I tend to find death-facing machismo a significant ingredient in the early Heidegger. — green flag
I think most of us don't feel this terror very often. — green flag
Is childhood a largely forgotten magical world full of monsters and queens ? — green flag
The terror of being a dying animal is foregrounded, along with various responses to that terror. — green flag
What do you mean? — Darkneos
There is a tendency to polarize ideas of human nature; either it is a Good Thing (Rouseau) or a Bad Thing (Hobbes). But either view is mistaken. — Ludwig V
It is funny when people say: there is no evidence that God exists, what do they really mean? — Raef Kandil
There is no contemporary philosopher who has delved into the nature of affect, feeling, mood and emotion more deeply than Heidegger. Check out this paper from Matthew Ratcliffe: — Joshs
The theological answer is given because most are not philosophers. They need answers and one that they cannot understand is better than no answer. And one that has the appearance of intelligibility and is the work of a god is even better. — Fooloso4
I think Heidegger was attempting to evoke a sense of wonder that there is anything at all, but it seems like mystification — Fooloso4
I'm curious to know what a " 'transcendent' aspect of improvement built into human spirituality' would look like to your friend — Janus
wouldn't social justice and universal prosperity (and the other benefits that go with those) be in common, with the differences being more in the way of how to get there? — Janus
Would many people deny that progress in the sense of social betterment, fairness and justice and greater prosperity for all is desirable? — Janus
From some ethical and aesthetical perspectives, there is certainly something ugly, something degraded, about capitalism — Janus
The question is whether he meant to say that he believed in the ideal of progress — Janus
I was merely pointing out that there is a distinction between the defeatist attitude that it is impossible, the optimistic attitude that it is possible, and the complacent attitude that it is inevitable. — Janus
The endless and fruitless search for foundations of knowledge certainly looks like a misapplication of an idea like the format of Euclid's writings about geometry. — Ludwig V
The guiding question of metaphysics, “what is being?” has reached its end with Nietzsche. With its completion the grounding question, the question of the essence of Being, can once again be taken up by Heidegger. — Fooloso4
Like many, I sensed that he had something mysterious and important to disclose. That thinking plays an essential role in to bringing being to presence. In time I came to think that pursuit of the question of "Being" is like chasing the wind. An oracular prophet without a revelation. — Fooloso4
Heidegger comes along and says that there is a system where the system has not been competed yet. Nietzsche would have produced it if he had lived long enough. All of those ideas by H are laid out in the Lectures I linked to. — Paine
We cannot doubt everything, because doubting requires a background against which the doubt is formulated — Banno
The decentralization of knowledge is a paradigmatic moment history will remember. — NOS4A2
To summarize: you only know something when you have perceived it undoubtably through your senses. — Bret Bernhoft
But one has to acknowledge that experiences of God are overwhelmingly important to their subject and seem to be self-certifying. However, it also seems pretty clear that not all such experiences are actually from God, and that validation of them by others should depend on what comes from them in everyday life. — Ludwig V
That's why Lao Tzu means so much to me. — T Clark
I use personal introspection as one of the sources of my knowledge. — T Clark
I don't think we ever really try to achieve certainty in our knowledge. — T Clark
On the conservative side, there are those who read him in close proximity to Kierkegaard , Levinas and Wittgenstein. Some associate him with critical theory types like Adorno, and then there are the poststructuralist readings which I favor ( Foucault, Deleuze, Derrida). — Joshs
There are counterexamples. I am certain, for instance, that this post is in English, and my certainty is not a theory that I could revise if further evidence came along.
I'd just say that if we counted something as knowledge and later it turned out to be false, then we were wrong, that it wasn't knowledge, and we have now corrected ourselves. — Banno
In 1969 Stanley Rosen published "Nihilism: A Philosophical Essay". It can be described as Plato against Heidegger. Rosen said:
Nihilism is the concept of reason separated from the concept of the good. — Fooloso4
How you decide to believe that Cream was formed in 1966 is over to you - you were there, your friend told you, you read about it on the back of an LP, you recall it from somewhere but are not sure where... — Banno
First i think there are two questions that sometimes get conflated; the first is, what does "...is true" mean? The second, how do we tell if some sentence is true? — Banno
"P" is true if and only if P. so "The kettle is boiling" is true iff and only if the kettle is boiling. It seems to me that this account brings together the coherence, correspondence and redundancy of truth, ideas to which philosophers keep returning. — Banno
This is where the distinction between what is true and what is thought to be true comes into play. Whereas truth is monadic, being about some sentence, belief is dyadic, being about both some sentence and a believer. That is, the kettle is either boiling or not is about the kettle, while that one believes the kettle is boiling is about both the believer and the kettle. This is of importance because idealism and anti-realism work by denying this distinction between truth and belief. For them something is true only if it is believed (or perceived, or whatever) to be true. — Banno
I hope it is clear that I do not think there can be what I've called an "algorithmic" account of truth, and hence of either what we should believe or of what we can know. — Banno
"How do we identify truth?" becomes a normative, even an ethical question, being much the same as "What ought we believe?". It is about our place in a community, especially a language community. So despite my rejecting the antirealist move against there being true statements independent of the attitude we adopt towards them, I do think that what we say is true or false is to a large extent bound to the way we are embedded in a society. I agree more or less with their conclusion, but not with their argument. — Banno
OF course, I might be wrong. — Banno
Philosophy is, generally speaking, a lot harder than it perhaps seems. — Banno
Presumably, a perfect definition would give an account of these three species of knowledge. — Banno
And it's not hard to see problems with defining knowledge as "useful information". We all know stuff that is not useful, unless one is going to specify utility in such broad terms that anything is useful—at which point being useful becomes moot. And there is useful information that is false - Newtonian physics, for example. — Banno
What should not be overlooked is how much of what the snake said is the truth: — Fooloso4
