it was 3pm. Which is the Gettier problem.
Now we could raise the justification bar and require that Bob check that the clock is working first and perhaps also verify the time against other clocks. But even that could conceivably fail to produce a true belief. And, more importantly, it starts to get away from what we ordinarily require for knowledge claims. — Andrew M
The man has successfully satisfied JTB. He has a belief. The belief is true. And the belief is justified. If you think knowledge is JTB, then you must conclude that the man has knowledge. You seem not to appreciate this fact. You're wanting to object that he doesn't have knowledge because he was looking at a broken clock. But you can't make that objection if you subscribe to JTB. — fiveredapples
A distinction is sometimes drawn between 'knowing how' and 'knowing that'. I am talking about 'knowing that'. — Bartricks
So, it is clear to our rational reflection that having knowledge does not just involve having a true belief. — Bartricks
Metaphysics and epistemology are what you end up doing when you try to justify an argument that you shouldn't do them and should just use science instead. — Pfhorrest
I belong to the second optioner group of type 2. I am having ball. I don't know if I could even handle a disciplined study at an institution (academic, not psychiatric or penitentiary). — god must be atheist
academic philosophers, whose jobs are mandates to delve into topics as hard and difficult a way as possible — god must be atheist
The type 2 . philosophers' other option is a speculative approach, which discovers for them brand new, but to the professional philosophy circles well-known philosophical thoughts. — god must be atheist
I used them mainly to shoot down the ideas of the presented topic's original author. I had a ball debunking Socrates and Hobbes, and had a chance to fall in love with the ideas and mind of Hume. — god must be atheist
we need to reinvent the concept of "friendship" with the virtues of past times, but accepting that it is rooted on self-interest, so that we can make the better of it. — Gus Lamarch
https://ndpr.nd.edu/news/husserl-s-crisis-of-the-european-sciences-and-transcendental-phenomenology-an-introduction/The history of modern philosophy is, indeed, nothing less than a struggle for the meaning of man, a struggle over the very fate of human civilization. And so the crisis of the European sciences is revealed to be something even larger and more grandiose (if that is imaginable): a radical life-crisis of European humanity, and of the human race as a whole. Philosophers -- the genuine ones, that is, not those fraudulent "philosophical literati" (Crisis, 17) who dominate the philosophical scene -- are the only ones suited to face up to the true struggles of our time, "between humanity which has already collapsed and humanity which still has roots but is struggling to keep them and find new ones" (Crisis, 15).
It is easy to dismiss such talk and even to laugh at it. Few philosophers operating today, surely, are able to take such ideas seriously. Dermot Moran is no exception, and so in his introduction to the Crisis in the Cambridge Introductions to Key Philosophical Texts series, he treads lightly whenever issues such as the "telos of European humanity" come up for discussion. Throughout the book, especially in his chapter on Husserl's so-called "turn" to history,[2] Moran dutifully records Husserl's deepest convictions on these matters, but he is careful to keep his distance from Husserl's more radical and controversial claims, and by the end of the book, after having played the role of honest broker for almost 300 pages, he finally allows his own skeptical take to slip out, endorsing the judgment of David Carr, who, he tells us, "has pointed out that Husserl was simply wrong to think that phenomenology, even in its most transcendental form, could save humanity" (299).
— link
Of course, these friendships are made of interests, of a "Union of Egoists", but of an almost utopian tone, one that lasts for years and years, seasons and seasons, and this feeling, with regret, also makes me question it: — Gus Lamarch
It got me wondering how we can ever even have well defined concepts in a language when every word is supposedly replaceable by a combination of other words. At what point do we cease defining and start understanding. — khaled
Are we talking Dunning-Kruger...? — jorndoe
Sometimes metaphysical concepts are so poorly defined it's hard to get started toward a consensus. Look at the tens of thousands of pages devoted to "being", for example. Then how about "truth"? That is why the more bizarre aspects of physics are better discussed in a mathematical setting than a metaphysical one. Math may lead to predictions of reality, whereas metaphysics doesn't seem to lead anywhere.
But I'm an old codger, so ignore me. :roll: — John Gill
Questioning authority is not equivalent to critical thinking. Doubt without adequate ground is not the result of critical thinking. It's the result of something else much less worthy... much less admirable. — creativesoul
Coming from one who has come to understand that my own past critiques have sometimes been based on a misunderstanding, I would readily concur with this. It's exactly right. — creativesoul
In what way is certainty linked to the notion of spirit? — ZzzoneiroCosm
All testing, all confirmation and disconfirmation of a hypothesis takes place already within a system. And this system is not a more or less arbitrary and doubtful point of departure for all our arguments: no, it belongs to the essence of what we call an argument. The system is not so much as the point of departure, as the element in which arguments have their life. — Wittgenstein
One already knows what a tree is, what a hand is, what one expects from trees and hands. One knows all sorts of things that one doesn't bother to know that one knows. And one knows things in a way that suggests that 'know' is the wrong word here. 'Understand' is better if we stress the 'under.' One participates in a form of life. 'One' refers to that form of life as a kind of software. But where is one?If you tried to doubt everything you would not get as far as doubting anything. The game of doubting itself presupposes certainty. — Wittgenstein
At the core of all well-founded belief lies belief that is unfounded. — Wittgenstein
The difficulty is to realise the groundlessness of our believing. — Wittgenstein
There is...something that average everyday intelligibility obscures... that it is merely average everyday intelligibility...This is what Heidegger called 'the perhaps necessary appearance of foundation....What gets covered up in everyday understanding is not some deep intelligibility as the tradition has always held; it is that the ultimate 'ground' of intelligibility is simply shared practices...This is the last stage of the hermeneutics of suspicion. The only deep interpretation left is that there is no deep interpretation. — Dreyfus
Any and all interpretations and comments on Wittgenstein and On Certainty are welcome. Refereces are appreciated. — ZzzoneiroCosm
476. Children do not learn that books exist, that armchairs exist, etc.,etc. - they learn to fetch books, sit in armchairs, etc.,etc.
Later, questions about the existence of things do of course arise, "Is there such a thing as a unicorn?" and so on. But such a question is possible only because as a rule no corresponding question presents itself. For how does one know how to set about satisfying oneself of the existence of unicorns? How did one learn the method for determining whether something exists or not?
477. "So one must know that the objects whose names one teaches a child by an ostensive definition exist." - Why must one know they do? Isn't it enough that experience doesn't later show the opposite?
For why should the language-game rest on some kind of knowledge?
478. Does a child believe that milk exists? Or does it know that milk exists? Does a cat know that a mouse exists?
479. Are we to say that the knowledge that there are physical objects comes very early or very late? — Wittgenstein