• Belter
    89
    Some of most famous philosophers were anti-philosophers. They argued that philosophy has not matter. Aristotle suggested that the core science is physics. Kant fits the same opinion. Metaphysics is not knowledge and it led to paradoxical conclusions. More, Wittgenstein claimed that it is better does not talk about metaphysics, due to only the science language reflects truly the reality. Finally, Peirce and Quine suggested that there is not frontier between philosophy and science. Both of them, worked consequently on the development of logic. So, my conclusion is that philosophy needs to differentiate of science, but it at present moment has not been made. Logic is the matter of naturalized philosophers. What do you think about?
  • I like sushi
    4.3k
    I view “philosophy” as being no more than an exploration of the limitations of linguistic understanding and what language means beyond the colloquial use, what it could be, and politically what it is to soon become.

    Note: within linguistics the term “language” has a broad meaning.
  • hks
    171
    I read Bertrand Russell's book and while I do not agree with his atheism and his dismissal of Aquinas I do agree with him that Philosophy must be separate from Science (which is an inductive/inference art taking data and observations and speculating about an overall rule related to it all) whereas Philosophy is pure human thought without any fallacies, prejudices, or contradictions.

    Nice summary that you gave regarding the major philosophers. Thank you.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    So, my conclusion is that philosophy needs to differentiate of science,Belter

    It's long been differentiated. Science and philosophy are mostly looking at the same things, just with different methodological approaches and slightly different focuses.

    Science is experiment-oriented, focused on theorizing and proposing hypotheses that we then attempt to falsify via empirical experiments (whereupon, in lieu of falsification, we consider the hypotheses provisionally verified, at least so long as the experiment was well-designed).

    Philosophy is not experiment-oriented. It's more focused on critically examining assumptions that we make, as well as trying to describe, account for and occasionally prescribe things about the world based on abstract structural relations.
  • Galuchat
    808
    If Science is empirical investigation which provides a reliable explanation, and Philosophy is logical investigation which provides a coherent concept, then Science and Philosophy can be complementary areas of study and/or practice.

    Relevant empirical facts should be presupposed in Philosophical problem-solving. And, the coherence which logical investigation imposes upon Scientific description should serve to clarify current knowledge and guide further empirical investigation.
  • Belter
    89
    Thank for the comments.

    an exploration of the limitations of linguistic understanding and what language means beyond the colloquial useI like sushi
    In my view, it is "semantic" matter, or linguistic one in general.

    pure human thought without any fallacies, prejudices, or contradictionshks
    Kant would not be agree that philosophy is contradictions free.

    focused on critically examining assumptions that we make, as well as trying to describe, account for and occasionally prescribe things about the world based on abstract structural relationsTerrapin Station
    Science works on assumptions (theoretical side). The prescribing role could be interesting. Some philosophical accounts have turned to psychological theories (e.g. the mental files theory of Perner, grounden in Frege`s semantic). But it is (theoretical) science after all.

    Philosophy is logical investigation which provides a coherent conceptGaluchat
    Again, it is science. Science is not just to make experiments, but to design the experiments, which is often the claimed matter of philosophy, contrarily to the common view of philosophers.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Science works on assumptions (theoretical side). The prescribing role could be interesting. Some philosophical accounts have turned to psychological theories (e.g. the mental files theory of Perner, grounden in Frege`s semantic). But it is (theoretical) science after all.Belter

    No idea what you're saying in any of that with respect to my comment.
  • BrianW
    999
    I came across this book in my library (long forgotten it was) and I thought to peruse a few pages for nostalgia's sake and then this hit me:

    2. For there can be no Religion more true or just, than to know the things that are; and to acknowledge thanks for all things, to him that made them, which thing I shall not cease continually to do.
    3. What then should a man do, O Father, to lead his life well, seeing there is nothing here true?
    4. Be Pious and Religious, O my Son, for he that doth so, is the best and highest Philosopher; and without Philosophy, it is impossible ever to attain to the height and exactness of Piety or Religion.
    5. But he that shall learn and study the things that are, and how they are ordered and governed, and by whom and for what cause, or to what end, will acknowledge thanks to the Workman as to a good Father, an excellent Nurse and a faithful Steward, and he that gives thanks shall be Pious or Religious, and he that is Religious shall know both where the truth is, and what it is, and learning that, he will be yet more and more Religious. [The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus]

    The underlined and in bold, seems to me, to refer to what philosophy is or what it attempts to achieve. I also came across the following definition (from an esoteric book whose name I can't remember), "Philosophy is the study of facts in their right relation."

    If the proposed provenance of The Divine Pymander is true, then, Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus may well be the first philosophic writer. That aside, it seems that even in ancient times the significance of philosophy was well defined including its influence on other fields of knowledge and information.
  • macrosoft
    674


    Check out Heidegger. I don't really think the high idea of philosophy is dead. He's not the only name, but I think you'll find him at the roots of this kind of not-giving-over to science.
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    Wittgenstein claimed that it is better does not talk about metaphysics, due to only the science language reflects truly the reality.Belter

    I think your post is based on a fundamental mistake about what philosophers, prior to modernity, thought that science was. Aristotle’s physics was not at all ‘scientific’ in modern terms, but was animated throughout by what we would now see as anthropomorphism. The Aristotelian conception of the Universe was that it was animated by purpose, and the crowning glory of the philosopher was the contemplation of the eternal ideas. Of course, Aristotelian physics was to be completely discredited by Galileo, in fact that was one of the milestones in the transition from medieval to modern science.

