If you have in mind people like us and people adjacent to us, then we are what, 5% of the population at very best? — Manuel
Most people - even in optimal conditions - don't care enough about these issues. Heck even interest in science is low for what I would like it to be, but philosophy today? That's tough. — Manuel
Another thing is being a follower of Derrida or Lacan, that exists, is relatively small, but probably not good for thinking, imo. — Manuel
I forget exactly where, I think it's in a few places, Plato describes being educated as primarily "desiring what is truly worthy/good and despising what is truly unworthy/bad." He says that a formally educated, wealthy person might be able to give more sophisticated answers as to why something is desirable or undesirable, but that this is ancillary to being truly "educated." If the more sophisticated person is nonetheless not properly oriented/cultivated such as to desire the good and abhor evil, then they are in an important sense uneducated (unformed); whereas the unsophisticated person is educated, although lacking in sophistication. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But education wouldn't quite be the same thing as wisdom. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Not that it's impossible to have someone change the way you view things, it just looks to be very rare. — Manuel
I think life difficulties are much more defined or informed by one's temperament more than what some intelligent person said back in the day. — Manuel
You can gain perspective and even insight in philosophy, but I don't think it will change the way you face problems, not unlike thinking that studying psychology will let you read other people's minds (it won't). — Manuel
But this is invariably met with the objection, what do you mean by 'higher'? Higher, according to whom? (Just wait!) This is because any such values are generally expected to be matters of individual conscience - the individual being the arbiter of value on modern culture. — Wayfarer
Because, in most situations, even a fool can see when something is a failure. You don’t even need to know what success is. But as I already said, very few people are 100% foolish.
— Tom Storm
This answer is neither here nor there. Fools by definition is someone who acts unwisely and gets unwise results. — L'éléphant
From my own experience, sometimes my intuition was right and sometimes wrong, so to me, this definition of intuition is problematic. I have no idea what wisdom may refer to at all. — MoK
In terms of contemporary usage, I don't see appeals to wisdom (as a specific concept) in general that often. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A key idea is that wisdom (and thus virtue) is sought for its own sake, being not mainly about making "good choices" in a pragmatic sense (as the goal of wisdom anyhow), but about an intellectual joy that is achieved through contemplation that itself makes one a "good (just) person," but which also leads to a good (happy) life, to joyous action (as opposed to the suffering brought on by vice). Whereas if wisdom is primarily about making good pragmatic choices, then it really is more of a means than an end. — Count Timothy von Icarus
How important do we think wisdom is in our lives, and do we agree with contemporary thinkers like John Vervaeke that we “suffer a wisdom famine in the West”?
I would imagine this is a quite common sentiment amongst perennialists or fans of particular Eastern or historic Western wisdom traditions. And this makes a certain sort of sense since, if one considers them important (or the sort of classical liberal arts education) then the fact that they are not generally taught will be something in need of change. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The drive for diversity has not tended to mean teaching other historical traditions either (e.g., the big Islamic philosophers). For philosophy and broader social theory, the post-moderns, liberals, and to lesser extent the Marxists, really dominate. But, for most perrenialists (and I do think they are right here), these are in key respects much more similar to each other than they are to any of the older traditions. So, even for people not committed to any particular tradition, there appears to be a missing diversity element that allows for unchallenged assumptions or a sort of conceptual blindness. This need not even be in alarmist terms. It's simply "hard to get" without any sort of grounding, and that grounding is missing. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You've got a fine house and you've completely forgotten what the point of a house is. — Srap Tasmaner
My two bits from a 2021 thread ...
