'If the child is standing near the coffee table then stand near the child in case they fall, perhaps this is a toddler learning to walk.' Before the instinctive act, no-one present at the time had reasoned that the child might fall against the table, the instinctive act saved the child from injury. — universeness
Catching a child before its head smashes against a coffee table is instinctive.
It was an action and it saved the child, which is good, and there was no pragmatism involved.
— universeness
There was no philosophy of any kind involved. What's your point?
— T Clark
So, would a phrase such as 'the philosophy of instinct/intuition' be an incorrect phrase? — universeness
As a pragmatist, I assert that no philosophical position is meaningful unless it has concrete implications for phenomena present in the everyday world, life, and experience of normal human beings.
— T Clark
Do you have scientific evidence for this assertion? — Cornwell1
Why you don't understand this? I have read this (interesting!) thread ab initio.
You asserted "that no philosophical position is meaningful unless it has concrete implications for phenomena present in the everyday world, life". Is that why you don't understand the meaning? — Cornwell1
Observation and deduction are elements of pragmatism. — universeness
So, would a phrase such as 'the philosophy of instinct/intuition' be an incorrect phrase? — universeness
what do you mean by useful? — karl stone
As a pragmatic epistemologist I assert that the primary value of truth and knowledge is for use in decision making to help identify, plan, and implement needed human action. — T Clark
As a pragmatist, isn't it more prgamatic to defend reasonable assumption against unreasonable scepticism — karl stone
One thing I haven't discussed is how the information we incorporate into the conceptual model is evaluated, justified. Justification comes in the steps where we evaluate the SCM. We need to answer these questions:
— T Clark
Well perhaps not 'only' but you imply that your opinion is that its the 'best' way to travel. — universeness
Well, if you are agreeing that instinctive actions and intuitive actions are valid methods of gaining knowledge and pragmatic actions are another valid method then are you merely saying that of the three, in your opinion, pragmatic actions produce 'more valuable' knowledge? — universeness
doesn't epistemological pragmatism devolve to an infinite regression that can only be brought to an end by asserting something is true? — karl stone
Yeah, better to just be a patronizing, bossy asshole, right. — baker
Seems to me that for something to be useful there needs to be some element of truth. Have you provided an example where a falsehood was useful? — Harry Hindu
You are suggesting that using pragmatism as an epistemology ("pragmatic approach to knowledge") is the only way to travel. — universeness
Catching a child before its head smashes against a coffee table is instinctive.
It was an action and it saved the child, which is good, and there was no pragmatism involved. — universeness
'It was my intuition that told me you were cheating on me. I had no evidence but it turned out to be true.'
Again an intuitive assumption resulted in new correct knowledge obtained but the new accurate knowledge was not based on a pragmatic epistemology.
You are putting too much space between knowledge and behavior or cause and effect.
Instinct and intuition are valid methods to use to gain new knowledge and so is pragmatism.
It may well be true that pragmatism will be a more fruitful approach compared to instinct or intuition but this does not mean it is wise to ignore your instincts or intuition on every occasion and wait for your pragmatism to kick in. — universeness
I don't disagree with everything said in this thread, but I feel that I start losing the track of what it means to be pragmatic vs not pragmatic. Could you give some examples of non-pragmatic behaviors or philosophies? It seems like it's the human nature to act pragmatically. Even the people who subscribe to seemingly nonsense philosophies have their reason to do so, and such people act pragmatically in their own ways. — pfirefry
My issue was if you were suggesting that being 'Pragmatic' was the top priority... I think you have given pragmatism too high a priority — universeness
Well again, it depends on the exemplar scenario under consideration.
If I am angry at myself, extremely angry then I may not put up with 'the abuse' anymore and I might change my life for the better.