    As for Wittgenstein, according to Ray Monk, who wrote a well-regarded biography of him,

    His work is opposed, as he once put it, to “the spirit which informs the vast stream of European and American civilisation in which all of us stand.” Nearly 50 years after his death, we can see, more clearly than ever, that the feeling that he was swimming against the tide was justified. If we wanted a label to describe this tide, we might call it “scientism,” the view that every intelligible question has either a scientific solution or no solution at all. It is against this view that Wittgenstein set his face.

    Wittgenstein’s Forgotten Lessons

    And indeed many 20th century, especially in the English-speaking world, fell thoroughly under the thrall of science as universal arbiter of truth. But regrettably to those with such an attitude, the difference between science and philosophy may be impossible to explain, as it’s a philosophical distinction.
  • macrosoft
    674
    Here's a nice line or two, ripped from a larger context that I don't feel like typing out (wish it was online.)

    Perhaps [philosophy] cannot be determined as something else, but can be determined only from out of itself and as itself -- comparable with nothing else in terms of which it could be positively determined. In that case philosophy is something that stands on its own, something ultimate.
    ...
    We are always called upon by something as a whole. This 'as a whole' is the world...This is where we are driven in homesickness. Our very being is this restlessness. We have somehow always already departed toward this whole, or better, we are always already on the way to it. ...We ourselves are this underway, this transition, this 'neither the one nor the other.'
    ...
    Rather this urge to be at home everywhere is at the same time a seeking of those ways which open the right path for these questions. For this, in turn, we turn to the hammer of conceptual comprehension, we require those concepts which can open such a path. We are dealing with a conceptual comprehension and with concepts of a primordial kind. Metaphysical concepts remain eternally closed off from any inherently indifferent and noncommittal scientific acumen.
    ...
    Above all...we shall have never have comprehended these concepts and their conceptual rigor unless we have first been gripped by whatever they are supposed to comprehend. All such being gripped comes from and remains in an attunement.
    ...
    We ask anew: What is man? A transition, a direction, a storm sweeping over the planet, a recurrence or vexation for the gods? We do not know. Yet we have seen that in the essence of this mysterious being, philosophy happens.
    — Heidegger
    from The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics
  • Belter
    89
    Check out Heideggermacrosoft

    Heidegger made in my view metaphysics. He suggested that only Germanic people are humans due to they construct their existential project (consisting for Heidegger in killing Jews, due to they are calculators ...). More, he thought that irationalism is rational, so he was either Nazi or absurd.

    I think your post is based on a fundamental mistake about what philosophers, prior to modernity, thought that science wasWayfarer

    My point it that philosophy, as differentiate discipline, is not supported by several famous philosophers, including Aristotle, the only pre-modern in my list.

    Thanks for the responses.
  • macrosoft
    674

    I thought you'd dig that. Philosophy as ultimate. I think that starts to do it justice. If something could grasp it from the outside correctly, then it wouldn't be philosophy in the strong sense.
  • macrosoft
    674
    .Here's some Wittgenstein on Heidegger:

    I can very well think what Heidegger meant about Being and Angst. Man has the drive to run up against the boundaries of language. Think, for instance, of the astonishment that anything exists [das etwas existiert]. This astonishment cannot be expressed in the form of a question, and there is also no answer to it. All that we can say can only,a priori, be nonsense. Nevertheless we run up against the boundaries of language.

    Kierkegaard also saw this running-up and similarly pointed it out (as running up against the paradox). This running up against the boundaries of language is Ethics.

    I hold it certainly to be very important that one makes an end to all the chatter about ethics – whether there can be knowledge in ethics, whether there are values [ob es Werte gebe , whether the Good can be defined, etc.

    In ethics one always makes the attempt to say something which cannot concern and never concerns the essence of the matter. It is a priori certain: whatever one may give as a definition of the Good – it is always only a misunderstanding to suppose that the expression corresponds to what one actually means (Moore). But the tendency to run up against shows something. The holy Augustine already knew this when he said: “What, you scoundrel, you would speak no nonsense? Go ahead and speak nonsense – it doesn’t matter!"
    — W
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    6.41 The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is and happens as it does happen. In it there is no value—and if there were, it would be of no value.

    If there is a value which is of value, it must lie outside all happening and being-so. For all happening and being-so is accidental.

    What makes it non-accidental cannot lie in the world, for otherwise this would again be accidental.

    It must lie outside the world.

    6.42 Hence also there can be no ethical propositions. Propositions cannot express anything higher.

    6.421 It is clear that ethics cannot be expressed.

    Ethics is transcendental.

    (Ethics and aesthetics are one.)

    TLP

    It's also significant that this is the sequence of aphorisms that ends with the one that is often said to be reminiscent of Zen:

    My propositions are elucidatory in this way: he who understands me finally recognizes them as senseless, when he has climbed out through them, on them, over them. (He must, so to speak, throw away the ladder, after he has climbed up it.)

    cf:

    I have taught the Dhamma compared to a raft, for the purpose of crossing over, not for the purpose of holding onto.

