That is the same fallacy as Dingo committed. I am not saying that philosophy is the only discipline that requires rigorous analysis. Law, mathematics, actually every scientific endeavour does. I am saying rigorous analysis is a part of philosophy. — Tobias
It is actually what sets it apart from mysticism or faith. Mysticism does not require argumentation, but revelation. — Tobias
What standard can we agree on to judge what is philosophy and what is not? At the very least a a kind of thesis has to be presented and argued for. — Tobias
developing skills at communicating about philosophical topics requires relevant skill developing social experiences including exposure to unfamiliar ways of looking at things. — wonderer1
JTB is partially correct in that knowledge must be a truth that is held in at least mind. If no one knows X then X is not knowledge. X must also be true. The key error is an insufficient connection between the justification and the belief. If the justification makes the belief necessarily true then the belief is impossibly false. Modal logic: □P ≡ ◇P // Necessarily(P) ≡ Not Possibly Not P — PL Olcott
JTB is insufficient as a way of understanding knowledge. — wonderer1
I am arguing, you on the other hand are not. — Tobias
One of the criteria for being considered a philosopher — Tobias
One of the criteria for being considered a philosopher is that you have displayed a certain level of rigor in your analysis of philosophical questions. Now if you never offer these arguments for scrutiny there is no way the community of philosophers can assess them and you cannot be considered a philosopher. — Tobias
In your rather short not very thoughtful, but still condescending reply — Tobias
I know that thinking in solitude about life the universe and everything does not make you a philosopher yet. — Tobias
There needs to be rigor in that thinking and that is hard to acquire on your own. — Tobias
the distinction between spirituality and philosophy — Moliere
not just from Eastern religions, either. — Moliere
Philosophical School of the Dao ("Taoist philosophy") or "Taology" ("study of the Tao"), or the mystical aspect—the philosophical doctrines based on the texts of the I Ching, the Tao Te Ching, and the Zhuangzi. One of the hundred schools of thought during the Warring States period. The earliest recorded uses of the term Tao to refer to a philosophy or a school of thought are found in the works of classical historians during Han Dynasty. These works include The Commentary of Zhuo by Zuo Qiuming and in the Records of the Grand Historian by Sima Tan. This usage of the term to narrowly denote a school of thought precedes the emergence of the Celestial Masters and associated later religions. — Wikipedia - Taoism
I'm not sure if you do need to bring something, — Moliere
I guess I feel in philosophy there is so much to know and understand and so little time, that the situation is almost hopeless for someone like me who hasn't read significant texts and fully understood the ramifications of key concepts. — Tom Storm
That's pragmatism, or at least it's foundation. I come from science and engineering, so my focus is on knowledge - how to get it and what to do with it once you have it. Very concrete - problem solving. — T Clark
I think good philosophy begins with life, encountering a problem that doesn't yield to the usual approach, finding something that works and wondering why it works, noticing something peculiar, or noticing the peculiarity of something ordinary. It begins, so to speak, with things, not with ideas about things. — Srap Tasmaner
But when I look at SEP, I see too much philosophy that starts on paper, lives on paper, passes into oblivion on paper. — Srap Tasmaner
1. Be curious about the world.
2. Be curious about how you think about the world.
3. Learn about the world however you can (looking, asking people, reading).
4. Learn new ways of thinking and, one hopes, get better at it by talking to people, reading, reflecting.
5. Make sure you don't forget (1) and (2), ever.
6. Don't worry if it's called "philosophy." — Srap Tasmaner
Because this is what is most important in philosophy: philosophical thinking, not philosophical knowledge. You can know about all the philosophers of the world and what they have written, but if you don't know how to think and actually thing philosophically --in the same way pone does with mathematics-- it's all on the surface. Very little useful. It's encyclopedic versus operational knowledge. And to operate philosophically is to think philosophically. — Alkis Piskas
↪T Clark is doing the approach to philosophy; when such introspection arrives at a conclusion, philosophy is being done. — Mww
I would not attempt to actually 'do ' philosophy, I don't have the expertise. — Tom Storm
I probably don't. — Moliere
there's something to be said for not seeking. It's just hard to qualify it as philosophy. — Moliere
It's just hard to qualify it as philosophy. — Moliere
It is not necessary that you leave the house. Remain at your table and listen. Do not even listen, only wait. Do not even wait, be wholly still and alone. The world will present itself to you for its unmasking, it can do no other, in ecstasy it will writhe at your feet. — Kafka
I can;t imagine what you think mysticism is about. — FrancisRay
That's not how I read him. Do you have an example where he says that?
When asked how he acquired his knowledge he answers, 'I look inside myself and see'.
