Would it be that you had anything of substance to offer as an 'issue thereby raised'. — StreetlightX
And the measure of the substance of an issue is...? — Pseudonym
... Unable to be decided in advance of the issue's being articulated and its implications laid out. — StreetlightX
Sufficient to whose satisfaction? — Pseudonym
Sufficient to the problem as articulated: the physiognomy of our problems, — StreetlightX
Any work of philosophy that qualifies as such furnishes its own criteria of assessment — StreetlightX
Any work of philosophy that qualifies as such furnishes its own criteria of assessment — StreetlightX
You've not specified what would qualify as success in any of these measures. — Pseudonym
if my comparison stands, shouldn't you allow SX what you seem to allow W. with regards to his language-games? — Πετροκότσυφας
Is this a fair comparison? — Πετροκότσυφας
That's not the only thing that W. seems to be doing though. He certainly criticises certain linguistic practices (philosophical theories). I think that Horwich, with whom I took you to agree, agrees with that: — Πετροκότσυφας
Philosophy is like cartography - each investigation reveals the aspect of human experience that it is interested in, and its utility is judged by it's being put to some use or another. This is a metaphilosophical position.
Metaphilosophy is an act of philosophy (as your second quote describes).
Therefore a metaphilosophical investigation is also like a map, drawing out those aspects of the field that the cartographer is interested in, and measured by its being put to some use or another.
Therefore it must be the case that the metaphilosophical theory that philosophy is like cartography and so similarly constrained, cannot itself be normative. — Pseudonym
There's simply no way anyone with any familiarity with Wittgenstein could make this kind of argument with a straight face: as if the metagame is here an act of interpretation. As if every act of philosophy - and hence language - doesn't carry its own metagame on its back in the mode of the practice of that self-same act of philosophy itself — StreetlightX
One way of approaching philosophy which has been resonating with me for some time now is as a cartography - the art of map making — StreetlightX
Tracing is a kind of reproduction, following an already established pattern; and using and making maps can also be a kind of calcomania. Whereas the true mapping is about making oneself a part of the rhizome, taking the risk of a becoming with the unknown outcome.maps can be maps of all sorts of different things: terrain, air pressure, vegetation density, and so on. None of these maps are more true than the other, and maps are useful to the extent that they are used for some purpose or another — StreetlightX
Cartography doesn't account for the fourth dimension that philosophy exists in. — Posty McPostface
But cartography isn't constrained to any particular number of dimensional degrees at all — StreetlightX
The map can only present itself as an image in two dimensions. — Posty McPostface
The point is that dimensionality is not only visual when it comes to maps (or anything else for that matter): a dimension simply designates a variable, and a visually 2 or 3D map can expresses variables far in excess of its visual dimensionality. I.e. the restriction you're trying to gesture toward is not a relevant one. — StreetlightX
Then take the saying, a picture is worth a thousand words. You have that as a common saying, even among ordinary folk.
But, what you're trying to do is reach a limit but never quite converge in my opinion. — Posty McPostface
This is whishy-washy. — StreetlightX
Changes in dimensionality don't result in increases of information available to the total state space — Posty McPostface
This isn't a question of information 'availability' as it is expressive power so you 'getting technical' is you talking about something else entirely and again, irrelevant to the discussion. — StreetlightX
It's not 'trying to capture philosophy' as if to represent or reconstitute it in some way or another - it is philosophy. I'm not convinced you've read and understood the OP. — StreetlightX
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