    The Buddha

    //ps// also relevant is Wittgenstein Tolstoy and the Folly of Logical Positivism, Philosophy Now. Contains a heading, Philosophy is not a Science.
  • macrosoft
    674


    Nice points. I always loved the ending part of the TLP, never really grokked the complicated stuff leading up to it, maybe because I had read criticisms of those details.

    I think (as you imply) that he was attacking the idea that the highest things could be subject to a science. The 'unwritten' part of the TLP (passed over in conspicuous silence) was dearest to him, as I understand it. Only Wittgenstein could get away with talking 'nonsense' to Carnap.

    When I met Wittgenstein, I saw that Schlick's warnings were fully justified. But his behavior was not caused by any arrogance. In general, he was of a sympathetic temperament and very kind; but he was hypersensitive and easily irritated. Whatever he said was always interesting and stimulating and the way in which he expressed it was often fascinating. His point of view and his attitude toward people and problems, even theoretical problems, were much more similar to those of a creative artist than to those of a scientist; one might almost say, similar to those of a religious prophet or a seer. When he started to formulate his view on some specific problem, we often felt the internal struggle that occurred in him at that very moment, a struggle by which he tried to penetrate from darkness to light under an intense and painful strain, which was even visible on his most expressive face. When finally, sometimes after a prolonged arduous effort, his answers came forth, his statement stood before us like a newly created piece of art or a divine revelation. Not that he asserted his views dogmatically ... But the impression he made on us was as if insight came to him as through divine inspiration, so that we could not help feeling that any sober rational comment of analysis of it would be a profanation. — Carnap

    It's interesting how positivism etc. can function as a kind of primer for negative theology. In its pursuit of a certain kind of purity, it actually abandons the 'spiritual' in a way that gives it space.

    For Carnap, talk of God that claims to mean something non-empirical must refer to images and feelings and therefore have no meaning. This identification of meaning with the empirical has a kind of massive stupidity. What does Carnap himself mean by 'feeling' here? If reference to feeling has no meaning? As often happens, the flight from meaning within meaning collapses into absurdity.

    https://philarchive.org/archive/TEOv1

    I wonder how much we can agree on a few issues. What do you make of the idea that intelligibility itself is the fundamental mystery? an intelligible life-world? Also, to what degree would you limit the spiritual to the realm of feeling, concept, and sensation? In other ways, to a way of existing. Would you grant that the spiritual is maybe 'only' 'ordinary' life lived in a certain way? With no quasi-scientific claims to make but only reports of 'internal' experience? This 'internal' is tricky, because the higher thoughts and feelings have a universality in my view. All explicit formulations fail or have their blindspots, like every attempt to count the real numbers one by one.

    And of course the ladder is beautiful. One way I like to interpret it is earnest conceptual analysis that finally leads to an aporia. Again and again perhaps until one has a grasp on something like semantic holism --and the grasp of the mystery of this 'thing' we are, a space for interpretation. Such a space requires an 'existential' in which things are articulated and clarified non-instantaneously.

    I know you've never been that open to Nietzsche, but what of this portrait of Christ? So far no one has told me they are moved by it or find anything in it. But I think it captures a behindness-of-langauge that I relate to in high moments.

    This faith does not formulate itself—it simply lives, and so guards itself against formulae. To be sure, the accident of environment, of educational background gives prominence to concepts of a certain sort: in primitive Christianity one finds only concepts of a Judaeo-Semitic character (—that of eating and drinking at the last supper belongs to this category—an idea which, like everything else Jewish, has been badly mauled by the church). But let us be careful not to see in all this anything more than symbolical language, semantics[6] an opportunity to speak in parables. It is only on the theory that no word is to be taken literally that this anti-realist is able to speak at all. Set down among Hindus he would have made use of the concepts of Sankhya,[7] and among Chinese he would have employed those of Lao-tse[8]—and in neither case would it have made any difference to him.—With a little freedom in the use of words, one might actually call Jesus a “free spirit”[9]—he cares nothing for what is established: the word killeth,[10] whatever is established killeth. The idea of “life” as an experience, as he alone conceives it, stands opposed to his mind to every sort of word, formula, law, belief and dogma. He speaks only of inner things: “life” or “truth” or “light” is his word for the innermost—in his sight everything else, the whole of reality, all nature, even language, has significance only as sign, as allegory.—Here it is of paramount importance to be led into no error by the temptations lying in Christian, or rather ecclesiastical prejudices: such a symbolism par excellence stands outside all religion, all notions of worship, all history, all natural science, all worldly experience, all knowledge, all politics, all psychology, all books, all art—his “wisdom” is precisely a pure ignorance[11] of all such things. — N

    I think climbing the ladder of concept allows one to see something about the relationship between concepts and life. In this case the 'pure' ignorance would be a learned ignorance.
    We see the 'destructive' or critical mind work through positive theologies one by one, climaxing in a negative theology of 'life' or 'light.'
  • macrosoft
    674
    I have taught the Dhamma compared to a raft, for the purpose of crossing over, not for the purpose of holding onto.