If I hate the Nazi 'B' then I may fight against him/her much more than if I try to be pragmatic about the whole issue. Hatred and Anger can greatly benefit in many scenario's — universeness
When you think about the impressive jargon and thought games inherent in phenomenology — Tom Storm
For the nazis it was. The machine of destruction was pretty well worked out. Hatred my fiend... — HKpinsky
Is it not a pragmatic/sensible/logical act, to be aware of self and what your own values are? — universeness
I think he is trying to understand how the 'good' associated with Godliness measures up against a prison guard who helps facilitate the holocaust. His actions would be evil but his faith in god may still be true, valid and good. He may even truly believe he is doing his gods work. I think it is this area that Peterson is trying to take on. — universeness
Because they are mostly instinctive, there is often not enough time to be pragmatic. I don't think 'fight or flight' has much reason. You often reason about what happened after it's all over — universeness
Which decision did you consider 'not effective' in the two scenarios involving hate and anger that I gave? — universeness
It was hatred that was the motor behind one of the most effective decision making in history: "Der Endlösung" at the Wannsee Konferenz. — HKpinsky
I agree, but self-awareness compared to what? How do we measure our improvement in self-awareness? How can we tell the difference between self-serving opinions and awareness? — Tom Storm
Running or fighting might be a better approach when raw facing hatred, dead on. — universeness
Hatred and Anger can greatly benefit in many scenario's — universeness
I think his broader point is about self-awareness. As Peterson and may others have mused, everyone tends to think of themselves as hypothetically opposing Hitler or being in the resistance if they found themselves in Nazi Germany. But the odds are you are more likely to be an active supporter, not a dissenter and much more likely a guard, not a liberator. That is the tragic dimension to human behavior and the self-awareness gap Peterson often attempts to highlight. — Tom Storm
I'd be interested in knowing more about the relationship between self-awareness and pragmatism. — Tom Storm
If one was to prove the existence of good wouldn't all other incentives need to be removed? We always seem to have many drives for practicality. We don't like over simplicity. But wouldn't we need to bare it if we are to truely be good without self or group serving incentives for evolutionary reasons? — TiredThinker
I was trying to respond to comments on my post, but it has been removed. Do you know why it was removed? — Ree Zen
Much of philosophy has been involved in the pursuit of pseudo-problems, or questions raised not in life which raise what Peirce thought was faux doubt like Descartes' claim to doubt everything. — Ciceronianus
So, I suggest that you're method start with a problem. — Ciceronianus
The view that a specific ontology is required for such an approach is, I think, another of the differences philosophers sometimes enjoy considering which, in fact, make no difference (as James would say). — Ciceronianus
I think all useful epistemology will employ pragmatism. — universeness
I would not call myself a pragmatist as it gives too much priority to the term. — universeness
but pragmatism has limited use when dealing with extreme emotional content such as hate, love, madness etc, yet these extreme emotions can produce 'eureka' moments. — universeness
Jordan Peterson stated that he was haunted by or he struggles with the thought of himself in the role of a prison guard in a death camp during the holocaust and he asks but it's possible to love such work.
