frank
It sounds like Being and Time didn’t make sense for Steiner. — Joshs
Dialectics? You mean Hegelian dialectics? — Joshs
The irony is that reductive naturalism is the product of Enlightenment philosophy, and is often aligned with rationalist theology and deism, where humanism is more closely aligned with atheistic existentialists like Sartre. — Joshs
Joshs
Steiner wasn't saying that Being and Time doesn't make sense. He was explaining that it's incomplete and that people who heard him speak said his lectures went beyond what he wrote. I guess the same was said of Plato. Apparently there is a recording of him somewhere, and Steiner says it reveals a magnetic personality. — frank
Ciceronianus
Joshs
↪Joshs
Yes. That would be part of the intelligent resolution of real problems, not philosophical ones. Dewey called the tendency to neglect context "the philosophers fallacy." — Ciceronianus
frank
Heidegger initially called his approach philosophy but then called it ‘thinking’ in order to distance it from the association between philosophy and abstraction. — Joshs
Tom Storm
This is the kind of thing that Habermas wouldn't have been able to accept because he and others perceived that the Holocaust was a manifestation of the indulgence of irrationality. In fact, the Nazis in general were thought of as such a manifestation. For Habermas, it was imperative to bolster rationality in every way possible to return to psycho-social stability. — frank
Joshs
Habermas was a long way from Heidegger philosophically. His longing for a metaphysical and moral foundation causes him not only reject Heidegger and poststructuralism, but Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Sartre, Gadamer, Freud and the many philosophical movements they were connected to which questioned foundationalism and recognized the need to reconcileThis is the kind of thing that Habermas wouldn't have been able to accept because he and others perceived that the Holocaust was a manifestation of the indulgence of irrationality. In fact, the Nazis in general were thought of as such a manifestation. For Habermas, it was imperative to bolster rationality in every way possible to return to psycho-social stability — frank
frank
Wasn't the Holocaust also a product of scientisitc thinking and misapplied rationalism with a technocratic final solution? Zygmunt Bauman ( a philosopher and death camp surviver) argues that the Holocaust was a product of modernity, made possible by bureaucratic rationality, which allowed ordinary people to participate in genocide without personal hatred or direct violence. I have always thought of the Holocaust as what happens when rational calculation overrides people’s emotions and moral instincts. — Tom Storm
Habermas was a long way from Heidegger philosophically. His longing for a metaphysical and moral foundation causes him not only reject Heidegger and poststructuralism, but Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Sartre, Gadamer, Freud and the many philosophical movements they were connected to which questioned foundationalism and recognized the need to reconcile
the rational and the irrational. — Joshs
Constance
"The essential structure of everydayness" seems ineluctable blindness to its presupposed "essential structure" ... like, to use a naturalistic example, an eye that must exclude itself from its visual field in order to see. Afaik, phenomenological reduction (i.e. transcendental deduction) is just an overly prolix way for the puppet (e.g. dasein) to show itself its strings (e.g. being-with-others-in-the-world-towards-death) that is only shocking or profound to Cartesians, subjectivists, and other mysterians. — 180 Proof
Constance
Oh, the horrors of everyday thinking! Ineluctable to those of us in the common herd, mired in life and living, and its seemingly real problems, neglecting its essential structure. — Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus
Joshs
My reading of the works of that dreadful man has been limited to short works, like What is Metaphyics? and The Question Concerning Technology — Ciceronianus
Frankly, I find it difficult to believe anyone would think it's the goal of philosophy to address such questions as "Why is there something rather than nothing?" If the question relates to the origin of the universe, it strikes me as unlikely that philosophers will answer it by thinking really hard. It's possible, though, that physics, cosmology and astronomy may provide insight — Ciceronianus
Philosophy has all too often been an assault upon everydayness — Ciceronianus
“Common sense is the ideology of the natural, and good sense is the ideology of the normative. Together they form the two aspects of the image of thought according to which thought is assumed to be in principle in accord with truth, and according to which the thinker is assumed to possess a natural capacity for thought.
“Common sense always interprets by reference to the identity of things; it thinks in terms of what is similar, what is continuous, what is known. It fears the singular, the event, and the unrecognizable. Thought is thus forced into the pre-existing framework of the recognizable, and loses its power to create new connections.”
Ciceronianus
180 Proof
:up: :up:Philosophy has all too often been an assault upon everydayness. Originally in the ancient West, though, it was vitally concerned with the best way to live our lives. I think that's a worthy inquiry. I don't look to an unrepentant Nazi like Heidegger for guidance in that regard. — Ciceronianus
Wisdom. :fire:We live in and are part of an environment. Our minds are part of it because we're part of it. All we know, all we feel, all we do results from and are part of our interaction with it. That is what's "natural" to me.
To the extent our interaction with the rest of nature indicates certain conduct and information is useful and beneficial, we may come to rely on it and it may become customary. But we should always be willing to accept that our judgments and conduct are subject to change when what is learned through further interaction establishes change is appropriate. What's customary may become inadequate or undesirable. I consider that to be common sense. — Ciceronianus
Constance
My reading of the works of that dreadful man has been limited to short works, like What is Metaphyics? and The Question Concerning Technology. As to the former, I'm sympathetic with Carnap's view of it. As to the latter, I thought it so Romantic as to be almost silly (it seemed as if he was ignorant of the fact humans have been manipulating nature for many thousands of year). I've also read his rhapsodic tributes of Hitler while at Freiberg. I doubt I'd have the patience to read anything longer.
Carnap's intelligence was limited, but I think profound. I think he was right in thinking the vagaries of Heidegger and others are, if anything, efforts of persons lacking any artistic talent to do what artists do-evoke insights into life and the universe and our place in it. The spiritual can play a similar role.
Frankly, I find it difficult to believe anyone would think it's the goal of philosophy to address such questions as "Why is there something rather than nothing?" If the question relates to the origin of the universe, it strikes me as unlikely that philosophers will answer it by thinking really hard. It's possible, though, that physics, cosmology and astronomy may provide insight.
If the question relates to something else, I'm not sure what it can mean. I doubt it's a question, in fact, or that there's an actual problem to be solved.
Philosophy has all too often been an assault upon everydayness. Originally in the ancient West, though, it was vitally concerned with the best way to live our lives. I think that's a worthy inquiry. I don't look to an unrepentant Nazi like Heidegger for guidance in that regard. — Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus
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