    This is lovely too. The idea for me is that words are a ladder to a state beyond words, or a state beyond any particular words. The 'point' of the particular words is that they can teach us the unimportance of the particular words used to get this point. It's like Kafa's Castle. For each man a door just for him, the ladder of his own strange and crooked life. And the particular words are therefore tangled up with the petty self that insists on its conceptual idols--usually in an attempt to control others, which reduces the spiritual to the political just as others would reduce it to science (which may really just be politics, a claim on the Real to ground political claims.)This is not to say that politics or science becomes wrong but only to open the possibility that we maintain in ourselves a sense of something higher than either (a mode of being that comes and goes, open to sinners and fools in other moments) . Those who reject that something can be higher than either already have their sacred on hand, whichever one they've picked.

    *This is just the way I'm currently seeing things. I don't want to sound dogmatic. I just want to get it out in a clear way.
  • Pattern-chaser
    1.8k
    I view “philosophy” as being no more than an exploration of the limitations of linguistic understanding and what language means beyond the colloquial use, what it could be, and politically what it is to soon become.I like sushi

    Philosophy is pure human thought without any fallacies, prejudices, or contradictions.hks

    I also came across the following definition (from an esoteric book whose name I can't remember), "Philosophy is the study of facts in their right relation."BrianW

    From the Wiktionary: philosophy n.
    • The love of wisdom.
    • An academic discipline that seeks truth through reasoning rather than empiricism. Philosophy is often divided into five major branches: logic, metaphysics, epistemology, ethics and aesthetics.
    • A comprehensive system of belief.
    • A view or outlook regarding fundamental principles underlying some domain.
    • A general principle (usually moral).
    • (archaic) A broader branch of (non-applied) science.

    It seems "philosophy" is different things to different people. For me, it's just thinking about more or less anything. Thinking about thinking is probably the most fun, but thinking can address anything, and so philosophy can too.

    But that's not to say that all thinking is philosophy. Thinking about whether I'll go to the pub quiz on Monday, or fixing the shed roof before winter; those aren't philosophy. But I think any kind of serious, considered, thought is probably philosophy. IMO, of course. :smile:
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    What do you make of the idea that intelligibility itself is the fundamental mystery?macrosoft

    It's worth noticing that 'intelligibility' has a very different meaning in what we might call classical philosophy than it has in the modern world. The point about 'intelligible truths' was that they were immediate and apodictic in a way that facts about the world could never be. For the grand tradition, this was testimony that they belonged to a higher or deeper or more general level of truth, than did facts about the world. (And notice the resonances between that and 6.41 above.)

    But, the idea of intelligibility is intimately linked to the theory of ideas. Again, the idea or form of something was grasped directly in a way that facts-about-the-world could never be.

    Aristotle, in De Anima, argued that thinking in general (which includes knowledge as one kind of thinking) cannot be a property of a body; it cannot, as he put it, 'be blended with a body'. This is because in thinking, the intelligible object or form is present in the intellect, and thinking itself is the identification of the intellect with this intelligible. Among other things, this means that you could not think if materialism is true… . Thinking is not something that is, in principle, like sensing or perceiving; this is because thinking is a universalising activity. This is what this means: when you think, you see - mentally see - a form which could not, in principle, be identical with a particular - including a particular neurological element, a circuit, or a state of a circuit, or a synapse, and so on. This is so because the object of thinking is universal, or the mind is operating universally.

    ….the fact that in thinking, your mind is identical with the form that it thinks, means (for Aristotle and for all Platonists) that since the form 'thought' is detached from matter, 'mind' is immaterial too.
    — Lloyd Gerson


    Lloyd Gerson, Platonism vs Naturalism, around 39:00

    Consider that when you think about triangularity, as you might when proving a geometrical theorem, it is necessarily perfect triangularity that you are contemplating, not some mere approximation of it. Triangularity as your intellect grasps it is entirely determinate or exact; for example, what you grasp is the notion of a closed plane figure with three perfectly straight sides, rather than that of something which may or may not have straight sides or which may or may not be closed. Of course, your mental image of a triangle might not be exact, but rather indeterminate and fuzzy. But to grasp something with the intellect is not the same as to form a mental image of it. For any mental image of a triangle is necessarily going to be of an isosceles triangle specifically, or of a scalene one, or an equilateral one; but the concept of triangularity that your intellect grasps applies to all triangles alike. Any mental image of a triangle is going to have certain features, such as a particular color, that are no part of the concept of triangularity in general. A mental image is something private and subjective, while the concept of triangularity is objective and grasped by many minds at once.

    Feser, Some Brief Arguments for Dualism

    I think this is why universals are fundamental to the notion of 'intelligibility'. Get rid of universals, as nominalism did in the late medieval period, and intelligibility goes with it, with considerable consequences.

    Also, to what degree would you limit the spiritual to the realm of feeling, concept, and sensation?macrosoft

    Not so much, in my book. But there's no representational mode that conveys it, other than the symbolic (which the N. quote actually alludes to). But the domain of 'being itself', if I may coin a phase, which is the domain of 'the spiritual', is the domain of 'realised being' - something which is implicit in all Eastern religions, and hardly comprehended in Western.

