I don't think this is fair. It can be said of Kant and Hegel as well. — Xtrix
Ontology is fascinating to me, and I don't think you can be really serious about it unless you hear Heidegger out in good faith. — Xtrix
regarding Heidegger as Nazi and villain and all that: who knows. That's debated, but frankly I'm in the group who doesn't really care all that much. — Xtrix
Why would you give the "thumbs-up" to the voice of ignorance? — Janus
If one of Heidegger's interpreters came out in agreement with the view you express here, there might be grounds for agreement. But it remains very unclear just what is being asserted about being. — Banno
They called Rorty a Pragmatist as well as Quine. I don't think Peirce or Dewey would've agreed with that. Not sure about James in this case. — Manuel
This by way of objecting to treating being as the name of something. — Banno
But that says nothing. And shows less. — Banno
Are there more mental illness now vs. before Social media was discovered? — TheQuestion
I'm not using the dictionary version of "interpreting," which is similar to saying "it's just your opinion." It's not a matter of opinion, it's a matter of perception. We all perceive, and so we all interpret. A glass being half full or empty is also an interpretation -- it doesn't mean there's no glass there. — Xtrix
Apparently, "interpretation" is one of those lit-crit loan words in philosophy which is easier than most other terms to over-interpret. — 180 Proof
It’s all interpretation. Once you’re thinking or talking about it, you’re interpreting. If you perceive, you’re interpreting. Take vision as an example. — Xtrix
The question as to how to distinguish a human being from other animals, with its very obvious answers is not at all the same question as "what does it mean to be a human being", though. — Janus
Add to that the basic mystery of the Real, of existence itself; questions that have had more and more elaborate stories, and more and more questioning of the stories themselves, spun around them over millennia and the modern situation doesn't seem so strange. — Janus
We're also a bunch of atoms nonetheless. We're also the "rational animal." We're also "creatures of God." We're also "minds" and "selves." To pick one of these and say "Here is the REAL truth" is just nonsense. It's an interpretation. That doesn't make it untrue -- it just means it's not the only truth. — Xtrix
We're distinguished in that we're the only entities with a world. Animals don't have worlds, they have environments. — Xtrix
That’s not how I live, nor how anyone I know lives. We can think it and say it, but an “organism trying to survive” isn’t my experience. First and foremost I’m engaged with someone or something, I’m moving towards something, I’m caring about our interested in something. I have a world, not an environment. — Xtrix
Have we? And what’s that? — Xtrix
What is a heirophant? — Xtrix
But this is all pointless talk about history, etymology, abstraction, and soaring speculation, which should be as relevant to us and our personal, everyday concerns as a mathematical theorem is -- that is, until we grasp the following fact: along with answers to the question "What is existence/what is being?" there comes an answer to the question "What is a human being?"
"What is a human being?" What can be more relevant to us? It's often the basis for what's considered a "good" life (i.e., the question "What should I do with my life?"), and so ethics and morality; for proposals about how to organize society -- and so the basis for politics; and for claims about human nature -- and so the basis for humanity's goals and about the future of the species ("Where are we going?") — Xtrix
Futility is a great utility in ultimate beliefs. — god must be atheist
But I venture to say that to train someone in capitalistic, consumer-oriented, individualist, greedy, egotist, narcissistic behaviour takes five minutes, and it is totally successful. — god must be atheist
Of course. Seeking fame for the sake of fame, wealth for the sake of wealth, etc. would be wrong from the Stoic perspective. But from what I understood, the Stoics were in favor of making good use of one's time and energy, which, if one has the predispositions and resources for them, would result in wealth, power, fame, etc. The Stoics were proactive about worldly matters. Like you say later, "Epictetus suggests we make the best use of what's in our power, and take the rest as it happens." The Stoics weren't like, for example, Buddhist monks who are forbidden from working for a living. (We could even compare the Stoics to Boy Scouts.) — baker
I do believe there are perfections worth striving for, primarily, perfect happiness and perfect knowledge. — baker
Again, is this the Aristotelian conception of arete or virtue? Also, there are preferred indifferents.
As a side issue of this thread, do you think apatheia is a natural conclusion of Stoicism or even quietism? — Shawn
I understand the condemnation is due to their not being in our control and can all be lost rather easily. Virtue, on the other hand, is said to be something that we can control, and not as easily lost. — praxis
I don't see Stoicism as being a perfect system of philosophy. Rather it gives guidelines and exercises in thought and considered, careful action. — Amity
Because the philosophy of the Stoics isn't the philosophy of someone who has given up on life, it's not quietism; it's also not the philosophy of someone who is simply trying to develop a soothing narrative for their troublesome life. No, it's the philosophy of someone who is proactive; someone who seeks to be in control, but who also recognizes the limits of it. And who never gives up. The best description I can think of for this is "ambitious". — baker
It's very important whether any Stoic attained sagehood, ataraxia, aequanimitas. Humility aside, if they have not attained the highest goal of what they're teaching, then they're giving advice they themselves were unable to follow through. Which means we're justified to doubt their advice, and their whole philosophy. — baker
I'd love to see these modern-day stoics (and the old ones, too, actually) cope with some real problems, like poverty on the verge of homelessness or grave illness, or both. — baker
At last. What took you so long ? :wink: — Amity
Surely slaves were ambitious? Or at least our particular slave here was.
But here's the catch: How many Stoics actually attained ataraxia, aequanimitas? — baker
Sounds like something said by someone very powerful, someone on whom others depend for mercy.
— baker
That might be because it was said by someone very powerful... — Tom Storm
Rome, totally blew it with their white togas. Imagine how much better their economy could have been with a wide variety of clothes and seasonal changes in what we wear. — Athena
The power and glory of Rome. Why do we admire it?
I think we can assume he was not a liberal when it comes to property rights. — Athena
I am not terribly worried about the poor if they can continue to have the essentials of life, such as family and community, — Athena
My memory is poor, but seems to me, Cicero was clueless about the reality of those who went to war for Rome and lost their land while they were gone to war! Not only did they loose their land, but they could not get jobs because of slavery. The wealthy were wealthy because they owned land and had slaves. They also held the seats of power and that means the system was to benefit the wealthy, not all citizens.
To a degree, giving the landless bread and circus prevented a violent revolution, but if I recall correctly some generals lead their troops to fight for what they believed they deserved, and in time these generals came to the seats of power. Should I look for more information? — Athena
As much as I like Cicero, I fault him for having a very poor understanding of economics. — Athena