https — 180 Proof
Okay so you're just supporting what I said earlier. How do you know what mistakes are if not by knowing what success is. — L'éléphant
One can recognize that events aren't meeting expectations and recognize that beliefs leading to those expectations were somehow mistaken. It's not obvious to me how "knowing what success is" is necessary to knowing what mistakes are. — wonderer1
You could only learn from the foolish if you know the difference. — L'éléphant
- the conviction that one is choosing the best answer when in truth one is imposing one solution amongst many. That imposition is the ethical aspect. — Banno
No, I'm seeing education as not just schooling and formal instruction. — L'éléphant
to me means no formal schooling and/or no instruction from the wise people. — L'éléphant
My Masters thesis was on organisations making decisions despite their being undecidable. But only the good undecidable decisions are wise... — Banno
At the time, the nearest thing I could find in Western culture to the enlightenment I was seeking was via the Gnostics. — Wayfarer
It would be difficult for me to assess in your place what exactly is minimizing suffering: letting someone commit suicide or letting someone live :grin: — Astorre
Thought experiment: You walk into a room where a stranger is about to commit suicide. What do you do? — Astorre
Have you ever felt the urge to take stock of your own paradigm? — Astorre
Does philosophical thinking change your approach to relationships, friendships, and love? If so, how? — Astorre
Ethics in Action: How do you personally resolve ethical contradictions that arise in your everyday life? — Astorre
Coping with Life's Challenges: Does your knowledge of philosophy help you deal with life's difficulties, losses, or existential anxiety? — Astorre
Balancing Depth and Superficiality: How do you find a balance between your philosophical mindset and the superficiality you encounter in others? — Astorre
There's an issue I don't think has been raised yet: "system" often carries a connotation of rigidity, though we can certainly point to systems that are flexible and adaptive. My point is, it's always a question with systems.
In your semantic terms, I was thinking about the use of the phrase "the System" (capital S) in the 60s and 70s counterculture. The imputation was of a particular kind of rigidity, a rigidity that extended to this semantic level. Thus the System was thought to see everything in terms of wealth and power and status, and to be blind to, say, art and feeling, on the one hand, or injustice and suffering, on the other. There were categories of no use to the System, and so it did not recognize them at all. You get the idea. — Srap Tasmaner
Do you agree? — Banno
I spent yesterday at a Voluntary Assisted Dying conference, and came away with an overwhelming belief that VAD is a moral good; one that was have been impossible to implement until recently. — Banno
There may be some benefit in further considering why wisdom fails intensification. Dose this show that it is valuable for its own sake? — Banno
Sure. The Enlightement casts a shadow. I'm overall in agreement with Vervaeke's diagnosis, although bearing in mind it is presented via a series of 52 hour-long lectures, staring with the neolithic, so it's very hard to summarise. — Wayfarer
They’ve seen everything before. I was thinking for a minute that maybe wisdom and maturity are the same thing, but that’s not right. I guess it’s more that maturity is a prerequisite for wisdom. Wisdom stands back and sees everything at once, how everything fits together, what’s going to come next. — T Clark
— Tom Storm
No.
— L'éléphant
That’s ridiculous. I think it shows, perhaps, a lack of wisdom. — T Clark
I asked Claude to have a go at this for me, and it produced the following groups:
Judgment/decision/conclusion/opinion (evaluative processes)
Experience/knowledge/facts/information/understanding (epistemic foundation)
Ability/skill (capacity)
Good/sound/valid/reason/sense (normative approval)
Quality/standard (measurement/evaluation)
It then suggested on this basis that wisdom sits at the intersection of out epistemic and normative judgements. This last corresponds to my own intuition. To be wise is to achieve a good outcome. — Banno
But in general, wisdom and cleverness are a natural dichotomy that organises the brain. And so also organise society as our collective brain. We have something of major metaphysical importance that goes beyond personal neurology and speaks to our societies as the combinations of its institutions and its innovations. — apokrisis
How do the two sides of this equation play into each other, and is something new indeed occurring as a next phase of its evolution? — apokrisis
Can an uneducated person be wise?
— Tom Storm
No. That said, there are many ways to educate ourselves. I don't mean academically. Reading, listening to other reputable people, and watching the actions of those you respect. — L'éléphant
Wisdom has a moral implication, — Banno
You can be too clever by half but never too wise. You can be very smart, but can you be very wise? You can be quite wise. The fragility of intensifies indicates that wisdom is an absolute quantity.