    The problem, again, is that the cultural matrix in which our dialogue is conducted has no convention within which such a question can even be meaningfully discussed. That's why it must always be depicted in terms of 'poetry and religion' - vague, nebulous, ennobling perhaps, but in no way real. We have a collective construct of what is real, built around science, but science itself is also a construct, at least when it comes to being considered a world-view.
  • macrosoft
    674
    The point about 'intelligible truths' was that they were immediate and apodictic in a way that facts about the world could never be.Wayfarer

    For me though the issue isn't about certainty but about intelligibility itself, the very existence of meaning or concept. For me epistemology is secondary to this mystery, since epistemology presupposes its own intelligibility. So does the solipsist, the radical skeptic. They mean something. In 'I think therefore I am' we have the link between concept and existence, but Descartes was too interested in a quasi-theological epistemological grounding of truth to be examine what makes truth possible --concept, meaning, intelligibility.

    But, the idea of intelligibility is intimately linked to the theory of ideas. Again, the idea or form of something was grasped directly in a way that facts-about-the-world could never be.Wayfarer

    As I grasp the matter, the world is grasped by means of the forms or concepts. Facts are made of concepts.

    I think this is why universals are fundamental to the notion of 'intelligibility'. Get rid of universals, as nominalism did in the late medieval period, and intelligibility goes with it, with considerable consequences.Wayfarer

    I think what we already have (more or less explicitly) is a holism with respect to universals. Meaning is not assembled from a set of distinct universals. Instead distinct universals are plucked imperfectly from a living meaning which is continuous.

    As far as consequences go, I agree. The denial of meaning is surprisingly common. But I'd say let's avoid this implicit shift into politics. Or by all means contextualize your thought in those terms. But for me (to contextualize my position) the shift into politics ultimately reduces philosophy to culture-war.

    The problem, again, is that the cultural matrix in which our dialogue is conducted has no convention within which such a question can even be meaningfully discussed. That's why it must always be depicted in terms of 'poetry and religion' - vague, nebulous, ennobling perhaps, but in no way real. We have a collective construct of what is real, built around science, but science itself is also a construct, at least when it comes to being considered a world-view.Wayfarer

    Much of philosophy is indeed concerned with meaning (universals) though. Some philosophers are indeed 'scientistic.' Others (like the 2 seemingly most famous philosophers of the 20th century) were distinctly anti-scientistic, with Heidegger being the variable boogey-man, and not at all only because of his political stupidities. Wittgenstein has an ambiguous status, given his later tendency to avoid exact theses.

    Beyond philosophy, I agree there are prominent intellectuals who consign the merely 'subjective' to the real of illusion. IMV they really don't speak to or for most people. They are the intellectual heroes of neckbeard theology -- a naive collapse of one handy way of talking among others into the one way of talking that gets it right. I won't attribute this view to you, but I did read some of the links in your profile. And I sometimes get the impression that what some culture warriors desire is to simply replace one positive theology (of dead junk) with another. In short, what is desire is the replacement with one authoritative science of the truly real with another. Again, I'm not saying this is your view.

    Let's give this position its due. Science has prestige as far as I can tell because it appeals to the vulgar or universal desires. Our animal selves are dazzled by the utility of prediction and control. But there is also a desire in humans to transcend the merely human. IMV, this is how a base instrumentalism gets super-charged with metaphysical significance. The real is identified with public power. Bacon said knowledge was power. But this is best read as 'power is knowledge.' The question of power, however, seems inseparable from the question of value. That which is powerful is that which gives us what we want. As long as we want animal comforts and fun gadgets more than 'inner' illumination, there will be a temptation to read scientific discourse as metaphysical truth. So the position that opposes science-as-metaphysics can be understood to oppose a certain shallowness in the contemporary lifestyle.

    One of the questions you didn't address is whether such shallowness can be said to be 'cured' in terms of conceptually mediated feeling. Another question might be whether the individual can/should seek salvation in non-political terms, accepting the shallowness of the world as a sort of cocoon from which individuals emerge if they are sufficiently passionate about higher things, 'gripped' by an attunement.
    For me the 'spiritual' issue is indeed higher than any kind of culture war or the speaking of what ought to be. 'God' exists within 'sinful' morality. From this perspective, positive theologies are a denial of the incarnation. That's where the cleansing flame of nihilism comes in as a dark night of the soul. We might say (symbolically) that this dark night of the soul is a suffering of the crucifixion, a realization that all our hopes and intuitions of the divine are nailed to a dying body in an unjust world that cannot be rationally grounded. This world in which we feel the divine in the context of mortality and injustice is a brute fact.

    (I don't think we agree on all of this. I would like it if you would engage with some of the other points in my original post --if you feel like it, of course.)
  • HiSpex
    4
    Philosophy is much concern 4 truth than fact but science is more concern 4 fact than truth. Philosophy search 4 truth and after find it see fact inside and move on to next problem. Science not ok with truth without fact. Science want to know more about fact. In end, both give truth and fact which go together.
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    For me though the issue isn't about certainty but about intelligibility itself, the very existence of meaning or conceptmacrosoft

    The point I’m trying to articulate is a very general one. As I said, I think ‘intelligibility’ had a specific meaning, and a different meaning, in pre-modern philosophy. The fact that the meaning has shifted, actually means that we no longer have the same sense of what 'intelligible' means. And I don't think that the reality of universals is at all accepted in modern philosophy generally - about the place you'll find it, is in neo-Thomism, as they have kept it alive (which I have learned from reading a smattering of neo-thomist philosophy from the likes of Gilson, Maritain and Feser.)

