What is a philosopher? One who contributes something new and of publishable quality to the realm of philosophy. — jgill
Perhaps Freddy, like old Socrates, is an ironic anti-sophistry sophist ... :smirk: — 180 Proof
If that were true, it would completely devalue what calling someone a philosopher signifies. It would become meaningless. If you and I are philosophers, then no one is. — T Clark
Regardless— the term is fairly meaningless anyway. What most people signify with “philosopher” is, in my view, already worthless. So there’s little to “devalue” — unless you accept the common usage. — Xtrix
Perhaps Freddy, like old Socrates, is an ironic anti-sophistry sophist ... — 180 Proof
Regardless— the term is fairly meaningless anyway. What most people signify with “philosopher” is, in my view, already worthless. So there’s little to “devalue” — unless you accept the common usage.
— Xtrix
"Philosopher" is a good name for what Aristotle, Plato, Russell, Wittgenstein, and all those other guys are. It's a useful term. — T Clark
"Philosopher" is a good name for what Aristotle, Plato, Russell, Wittgenstein, and all those other guys are. It's a useful term.
— T Clark
I'm not sure they would agree. But even if they did, it's pretty easy to point to what is traditionally (and commonly) used as examples of what a "philosopher" is. I don't think that tells us much -- especially if it does nothing to clarify what philosophy or science is. — Xtrix
I'm not sure they would agree. But even if they did, it's pretty easy to point to what is traditionally (and commonly) used as examples of what a "philosopher" is. I don't think that tells us much — Xtrix
Before the word "philosopher" was even coined, what was happening? Was there no "philosophy"? I don't think so. I think Parmenides was as much deserving of the label "philosopher" as anyone. — Xtrix
Every human being can think; not every human being is a thinker.
[Also, it may be useful in an everyday sense -- but certainly not in a technical sense. So while I find nothing wrong with "work" as a useful word in everyday life, that itself doesn't make it useful in physics (where that string of letters takes on a completely different role, and is given a technical meaning).] — Xtrix
What is the alternative to using the word philosopher? — Tom Storm
I laid out what I see as the requirements for being a philosopher. The people I listed all met those requirements. My point was to show that my set of criteria will identify people who we normally think of as philosophers. That helps show that my definition is consistent with everyday usage. — T Clark
That doesn't really work for a philosopher, but it gets at some principles. Let's try this:
Commitment of your life to practicing philosophy to the exclusion of other important aspects
Ability to express your thoughts so other people can understand them
Submittal of your ideas to other philosophers and competent laymen for evaluation
Ability to competently defend your ideas — T Clark
I don't know if there is one alternative, but I don't see why "thinker" can't be used as meaning basically the same thing, if by thinking we mean the type of thinking involved in what is normally called philosophy — Xtrix
I keep coming back to the idea that to be successful in philosophy (as I see it) one needs a solid awareness of the tradition and how ideas have been explored thus far. One can be a thinker and have no idea about the work already achieved. For me this latter part is important. — Tom Storm
Perhaps I'm being uncharitable. I generally know what you're saying -- that a general awareness of these questions is valuable, and I agree. I think depriving oneself of the riches of the past is exactly like you mentioned, reinventing the wheel. But whether or not that is important in defining what makes a "philosopher" is debatable, and I'm skeptical of it. — Xtrix
I know several economists who've never read Adam Smith, and several programmers who have never read Boole's work. — Xtrix
People do all sorts of jobs without reading historically significant texts in their area. The key issue in work is accreditation and/or competence, not books read. — Tom Storm
One needs to have this exposure not in order to come up with great original thinking , but to come up with and refine a language of expression of the ideas. — Joshs
The same original kernel of genius one begins with early in life may find its language of expression in science or the arts rather than philosophy, depending on which form of expression one discovers is most satisfying. — Joshs
But could Heidegger have done the same work as a movie director? I wonder if certain projects require a particular expression? — Tom Storm
And it's the question of competence that I am interested in and how this might be understood in relation to philosophy. Christ knows if it's possible. My thoughts, maybe they are reactions, are galvanized by the claim some make that anyone is a philosopher, that all it takes is a kind of reflection or a sort of love. My sense is it needs to be deeper than this. — Tom Storm
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