He explicitly states that our everyday opinions about the world are reasonable. — T Clark
Just to add, Dewey is a part of my thinking only. As is Witt, Heidegger and the rest. So don't take to the letter anything I say as I USE them, to be a representation of what one might encounter in some expository course. — Constance
its a vacuous reply. A fallacy that is so obvious it has a name: ad hominem. — Constance
My car stops when the pedal is pressed and I know this. But I don't know the analysis of this: talk about brakes, brake fluid, pressure, and so on, is very different. This is because braking is, if you will, a thing of parts, it is analyzable. — Constance
The analysis of knowledge is inherently an analysis of value (that's Dewey), and it is value that is the existential core of meaning in the world. Knowledge ABOUT something, my cat or stocks' daily yield, is reducible to an ontology of value and cognition, and cognition, assessed in itself, bears no actual. Or: epistemological analyses utterly fail because there is no foundational dimension; they always begin with the relation, and relations are justificatory and justifications are discursive such that the foundation is always at a distance from t he affirmation sought: P is always on the other side of S. — Constance
Could you give an example of a question from a specific philosopher, and either show that they don’t answer it, or that their answer is either pretense or ‘distanced from life’? — Joshs
Do you believe everything you've just pondered and written just now is "just pretend" or a child's game? — Outlander
Needs work. — frank
Heidegger is radically different. He is an embodiment of the entire history of philosophy as he critiques and rejects many of its central claims. — Constance
This is not at the basic level. — Constance
t. I see a cup,I know what it is, but I don't know what it means to know what something is. Now I am in the philosophical mode. — Constance
Not much of a philosophy fan, huh? — frank
And speaking of Descartes, think of that wax of his: do you think a self, an "I" is reducible to what the was is reducible to in his famous analogy? — Constance
Then you are very much aligned with Heidegger and others. — Constance
At the level of the most basic inquiry, what IS it? — Constance
I am not an object to see; I have no presence, there, like a cup on a table. Nor am I a brain with a body. I can see brains, brain matter and its magnification, but to see my "I" is impossible, for the observational event to affirm this would presuppose the very "I" that I would be trying to affirm. — Constance
The rationale is simple: no proof at all for G is indistinguishable from there is proof of G but you haven't discovered it yet) — Agent Smith
A very powerful Christian argument against abortion: Jesus Christ — Agent Smith
he martyr's logic: I'd rather not live than <insert option but whatever it is, it's gotta be pain of some kind> — Agent Smith
Assange is a king. — StreetlightX
I am not suggesting that we are just novelty producing machines. What I am trying to convey is that we can only experience the world in terms of similarities and likenesses with respect to our history. Everything we encounter, no matter how new and surprising, has our stamp on it already. Nothing is ever completely unfamiliar to us. We can’t make any claims about a world beyond this relationship without lapsing into incoherence. — Joshs
Ciceronianus....are you being serious? You are a pragmatist. Knowledge is pragmatic, not ontological. Knowing other parts, as you say, is a matter of knowing how to deal, solve problems, but issues about knowing the external world are ones that respond to the Cartesian claim that there is res extensa "out there" as opposed to res cogitans. Are you a res extensa proponent? If so, you are no disciple of Dewey, James, et al. — Constance
If you are an objective realist , you wait for it. You stare at it as if it were separate from you. Every moment of living in a world consists of co-inventing it. — Joshs
(Nietzsche,Will to Power) — Joshs
Answer: you must create that real word, not stand there waiting for it to slap you on the ass. — Joshs
Under which circumstance could objective reality remain inaccessible to us? — Mersi
What fundamental properties (or flaws) must we accuse of our cognitive faculties to justify this assumption? — Mersi
What properties would be conceiveable to make it impossible to ever truely see it? — Mersi
And if we cannot get such any accurate imagination of reality, how can any technological progress made by humanity be explained? — Mersi
Suffering from evil has its own joy and lessons. — Wittgenstein
Aberrations and diseases are things we want to get rid of, eliminate them. We see them as things that shouldn't exist.
It's in this desire and effort to destroy or eliminate certain objects, events, or people that shows that we think they shouldn't be part of our world.
So it's not clear how a person who believes there is just this world can be consistent when they believe there are things that shouldn't exist. — baker
I can't comment on the merit of his ideas but the prose it so bombastic I can't ever get though more than a few sentences before needing to leave in a hurry. It's like being stuck next to a hectoring uncle who teaches lit crit somewhere. — Tom Storm
tzsche, if I am not mistaken, admired the Stoic spirit of acceptance of what cannot be changed, like Spinoza, but what do you say of his critique of the Stoic's belief in logos and providence? — Janus
This is only an argument against classical dogmatism as opposed to a scientific approach arising from experience. If I lost my car keys after dark Dewey would suggest that I should search in context under the streetlights because it is more efficacious. Unfortunately, the odds of success depend on the spacing of the streetlights. Science does not follow either Hercule Poirot's advice to retrace my steps from the pub nor the pragmatist's to look only where I can see. Science builds portable lights to scan at ground level which lengthen and put in motion the shadows of all lost objects along the path. — magritte
Is this an epistemological or a metaphysical/ideological/ethical consideration?
(Or do you believe that there cannot be one without the other?) — baker
If you hold that everything and everyone is part of this world and belongs in it, then how do you explain what are considered aberrations and evil (such as mental illness)? And how do you justify morality, a sense of right and wrong?
If you accept aberrations and evil as somehow normal, as part of this world, then on the grounds of what can they be called "aberrations", "evil" to begin with? — baker
t's an odd disconnect from reality, taught in first year philosophy. It's a test to see who amongst the students can see beyond such poor arguments to move to second year Philosophy. — Banno
No, I am assuming nothing. Perception is an illusion, in that the sensory phenomena that appears to inhere to the world, the experiences of the 5 senses, are in fact phantasmal mental products. And yet, sensation is the projection of real environmental inputs onto the imaginary plane of qualia. This projection is information preserving, and so we can make intelligent decisions on the basis of these illusions. If we couldn't, we wouldn't have them. — hypericin