    One of the questions you didn't address is whether such shallowness can be said to be 'cured' in terms of conceptually mediated feeling.macrosoft

    Are you familiar with the expression 'cartesian anxiety'?

    Cartesian anxiety refers to the notion that, since René Descartes posited his influential form of body-mind dualism, Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. The term is named after Descartes because of his well-known emphasis on "mind" as different from "body", "self" as different from "other".

    Richard J. Bernstein coined the term in his 1983 book Beyond Objectivism and Relativism: Science, Hermeneutics, and Praxis.

    So, a 'cure' for that, involves coming to some understanding of how modernity is itself a kind of mindset or state of being, and understanding the cultural dynamics that drive it. That is the sense in which my orientation is basically counter-cultural. You actually have to jail-break yourself out of the Western mindset which is no easy task, if you're living in it, as we all are.

    The question of power, however, seems inseparable from the question of value. That which is powerful is that which gives us what we want. As long as we want animal comforts and fun gadgets more than 'inner' illumination, there will be a temptation to read scientific discourse as metaphysical truth. So the position that opposes science-as-metaphysics can be understood to oppose a certain shallowness in the contemporary lifestyle.macrosoft

    :up:

    I did read some of the links in your profile. And I sometimes get the impression that what some culture warriors desire is to simply replace one positive theology (of dead junk) with another.macrosoft

    The narrative of those references revolves around the 'new atheism' (which is already old), but which is what got me interested in forums 10 years ago - 2 and 3 are critical reviews of Dawkins and Dennett; 4 and 5 are about Nagel's book, Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False. So, those links address a coherent theme, which is the attack on religion (broadly conceived) by neo-darwinian materialism, of which Dawkins and Dennett are representatives; and Nagels' book, which is a counter-argument against the same, not from the perspective of a religious apologist, but from a secular academic.

    My 'meta-narrative' is about how the secular-scientific attitude became so entrenched in Western culture. So I don't see it in terms of 'replacing one theology with another' but trying to understand the underlying dynamics and how they have unfolded over history. (Actually had I had any kind of career in academia, it would likely have been more suited to history than philosophy per se.)

    Would you grant that the spiritual is maybe 'only' 'ordinary' life lived in a certain way? With no quasi-scientific claims to make but only reports of 'internal' experience? This 'internal' is tricky, because the higher thoughts and feelings have a universality in my view. All explicit formulations fail or have their blind-spots, like every attempt to count the real numbers one by one.macrosoft

    There are some domains of discourse in which that is true - for example, Soto Zen, which is very much oriented around how the 'ordinary mind' is itself extraordinary ('Chop wood! Draw water! How marvellous! How mysterious!'. 'When hungry I eat, when tired I sleep, fools will laugh at me, but the wise will understand.') But the point is, that school of Zen was itself the culmination of more than a thousand years of dialectic, starting with the Buddha, and then unfolding through the subsequent centuries, millenia even, to find expression in the writings of Dogen (who some have compared to Heidegger.) And there's an awful lot of implicit depth in that tradition, if you actually encounter it; their 'ordinary' is far from the 'ordinary' of the 'ordinary wordling'.

    But overall, my 'perennialist' leanings are such that I really do think there's an underlying 'topography of the sacred'. Of course the 'parable of the blind men and the elephant' always bedevils such an analysis, but this is the general drift (courtesy Ken Wilber):

    great-chain.gif

    E. F. Schumacher laid it out.
  • macrosoft
    674
    The fact that the meaning has shifted, actually means that we no longer have the same sense of what 'intelligible' means. And I don't think that the reality of universals is at all accepted in modern philosophy generally - about the place you'll find it, is in neo-Thomism, as they have kept it alive (which I have learned from reading a smattering of neo-thomist philosophy from the likes of Gilson, Maritain and Feser.)Wayfarer

    I agree that the theory of universals is not accepted. I'm saying that it has been replaced by the problem of meaning. And I find it plausible that we don't have the same notion of intelligibility. But how would we know? If you, for instance, have access to this notion, then it's not really lost. Personally I think semantic holism is far more plausible.

    Cartesian anxiety refers to the notion that, since René Descartes posited his influential form of body-mind dualism, Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. The term is named after Descartes because of his well-known emphasis on "mind" as different from "body", "self" as different from "other".

    This is one the big themes in Heidegger. Descartes encouraged us to read our own existence as a present-to-hand object, a kind of rock with consciousness stapled to it somehow. Deconstruction AFAK started with Heidegger's dismantling of this encrusted taken-for-granted ontology that obscures the phenomenon of being-in-the-world-with-others. We are always already in the world with others in a pre-theoretical way. This being-in-the-world-with-others is why solipsists immediately want to tell folks about their discovery. This is why people can argue about which theory of truth is true without having settled on a theory of truth. The obsession with epistemology obscures the paucity of meaning in the very terms we argue about. Whether something exists obscures what we even mean by 'exist.' IMV, hermeneutical phenomenology was exactly the kind of opening philosophy was right to take. Whether one likes Heidegger, his general approach seems to be neither science nor literature and aim at something like wisdom.