We have folk wisdom, Divine Wisdom (complete with capitals), ancient wisdom, and conventional wisdom. Wisdom can be possessed, accumulated and passed down. And even occasionally applied.
Better to be wise than knowledgeable or intelligent, and we have artificial intelligence, not artificial wisdom. Wisdom is earned by suffering and experience, not so knowledge or intelligence. We say someone is intelligent when they demonstrate analytic capacity but wise when they show good judgement.
Is it more serious if I question your wisdom than if I question your judgement? — Banno
Oddly, "wise" and "video" are cognates. Having seen YouTube, I find that ironic. — Banno
On this point, I also ask you to consider the role that religion has played in each of these different aspects of human life. My initial point with the post was to ask readers to consider the basis for most of the contention and separation that we see globally as being religious ideology. I — Paula Tozer
Everyone I know has been altered by religious ideology - that includes Catholic, Baptist, as well as other Protestant religions. — Paula Tozer
To compare it to a deviance..I don't know if I'd go that far. — Paula Tozer
In my view, it's absolutely unnecessary to follow a deity. — Paula Tozer
I disagree here. I would call it need rather than preference. Some people seem to need religion or god or mystery or whatever and some people do not, some people are comfortable with no greater meaning and some are not. Preference implies an array of different paths on a journey but actually its a matter of being on a journey or not in a journey at all. — DingoJones
I think even when a meaning seeker rejects religion they will find another path to it by another name. The ones who aren’t searching for meaning (or at least meaning beyond the physical world), aren’t selecting any preferences because they aren’t looking for anything (beyond the physical world) — DingoJones
but it sounds like you believe no one has any knowledge about god, from the bible or otherwise. Is that correct, and if so why do you suppose that is? — DingoJones
Unless the god in question could/would/should stop or curb that evil. — DingoJones
For the record I’m not a schizophrenic and the scenario I’ve just described has only happened once but that’s all it took to convince me. — kindred
Obviously the shocking thing was to hear something in my head in the first place almost like a loud voice and not the usual internal monologue, to have this exact phrase repeated by a family member truly shocked me which is why I believe that there’s a higher power, for what else could explain it — kindred
I believe that there’s a higher power, for what else could explain it. — kindred
It is to avoid repeating the usual cliches about Nietzschean power, strength and egoism recycled from Marxist and Christian thought, so that another Nietzsche can be made to appear. This would not simply be a ‘kinder, gentler’ Nietzsche, as though we could use the same cliches and position him on the ‘right’ side of them. I dont know ether he is kind and gentle. Whether he is or not, I want to show to what extent this other Nietzsche has been obscured by the preconceptions imported from traditional philosophical thinking about the self, the community, power and ethics. — Joshs
But Nietzsche's "individual" is not the liberal subject. It is a transindividual site of forces. The "Will to Power" is not what an individual *has*; the individual is what the will to power becomes in a specific configuration. The Overman is not a super-powered individual. The Overman names a process, a going-across, a transformation of the human into something else. It is about the creation of new possibilities, new ways of being, new values. It is not about the triumph of one individual over others but about the emergence of a new form of life that transcends the current human economy of ressentiment and bad conscience. His purpose is not to glorify any specific crime or social order but to provide the tools for a ruthless critique of all values, especially the moral ones we hold most dear. He doesn't offer a new system to believe in but a method for questioning, — Joshs
I used to be an atheist up to my early twenties but as a grew older I had some personal experiences which swayed me rather than scripture which I never found convincing to begin with. — kindred
Are the philosophical arguments much better? Are any of those cartoonish in your view? — DingoJones
Wouldn't the behaviour of believers reflect whether god exists depend on how one is defining god and specifically some of the wisdom or rules he lays down? — DingoJones
Well there ARE bible literalists, so some people do believe a cartoonish thing. Of course it is also low hanging fruit as you say, the easiest attack vector against religion. — DingoJones