Am I being clear enough? — Srap Tasmaner
Answer: definitely not, but don't go to any further trouble. — Wayfarer
It's quite painfully simple. — Isaac
Why did you choose that as a hypothetical example? — Wayfarer
Is it because you have me pegged as a religious-or-spiritual type, therefore this must be typical of the way that I think? — Wayfarer
My claim is that, from the outset in Plato, down to the end of the 19th century, there was a soteriological element in Western philosophy. — Wayfarer
The notion I take Srap Tasmaner's OP to be gently poking a stick at is exactly that missing step. Simply saying that idea y arose alongside, for example, an enlightenment rejection of the supernatural, says absolutely nothing about whether such coincidence was reasoned, accidental, or peer-pressured. That case is left entirely unmade. — Isaac
If you are making a counterclaim or counterargument, you should be able to explain how it undermines your opponent's point. In that regard, what specific claim does your appeal to the history of ideas undermine? What force makes your claim need to be addressed on pain of being unreasonable? — fdrake
The only guess I have is that you seek to portray an opponent's conclusion as a contingent event of thought; which it is, their thought just happened as part of the history of ideas. Nevertheless a claim can be a necessary consequence of another through rules of reasoning. — fdrake
Fair enough. — fdrake
Not really. — Isaac
The history of an idea can also show where a tradition when [ went ? ] wrong in ways that simply looking at where the current tradition is today can't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
As it happens, that is very much my reason for invoking it. — Wayfarer
'there's plums in the icebox' being confirmed when one goes to the icebox — plaque flag
Relating this to the OP, Srap Tasmaner sounds to want philosophy to be an open and unstructured kind of thing. A pastime with no real purpose or stakes. It is talk that is free and not to be constrained by grand ends. — apokrisis
Nice conclusion. — Tom Storm
Hence the point is not to understand language but to use it. — Banno
While we may wish to reject the materialist realism of science as a form of metaphysical prejudice, we cannot do so in favour of an alternative metaphysical framework that also claims to describe an ultimate reality be it a new form of idealism, panpsychism, or some Hollywood influenced Matrix version of 'we are living in a simulated reality' without having a theory of language that explains how any of these realist claims are possible. — Lawson
I think the beauty of Lawson’s promise (which I still don’t understand) is that if there’s no realist theory of language then discussions about effete topics like idealism and panpsychism bite the dust for good. That would be an interesting development. — Tom Storm
Most of the issues that raise a ruckus in philosophy are metaphysics. They are matters of point of view, not fact. — T Clark
Such an ephemeral ontological object cannot really be the subject of any serious investigation — Isaac
I'm not sure what's to be gained from lining up on two sides to say "There's one kind of thing!" or "There's two!!" More interesting is what you can do with such a claim. Naturalism is pretty straightforward as a working assumption, rather than a dogma; you know how to proceed, what sorts of things to look for, how to design experiments, how to craft a research program. I'm not clear what the other side offers except a defense of people's common pre-scientific beliefs. — Srap Tasmaner
Language is a crowbar, a smokescreen, a mirror, all kinds of things. — plaque flag
The acquisition of capability for learning linguistically is secondary to learning from interactions with the world. — wonderer1
a pragmatic understanding of language, which doesn't address the question of realism — Tom Storm
One way (hardly the only way) to look at philosophy historically is as a zoo of intense personalities who react to those who came before and influence those who come after. — plaque flag
fundamental metaphor for reality — plaque flag
It remains unclear what you mean by "framework" — Banno
So maybe it would help if you tied all this back to the OP? — Banno
First of all, why is that paragraph 'weirdly factually wrong'? — Wayfarer
The pedagogy is designed to teach people to be employable rather than give a deeper insight. — Moliere
Ridiculous how education essentializes and splits up technical topics cleaving it of any human element. — schopenhauer1
St. John's, I believe tries to teach students through primary sources — schopenhauer1
And I don't think you would want philosophy to exude that kind of authority where the right views are already there to be learnt? — apokrisis
But what you learn from close reading of the big names is as much the way they thought as what they thought. — apokrisis
Yet how would you set up Philosophy 101? — apokrisis
There are narratives — Paine
I explicitly proposed that the issue is one of the choice of grammar — Banno
Or that the difference between realism and anti-realism is more one of choice of grammar than profound ontology? But that is all philosophy is - wordplay. — Banno
You've a few jokes, but nothing substantive. — Banno
generally I understand the idea by understanding the ideas' story — Moliere
it makes sense to understand the context of what has gone before so as to ground what seem the concerns now. — apokrisis
But what do you study when you do a philosophy degree but the history of ideas? — apokrisis
Studying the history of ideas helps you understand that things that were once seen as true but now aren't may be true again. — T Clark
I would say that in fact a problem is that folk skimp their history and don’t realise how much is simply being rehashed with each generation. — apokrisis
But anyway, the history of ideas is important as it is the only way of understanding why folk tend to believe the things that they do. — apokrisis
Be clear. — Banno
The anti-realists failure to commit amounts to a failure to understand how language functions; "the ball" is the ball. — Banno
"the ball" is the ball
So a realist says the ball has a mass of 1kg; the anti-realist might say that saying that it has a mass of 1kg is useful, or fits their perceptions, but will not commit to its being true. The anti-realists failure to commit amounts to a failure to understand how language functions; "the ball" is the ball. — Banno
Animals move around and plants don't move around, although they may be moved by wind, while remaining in the same places. — Janus
one neither passively absorbs, nor jointly negotiates the normative practices of that culture, but validates one's own construction of the world using the resources of that culture — Joshs
The cultural control we see is one which is within the person’s own construct system and it is imposed upon him only in the sense that it limits the kinds of evidence at his disposal. How he handles this evidence is his own affair, and persons manage it in a tremendous variety of ways. — Kelly
How does each individual respond to their culture inheritance? — Joshs
I'd also note here that 'sensorily' takes the sense organs existing in an environment for granted. What I call the constructive approach seems to want to take an interior as given and construct the exterior from this interior --but this conception of an interior seems to quietly depend on common sense. — plaque flag
But the scientific search for 'what is the mind?' will always be bedevilled by the epistemic split between knower and known, because in the case of mind or consciousness, we are what we are seeking to understand - mind is never an object to us. And I say there's a profound problem of recursion or reflexivity in the endeavour to understand it objectively, given in the Advaitin aphorism, 'the eye cannot see itself, the hand cannot grasp itself.' — Wayfarer
You reply as though I’m pushing you into buying something and you’re not yet prepared to buy it — javra
So I’ll now ask you in turn for your own perspective — javra
Do you find that the basic laws of thought are fixed for everyone today, yesterday, and tomorrow? — javra
The twisty journey that all must take from lumpen realism, to the body shock of idealism, to the eventual resolution of enactivism and pragmatism. — apokrisis
If not, on what coherent grounds do you find that reasoning and logic can serve as means for discerning what is real? — javra
We can start in the middle of things — apokrisis
the logical inferences of materialists when it comes to their metaphysics result in the conclusion that all logical inferences are relative - such that one might as well declare that "to each their own equally valid logic and reasoning". — javra
Can you better explain what you mean by "immaterial entities" in this context? — javra
how can materialism and physicalism uphold their own rational validity when their rational validity is (for reasons so far discussed) undermined by the very metaphysical stance they maintain? — javra