If you're arguing the mysticism is not the study of consciousness then thanks for the chat but we'd best leave it here. It is such a basic and easily verifiable fact. . — FrancisRay
I've been thinking that moral relativism can provide a good framework to suggest that one's idea of 'goodness' in death is individually determined based on ones cultural and individual factors, and therefore the only definition of goodness in death can be 'that which is satisfactory to those involved. — AlexMcGram
Haiku is not a Zen souvenir. It is Japanese art and literature. To compose a haiku, you need to work out on Japanese aesthetics previously. — javi2541997
Although I suppose you could say hard problem depends on it being true. — FrancisRay
What current understanding? the natural sciences have no method for acquiring an understanding. — FrancisRay
My point was that to confuse being ;scientific' with endorsing materialism is a serious error. — FrancisRay
I don't agree that mysticism is the study of consciousness.
This is not a matter of opinion. What else could mysticism study when it teaches that everything is consciousness? . — FrancisRay
Psychology is the study of mind, including consciousness.
This is not that case, as is noted by Kant. It studies the intellect, but not the source of the intellect. . — FrancisRay
Introspection is a valid method for studying human psychology. Introspection is not necessarily mysticism. Or mysticism is not necessarily introspection. Or something like that.
I'd say it depends on how you define 'introspection and how you practice it. — FrancisRay
I think you're mixing things up here. As I understand it, "perennial philosophy" is metaphysics.
Yes it is, but it is also mysticism. Since Huxley's book under this title the phrase 'Perennial philosophy' and mysticism are synonyms. — FrancisRay
For Lao Tzu... consciousness and reality are the same phenomenon. . . — FrancisRay
This seems correct to me. If a 'scientific explanation' is one that depends on materialism being true then it would be my view also. I'd say it's the only available sensible view. Unless we abandon our unnecessary and demonstrably absurd metaphysical views then we cannot explain consciousness, mind, matter or anything else. . — FrancisRay
As state it is, of course, a gross misuse of the term 'scientific'. — FrancisRay
To deny the existence of mysticism, which is the study of consciousness, is not just a profoundly unscientific way of avoiding the study of consciousness but a laughable one. — FrancisRay
I would collect together every book that has ever been published that correctly explains the Perennial philosophy, and hire a fleet of trucks to deliver them to the science department with a note asking them to produce a scientific explanation for why all their authors agree with each other and why everything they say is irrefutable and in accord with modern science and how what they say allows us to solve all metaphysical problems and put the natural sciences on a solid fundamental foundation. They have no 'scientific' method for studying consciousness and discovering the reason, but it might make make them wonder, Would this count as empirical evidence? . . . . — FrancisRay
Or if it’s not equivocating it’s at least not acknowledging the distinction as that makes the difference. — schopenhauer1
My position is that the hard problem is metaphysical, and that if this is not recognized then it is hard (intractable) for the reason Chalmers originally gives. As a metaphysical problem it is tractable but only when we abandon dualism. The same would go for all metaphysical problems. — FrancisRay
It can be studied scientifically. and Yoga is often described as a science, but not empirically. Lao Tzu makes no use of empiricism for his knowledge but explains it by saying 'I look inside myself and see'' He endorses the non-dual doctrine for which reality and consciousness are the same phenomenon and it is a unity, and this is how he can know about Tao and the 'ancient origin', the knowledge he calls the 'essence of Tao'. . . — FrancisRay
I wonder how you would go about studying consciousness empirically. Can you imagine a way of doing this? Generally, academic researchers have to rely on second-hand reports. It is telling that scientists used to dismiss consciousness as non-existent for the sake of Behaviorism. This view arose because it cannot be studied empirically. Sometime round the 1980s they changed their mind and decided it did exist but I don't know what brought about this change of heart. It was not any new data. . — FrancisRay
Well, if that is the worst of the bunch, i've been far more courteous than some of my interlocutors who have accused me of being a Putin puppet... — Jack Rogozhin
However, if you can show me where I have been impugning motived and intentions instead of arguing the facts, I would gladly correct that — Jack Rogozhin
This is an outright lie. — Jack Rogozhin
Does non-dualism have any insight on how we perceive time? I have a problem with metaphysics being more fundamental than physical matter. — Mark Nyquist
And coup against America? France, definately yes, US perhaps not:
(REUTERS 10th Aug 2023) After ousting President Mohamed Bazoum from office on July 26 and placing him under house arrest, the junta revoked military cooperation agreements with France, which has between 1,000 and 1,500 troops in the country.
So far the United States has not received any request to remove its troops and does not have any indication that it will be forced to do so, said two U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity. — ssu
China's interest in the Sahel (and in Africa in general) with it's Belt and Road Initiative is simply to get more customers for it's industry and enlarge it's infrastructure building beyond China. — ssu
The below map — ssu
mercenaries from Wagner — ssu
If you think so, you must think the Maidan coup in Ukraine was evil to, no? — Jack Rogozhin
It's because I endorse non-dualism and for this no problems arise. — FrancisRay
You'll find that those who do not understand non-dualism do not understand metaphysics and as a consequence cannot make sense of consciousness. I would cite the whole of modern consciousness studies for evidence. I'm coming from somewhere else and endorse the explanations given by the Buddha, Lao Tzu.and Schrodinger, which are entirely ignored and usually unknown to most people working in modern consciousness studies. — FrancisRay
This wouldn't happen if you argued with me. — FrancisRay