    So, a 'cure' for that, involves coming to some understanding of how modernity is itself a kind of mindset or state of being, and understanding the cultural dynamics that drive it. That is the sense in which my orientation is basically counter-cultural. You actually have to jail-break yourself out of the Western mindset which is no easy task, if you're living in it, as we all are.Wayfarer

    I very much agree on this goal of a 'jailbreak.' I'd say that individuals vary widely in terms of how much they are caught up in it. Of course one starts in the common consciousness more or less. Then one spends a lifetime trying to get brighter and freer.

    My 'meta-narrative' is about how the secular-scientific attitude became so entrenched in Western culture. So I don't see it in terms of 'replacing one theology with another' but trying to understand the underlying dynamics and how they have unfolded over history. (Actually had I had any kind of career in academia, it would likely have been more suited to history than philosophy per se.)Wayfarer

    Thank you. That is clarifying. I also find that fascinating. One theory is that Plato himself got that in motion. Scientism offers a debased leading-out-of-the-cave as its gimmick. The human world (maybe consciousness itself) is an illusion. The truth is dead stuff and randomness. While there are some who publicly tout these ideas, I don't think anyone can live by them. Dawkins is a neckbeard's theologian.
    We might talk about the schism between artificial theories and life as it is lived.

    There are some domains of discourse in which that is true - for example, Soto Zen, which is very much oriented around how the 'ordinary mind' is itself extraordinary ('Chop wood! Draw water! How marvellous! How mysterious!'. 'When hungry I eat, when tired I sleep, fools will laugh at me, but the wise will understand.') But the point is, that school of Zen was itself the culmination of more than a thousand years of dialectic, starting with the Buddha, and then unfolding through the subsequent centuries, millenia even, to find expression in the writings of Dogen (who some have compared to Heidegger.) And there's an awful lot of implicit depth in that tradition, if you actually encounter it; their 'ordinary' is far from the 'ordinary' of the 'ordinary wordling'.

    But overall, my 'perennialist' leanings are such that I really do think there's an underlying 'topography of the sacred'. Of course the 'parable of the blind men and the elephant' always bedevils such an analysis, but this is the general drift (courtesy Ken Wilber):
    Wayfarer

    Thanks. I underlined the part that echoes the notion of learned ignorance. I speculate that Pyrrho and other skeptics have been caricatured. For me there is the notion of getting behind language. As I understand it, this comes from a mastery of concepts, not their neglect. It's the apotheosis of trying to trap the real in finite expressions. You mention the 'thousands of years of dialectic' this required, which is also an extremely Hegelian idea. Following this logic, the spiritual possibilities for individuals are caught up in time. On the other hand, I think existence is justified in terms of feeling. Presumably our affective structure is sufficiently constant for the same enjoyment of the 'absolute' through varying conceptual lenses over the centuries. Or we might say that the 'absolute' takes different forms, where feeling is grasped in better and better concepts to hold it fast. Or just to light up the concept system with passion. The 'absolute' or 'God' could just be a word that gets used again and again for related but somewhat different states of mind (peak experiences). I find this last one most plausible.

    The topology of the sacred I find most plausible is in terms of primordial images. These images just keep on working, despite our time-bound conceptualizations. I do like Wilbur's hierarchy, and I was pretty impressed once by his Brief History of Everything. I should check it out again after all these years. I know that he mentioned Hegel (before I had read any Hegel), and I would probably like his holons more now that I'm more of a holist. (Some might say A-holist.)
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    And I find it plausible that we don't have the same notion of intelligibility. But how would we know? If you, for instance, have access to this notion, then it's not really lostmacrosoft

    It could be demonstrated with reference to the texts - that’s what I tried to do with those two quotes from Gerson and Feser. I’ve read some books on the idea, but it’s hard to explain.

    There’s book by a professor of English at Uni of Chicago called ‘Ideas have consequences’, Richard Weaver. It is exactly about the dissolution of a real metaphysics and its pernicious consequences for Western culture. (Unfortunately, it is a book that is now mainly associated with American conservatism. But then I also agree with much of the analysis in Horkheimer’s Eclipse of Reason, which is archetypal New Left, so I hope that balances it up a bit.)

    But in any case, the really key point, the crucial fact, is the nature of the reality of ideas. They’re not real because they’re generated by some piece of meat that grew in the Petri dish of evolution; they’re real whether anyone knows them or not.

    This is one of the big themes in Heidegger....macrosoft

    Husserl’s critique of Descartes in Crisis of the European Sciences anticipated that. In any case, it is true - it is the consequence of treating ‘res cogitans’ as a ‘that’ (whereas in reality it is always unknown.)

    Have you heard about the purported relationship between Pyrrho of Elis and Buddhism? Also see Katja Vogt.

    I agree Hegel’s conception of dialectic is profound.
  • Valentinus
    1.6k

    Thanks for the reference to E. F. Schumacher's A Guide for the Perplexed. I had not known about it and will give it a read.

    The "'topography of the sacred' along with the diagram reminds me a lot of Plotinus mapping out forms of experiences. It also reminds me of some of the Gnostic "maps" that Plotinus opposed.

