First question - is there a group or a forum for guys like me, amateurs that want to build knowledge together? — Ansiktsburk
Are there any more effective group discussion platforms? Where a thread do not wander away into oblivion and some conclusions are made. Maybe an active moderator? — Ansiktsburk
But even more I would love to explore the world of philosophy together with people and not against people, and without prestige. I am at the end of a rather succesful career (in a much more boring discipline than philosophy) and I have no need to prove Wit or IQ. I simply want to learn togeter with others. Is that possible here? — Ansiktsburk
But even more I would love to explore the world of philosophy together with people and not against people, and without prestige. I am at the end of a rather succesful career (in a much more boring discipline than philosophy) and I have no need to prove Wit or IQ. I simply want to learn togeter with others. Is that possible here? — Ansiktsburk
I dont want to handle stuff in my leisure time, — Ansiktsburk
I simply want to learn together with others. Is that possible here? — Ansiktsburk
but want to know more about Sartre and discuss it with peers at the same level. But I have a hard time finding that. And sadly, not here. — Ansiktsburk
There are biggish background disagreements (e.g., religious faith) that can end discussion, — Srap Tasmaner
The ”philosophy now forum” is a little better, but there people are angry all the time and make politics of everything. — Ansiktsburk
Spinoza isn't a "serious thinker"? or Leibniz? or Hume? Kant? Hegel? Kierkegaard? Feuerbach? Nietzsche? Peirce? Wittgenstein? Buber? Levinas? Jaspers? et al ... Even Marx acknowledges the effectiveness of "the opium of the masses" helping the oppressed barely survive "in the midst of chaos".This is a deal breaker for me. I cannot have a serious conversation with a person who has an invisible, celestial friend. The mindset is so incredibly divorced from what is actually going on in reality. We are barely surviving in the midst of chaos. Serious thinkers don't have time to ponder the abstractions of God. — JerseyFlight
And why should anyone assume "reality" is g/G-less on your say-so (without even addressing such an assumption as an aporia) just in order to have a "serious" (philosophical) conversation with you? — 180 Proof
it’s still the least bad I’ve found on the internet. — Pfhorrest
And why should anyone assume "reality" is g/G-less on your say-so (without even addressing such an assumption as an aporia) just in order to have a "serious" (philosophical) conversation with you? — 180 Proof
I'm jealous, the early internet seemed like a pretty cool place. — darthbarracuda
How could it not be? Either one's 'ontological commitments' include or exclude an 'ultimate intentional agency' - explicitly as g/G or implicitly as weak anthropic / contra-mediocrity / sufficient reason principle - which conditions, or qualifies, any discursive critique or praxis. Even if we restrict discussion to 'avowed nonbelievers', providential assumptions are likely still operative and function as unexamined inconsistencies effectively blocking, or sabotaging, all but the shallowest critique. The g/G topic must be gotten out of the way first, at least stipulatively for the sake of discussion, I think, in order to proceed seriously even with those who claim to be "atheists" or "agnostics" (but who are also e.g. anti-realists, idealists, panpsychists, hegelian marxists, et al - even "materialists" who nonetheless more-than-speculatively entertain the "Simulation Hypothesis", etc). Without bracketting g/G (in husserlian fashion) or dialectically ripping-out analoguous assumptions root & branch (i.e. neutralizing - neutering - them), only idle reflections & polemical apologetics (sophistry) seem possible, or likely.Though this does draw my curiosity, are you claiming that the topic of God is of utmost importance? — JerseyFlight
Just saying. — Malcolm Lett
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