Among the difficulties in many discussions on Kant is that one - or both - have not understood him. Without understanding, no target can be established, and no criticism can hit a target that does not exist. — tim wood
The effect of an object upon the faculty of representation,
so far as we are affected by it, is sensation. — Kryneizov
. "Naive" is a dangerous word in this context, that may come to haunt you. — unenlightened
That is all that is required. — A Seagull
A Pragmatist Seagull. How effectively are you interacting with the world? Are you sure you're not missing something? If it is all we've got, then we'll have to make the best of it, but one can certainly wish one could tell the oasis from the mirage without a five mile walk and a mouthful of sand. — unenlightened
For exemple, currently I am reading Metaphysics by Aristotle (from beginning to end). It is really hard to understand. I feel like I'm stuck. I am reading with two different translation.
When you face difficult books what do you do? You keep reading even without understand? What can help in this situation? — John Pingo
Well, some values, once established to be worthy, may need to be preserved for the next generation, no? For example, the value of a life — TheMadFool
where the words "believe/belief" rear their ugly heads — Frank Apisa
For me, there are four things that count as needs:
-Water
-Food
-Shelter
-Medication — Shawn
The problem is, not that the values that have been attacked by "scholars" are good, but that there are no good theories to take their place. I would prefer this situation to be due to a lack of trying but it might be the case that no system of values can ever be picture perfect. — TheMadFool
And a 'force multiplier to thought' is meaningful??? — A Seagull
Obviously. — StreetlightX
perhaps there are no truths in moral philosophy. — A SeagullThere definitely are truths in moral philosophy, — Congau
And a 'force multiplier to thought' is meaningful??? — A Seagull
Do you know the term “force multiplier” in general? — Pfhorrest
Conclusions in moral philosophy, although they may be true, can’t really be called facts. — Congau
↪A Seagull There's nothing subjective about it. Or objective for that matter (a silly distinction of limited use, everywhere misapplied). — StreetlightX
A good philosophy acts as a force multiplier to thought; it forges connections between the disparate, as elaboration on world and word. A good philosophy constantly surprises, pulls one along a forceful current of throught that propels a mind from one element to the next, and leaves one hungry for more. It inspires creation in thought and serves as a launchpad to thinking otherwise, always. It refers one constantly to an elsewhere and an outside that cannot be captured within that philosophy but on which it always draws upon, augments, and edifies. — StreetlightX
A good philosophy may be restricted to a true philosophy — Congau
↪A Seagull Mine. The one that sentence was in. This is a self-serving answer. And what followed were the details of that answer in that post. — Coben
↪A Seagull Thanks. And I agree with your analysis of how logic works. I would call the two types you described as analytical logic and applied logic. But only becasue I am old skool. I like descriptive names that mean what they say. User-friendly naming conventions — god must be atheist
Peter is John.
John is Paul.
Therefore Peter is Paul
The conclusion is right in logic. — god must be atheist
Does your system have a special name to it? If I guessed your system correctly, and it has a specific name, would you please give it here? — god must be atheist
Why are you starting with truth? What is meant by 'truth'? — A Seagull
I am not starting with truth, but with the undeniable fact that I am self-aware, which is simultaneously an object of awareness and a truth. This is because truth and being are identical. Truth does not necessitate language, otherwise, the necessary truth "mind is necessary for language," is false. — TheGreatArcanum
A giraffe has a long neck.
A giraffe has a short neck.
Would you call the corresondence to truth a value, or a label? Why? This is not a rhetorical question. I don't know why you would call them labels instead of values. So please explain. — god must be atheist
Statements have truth values — god must be atheist
each truth is contingent upon a higher truth — TheGreatArcanum
The first principle of philosophy is that philosophy has a first principle.
(That ought to be right.) — god must be atheist
↪
Well then who would you like to examine your life?
A Seagull I would like to do it myself. But, how do I go about it? I see my thoughts are conditioned and contradictory so, any kind of self-analysis I feel will yield unfruitful results. I am tempted to say, that I can examine myself in regards to my relationship to others, as Viktor Frankl proposes. But, I am not quite convinced. — Zeus
↪A Seagull Well, this is a self serving answer — Coben
That said, the essence of philosophy is, in true Socratic spirit, a journey of discovery of not wisdom but of our own abject ignorance. The philosopher then is the quintessential tragic hero, lured by the promise of wisdom to begin a quest to become a sage but sadly betrayed to none other than himself and his pathetic ignorance. — TheMadFool
P
258 — Pussycat
Let's assume, if we can, an unexamined life is not worth living — Zeus
Logic is a measure of consistency/coherence — creativesoul
Philosophy is like dancing. So asking what makes a good philosophy, is like asking what makes a good dance. — Pussycat
Do you consider that your answer to the question 'What makes a good philosophy' to be a superior one? — A Seagull
Yes. — Pfhorrest
So you think false statements are good philosophy? — creativesoul
Logic.
Logic may be defined as the branch of philosophy that reflects upon the nature of thinking, or more specifically reasoning, itself. — Harry Hindu
Philosophy is the search for wisdom, which is the ability to discern superior from inferior answers to questions. A good philosophy is thus one that provides such an ability. — Pfhorrest
What makes for a good philosophy? — A Seagull
True statements. — creativesoul