    On the matter of " Cartesian anxiety", it may be worth considering that Spinoza wrote his Ethics with the intent of belaying perplexity of this kind. Not just in saying that all substances (including our minds) are in God but by noting that men can only see will and intent as a means to an end whereas it is very unlikely that God suffers the same limitation. Along the same lines, Spinoza distinguishes looking for causes of finite things as necessarily looking for something outside of the caused thing where infinite things cause themselves.

    In this register, Descartes would have to be infinite to be the source of verification he claims he is.
  • hks
    171
    Can you live without a dictionary ??
  • Valentinus
    1.6k

    Your rhetorical question is a meaningless taunt.
  • Wayfarer
    20.6k
    I studied the Ethics at undergrad level and in fact even wrote an essay on it, but I confess that I still find Spinoza very hard to understand. I recently read an essay about his relationship to Jewish mysticism, such as Moses Maimonides. That helped in a way. I think his 'intellectual love of God' is very much drawn from such sources.

    I think also that the meaning of ‘substance’ is very different in Spinoza than what we take it to mean currently, in that it also has a sense of ‘subject’ or perhaps ‘being’; it’s not something objective in the way we would nowadays expect.

    The "'topography of the sacred' along with the diagram reminds me a lot of Plotinus mapping out forms of experiences.Valentinus

    Neo-platonism is very much concerned with that. So too were the gnostics, although as you say, Plotinus was critical of them, but from our perspective both sides might seem to have much more in common than either of them do with us today.

    It is the loss of a sense of there being a 'vertical dimension' that I take to be one of the cardinal signposts of modernity. Post Descartes' 'new science', it was felt that literally everything knowable should be able to be represented through algebraic geometry. One of the pernicious consequences of his ‘objectification’ of ‘res cogitans’ was precisely to transform it into a kind of ghost (hence the ‘ghost in the machine’ criticism in Gilbert Ryle’s Concept of Mind, which is viewed as one of the most influential books in modern philosophy of mind.)

    Regarding Schumacher’s book - I don’t know if I could hand-on-heart recommend it as a book, it’s more that the abstract of it makes a very clear point about ontology and the shortcomings of scientific materialism. But it’s significant that Schumacher ultimately converted (dragged kicking and screaming, some say - see here) to Catholicism, because really what that book does is recapitulate in very summary form the idea of an hierarchy of being, which is, again, what has largely dropped out of modern philosophical discourse.
  • macrosoft
    674
    It could be demonstrated with reference to the texts - that’s what I tried to do with those two quotes from Gerson and Feser. I’ve read some books on the idea, but it’s hard to explain.Wayfarer

    Not to be difficult, but anything less than direct experience would seem to be a talking about what is finally not understood, a difference as difference without further specification.

    But in any case, the really key point, the crucial fact, is the nature of the reality of ideas. They’re not real because they’re generated by some piece of meat that grew in the Petri dish of evolution; they’re real whether anyone knows them or not.Wayfarer

    This is a bold thesis, a theological thesis even, assuming these ideas are of central significance. For me this is hard to make sense of in the same way as mathematical platonism is hard to make sense of. We have access to 'intersubjectivity' (a non-neutral word), which provides the phenomenon that might be interpreted in terms of a faculty that 'sees' an otherwise invisible realm. For me, though, the phenomenon in its being is the 'reality' of the situation. Attaching additional concepts to this direct experience of the intuitions (they exists 'outside' us) would just be contexualizing the experience among other experiences. This is not to say that experience must be interpreted in terms of a subject having experience. The word 'experience' points at what is given, that which we try to describe and understand.
    Or which it itself (experience) tries to understand as an embodied, self-clarifying field of meaning.

    Husserl’s critique of Descartes in Crisis of the European Sciences anticipated that. In any case, it is true - it is the consequence of treating ‘res cogitans’ as a ‘that’ (whereas in reality it is always unknown.)Wayfarer

    I take your point about 'unknown,' but maybe 'elusive' is better? Something always unknown is arguably not worth troubling ourselves about. The 'pure witness' gets some of what's important. Existence is its there. But the pure witness (subject as bare possibility of experience) is outside of time, and this implicitly freezes being out of time, since such a subject must be being itself. Or being in the sense of that which lights up or discloses or gives beings. I'd say an immanently historical stream of meaningful experience that experiences itself as experience is not too far from the situation. We might also talk of a 'thrown open space' that 'worlds.' Hegel seemed to be pointing at this in a lingo that was either insufficiently dynamic (crystalline as in shard of conceptual glass) or just too hard to understand (is the concrete concept continuous?).

    Have you heard about the purported relationship between Pyrrho of Elis and Buddhism?Wayfarer

    No, but that is what I had in mind. I suspect that some dialectical/argumentative/epistemological thinkers had breakthroughs and got 'behind' language, 'behind' an objectifying grasp of existence. To speak of an elusive becoming at the ground of beings is not enough, since those in the objectifying mode must take this becoming and this ground as one more being and not as the thrown open space for beings. IMV, Wittgenstein's ability to be shocked that the world exists is a becoming-aware of this thrown-open-space. Any purported ground of this space must be yet another object within this space and not its ground. That's why I suggested that intelligibility itself (the space of meaning) was the great mystery. All other explorations, questionings, and explanations presuppose this space. Man is the biological foundation of this space and simultaneously this space itself in which he roams for a ground apart from himself., his own mortal abyss-for-ground. Cue the organ music.
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