And now a third definition of what
philosophy is and of what it is good for.
For me personally the difference between
continental philosophy and analytic
philosophy can be explained by
the different
kind of
types of people
who do
either of those two,
so i like to understand continental
philosophers and i see myself
in that very tradition
as something like failed writers or
failed poets. Some people who don't
really manage to write a good fictional
book and then
they resort to philosophy. And in a very
similar way i like to think of analytic
philosophers as failed mathematicians or
failed scientists as some sort of
nerdish types who are maybe not good
enough in math or in physics to make a
career in that field. And of course there
is this kind of subspecies of human
beings like myself - failed writers or in
the analytic philosopher's case failed
mathematicians - and they need something
to do, and that's what philosophy
provides them with. It is some kind of
occupational therapy.
For this species of people, the failed
writers and the failed mathematicians, it
gives them something to do
because otherwise they would be totally
useless in society. So
it's a kind of blessing of philosophy
that gives people uh
like myself some sort of dignity and uh
even a paid job if we're lucky — Hans-Georg Moeller
Philosophy has taught me more about life than anything I have studied, or experienced. — Rob J Kennedy
Philosophy has taught me more about life than anything I have studied, or experienced. — Rob J Kennedy
Specifically, two things philosophers have taught me is, one, like Epicurus said, the best way to live is to be in a community of like-minded people, to live and eat simply and be open to others.
Two, Sartre, etc., once I was thrown into this world, I am responsible. This is my world and I make it.
I live by both these maxims. — Rob J Kennedy
I find it pleasing because it feels like independent confirmation. — Moliere
I'm just surprised to see someone express a continuity between Epicurus and Sartre. — Moliere
Do people still read Sartre and take him seriously? I recall Camus and Sartre being fashionable in Australia just after the war; mixed into a kind of beatnik, socialist sensibility. By the 1980's, people were still reading Camus (perhaps because he is easier to follow) but existentialism became a bit of an embarrassment for a while - if you were an enthusiast, you were seen as a throwback to your parent's generation. Any thoughts from you side of the globe? — Tom Storm
I have come across a fair amount of people who began philosophy courses, often not completing them, because they just found that they could not relate to it. — Jack Cummins
My 'philosophical interest' was/is rooted in everyday encounters with stupidity (i.e. maladaptive, incorrigible behavior) in all of its insidious forms as both an enabler of and constraint on practice (or agency). Though I've always had strong affinities with Zapffean-Camusian absurdism, more than anything else I'm a fallibilistic Epicurean-Spinozist (i.e. committed to a critical form of anti-supernaturalism).I often wonder, what makes a person interested in philosophy? — Rob J Kennedy
In practice, IME philosophy is an infinite game (i.e. fractal-like maze, not 'solvable' labyrinth) one falls into and cannot / doesn't want to escape from (unless you're a fly named "Ludwig" trapped in his own flybottle). :smirk:What is it about them that draws them to read, study and discuss philosophy?
Yes. Solitaire ...Usually they are people who prefer to be alone than constantly around others.
... et Solidaire. Yes.They are people who care about politics and the arts.
Yes ... sentences cage me.They are writers.
Yes ... very bookish.They are introspective and educated.
Yes ... and themselves.They want the world changed ...
Tolstoy, Dostoevsky and Hesse at 12, wow. — Rob J Kennedy
Philosophy has taught me more about life than anything I have studied, or experienced.
— Rob J Kennedy
That's an amazing thing to hear, and I say that as a professional philosopher. I can't believe that someone actually gets something that useful out of philosophy. — Arcane Sandwich
Is it correct to consider B&N to be a sort of Heidegger-lite? — Tom Storm
Usually they are people who prefer to be alone than constantly around others. — Rob J Kennedy
That is because it can be made so obscure and remote from life to be made uninteresting. — Jack Cummins
what makes a person interested in philosophy? — Rob J Kennedy
What is this "thing" that we call Reality? — Arcane Sandwich
What is it really? How do we know? — Philosophim
us verbal guys that get sucked into the intricacies of philosophical ideas. We prefer to be alone — T Clark
(Love that.)it is philosophy that makes me interested in it — unenlightened
You may not talk explicitly about philosophy or philosophers, but that doesn't mean that you dont ever think philosophically...
I would turn the OP’s question on its head. What does it say about someone who calls themself an artist and yet who has no interest in philosophy? — Joshs
What is this "thing" that we call Reality? — Arcane Sandwich
What is it really? How do we know? — Philosophim
us verbal guys that get sucked into the intricacies of philosophical ideas. We prefer to be alone — T Clark
it is philosophy that makes me interested in it — unenlightened
...extremely introverted, analytic, brutally honest (with myself), and I yearn for absolute truth. I cannot live without doing philosophy, just as much as I cannot live without eating.... — Bob Ross
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