Horror, terror, ecstasy, wonder. I don't think pragmatism touches these yet many people experience such, every day. — universeness
Some random reactions - I come from the reverse of engineering - community work - no maths, few solutions, unanswered questions and jagged edges. — Tom Storm
I guess for me everything needs to start with at least one presupposition, namely that truth or ultimately reality are likely inaccessible or imagined... I wonder if holding a pragmatic epistemology is more of a world view than a philosophy - not wanting to make too much of this, but a key question inherent in setting up one's philosophical orientation is how deep are we prepared to dive and why? — Tom Storm
What is the irony in mentioning Mary? — Bitter Crank
In a way, I'm not sure one can say Jesus was the founder of Christianity, let alone his mother....If we are looking for a founder, Paul comes much closer. — Bitter Crank
To impress those we like that they may stay in our lives? — TiredThinker
But is there any good we do when nobody is looking other than to make ourselves feel good? Is morality driven by punishment? Any exception if that were largely true? — TiredThinker
But the point remains that we interpret Eastern thought through a Western lens, i.e. your description of Taoism as "meat and potatoes philosophy". — Noble Dust
Welfare isn’t a one-to-one ratio with socialism, but I agree. — NOS4A2
If you are interested in a serious discussion of epistemology that follows what you consider pragmatic, you can join Bob Ross and I here. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/9015/a-methodology-of-knowledge/p1 The first two pages of responses are primarily junk, but when Bob Ross joins, we have a serious discussion. — Philosophim
Resist falling under the spell of socialism, if you can. — NOS4A2
Present your case in whichever way you like. — universeness
It's also perfectly fine for you to choose to pick up your ball and remove yourself, if you don't want to play. — universeness
The west interpreting the east in a western way. This doesn't say anything about the actual ideas. — Noble Dust
Yes, it is a requirement, and some people treat it as an inconvenience: "I understand the problem, and I have a solution. Why should I be wasting my time on writing it down for the sake of bureaucracy?" Software engineers are free-spirited and they despise inefficient processes. A part of my job is to teach them to embrace this process, because I'm convinced that writing design docs benefits the author even more than the reader. — pfirefry
Unless you mean to exclude pragmatics like Dewey and James, in a pragmatic view. knowledge is a conceptual model that can be more or less USEFUL. — Joshs
You mentioned forms of philosophy reliant on truth propositional logic as not pragmatically meaningful, but I assume you would also include many Continental philosophers. — Joshs
There is a danger that ‘normal human beings’ becomes synonymous with ‘ human being who can understand the philosophy’. — Joshs
But the greatest works of continental philosophy, from Plato to Descartes, Spinoza, Hegel and Nietzsche, were initially and for the most part still to this day meaningful to only a small segment of the population. But such ‘useful’ philosophies became the basis for interpretations by mathematicians and scientists (Newton, Frege, Gauss, Heisenberg, Godel, Turing, Darwin, Freud) who produced models influenced by these ideas which in turn led to new technologies, therapies, sciences. So the usefulness doesn’t happen as a direct communication from abstract philosophy to ‘normal human beings’ , it happens in stages, by being translated into more and more pragmatically articulated versions over time, accessible to increasingly large segments of the population. — Joshs
In software engineering, we have a practice of consolidating knowledge in Design Docs, also called RFCs (Requests For Comments). E.g. Google, Uber. Overall, it is similar to SCM. When someone needs to build a new feature or change an existing system, they will write the proposal in a design doc and assign relevant stakeholders for a review. — pfirefry
Overall, my stance is that knowledge exists in our heads. We use processes such as SCM and design docs to solidify our own knowledge and to align our knowledge with the knowledge of others. The artefacts of the process, such as SCM and design docs, don't fully capture the knowledge that we have, but they help their readers to form their own knowledge. Obtaining knowledge and sharing it with others requires investing time and effort. A pragmatic person knows how to balance the time spent researching and the time spent doing. — pfirefry
Intuitively, we think that sharing knowledge is an altruistic act, because it takes away someone's time for the benefit of others. But I think oftentimes it is not the case. For example, this comment is an artefact of knowledge sharing. I expect that 90% of the value generated from this comment is for my personal gain, from organising my thoughts on this topic, and I can only hope that it will generate at least some value for others. — pfirefry
Sure, pragmatism pretends to drop the notion of truth in the hope of working instead only with belief. — Banno
But one does not have to drop the notion of truth in order to act in accord with your six methodological points. Indeed, it is clear from the first point that some things are to be taken as true in order to get the process started.
It would not do in your example to doubt the existence of groundwater and soil. These are presumed as constitutive of the activity in which you are engaged.
But further, it would not do to doubt that one can keep accurate records, that one can make measurements, that one can communicate these with others, that one's actions can make a difference to the environment. — Banno
The Long Goodbye, Raymond Chandler — jamalrob
You would have to elaborate and use examples to evidence your point of view. Otherwise what you have typed is mere simplistic opinion. — universeness
