In the Phaedrus Socrates explains why he never wrote:
[E]very [written] speech rolls around everywhere, both among those who understand and among those for whom it is not fitting, and it does not know to whom it ought to speak and to whom not. (275d-e)
Plato's writing must be read in light of this problem. In other words, it must conceal itself from those for whom it is not fitting who read the book. The wily Plato does this by leading the reader to believe that he, the reader, has discovered some wondrous secret known only to those few who have ascended from the darkness of our ignorance to the light of truth. — Fooloso4
Speaking of which, do you know the etymology of the Hindu word ‘Upaniṣad’? It means ‘sitting up close’, referring to the relationship between guru and chela (disciple), which is taken to imply that the teaching of the Upaniṣads was transmitted directly from one to the other. I think that’s exactly the principle that is being expressed by this ‘concealment’ - lest these matters of high philosophical import be seized upon by the hoi pollloi, to create something awful (like modern Western ‘culture’. ;-) ) — Wayfarer
Or is the modern world a mess due to mis-reading philosophy? — ZhouBoTong
What do you think was behind Husserl’s contention that ‘Galileo was at once a discovering and concealing genius?’ What exactly was ‘concealed’ by Galileo’s new science? — Wayfarer
What was concealed from Galileo was the practical activities of the life-world making possible the abstractions of modern science. — Joshs
Galileo abstracts from the subjects as persons leading a personal life; he abstracts from all that is in any way spiritual, from all cultural properties which are attached to things in human praxis. The result of this abstraction is the things purely as bodies; but these are taken as concrete real objects, the totality of which makes up a world which becomes the subject matter of research. One can truly say that the idea of nature as a really self-enclosed world of bodies first emerges with Galileo. A consequence of this, along with mathematization, which was too quickly taken for granted, is [the idea of] a self-enclosed natural causality in which every occurrence is determined unequivocally and in advance. Clearly the way is thus prepared for dualism, which appears immediately afterward in Descartes ~ Husserl, Crisis of the European Sciences. — Joshs
But they are invaluable in telling you what you miss out when you do so. — Wayfarer
the subject is of the world and the world is of nature. The transparent veil erected by this wrongheaded thinking isn't really there; our senses are prisms more than prisons. — fdrake
And the phenomenological emphasis on the inadequacies of the natural attitude
How much of Crisis have you read? What source are you working from? — I like sushi
In the opening sections (Crisis §§ 1-7) Husserl makes a number of bold and interrelated claims:
1. There is a crisis of foundations in exact sciences
2. there is a crisis brought on by the positivity of the sciences
3. there is a crisis in the human sciences since they model themselves on the exact sciences
4. there is an explicit crisis in psychology, the supposed science of human spirit
5. There is a crisis in contemporary culture (‘a radical life-crisis of European humanity’)
6. There is a crisis in philosophy (traditionally understood as the discipline which addressed the crisis in the sciences and in life)
All these crises are interlinked and they have, according to Husserl, a common solution: transcendental phenomenology with its secure and grounded clarification of the concept of subjectivity offers a way out of these crises.
why when they're all harmonising we end up with a successful understanding of nature — fdrake
From your very brief comments, I don't think you're seeing the point at all. Husserl was very much working from the Kantian tradition. Are you familiar with his criticism of naturalism? He wanted to devise a 'science' in a completely different sense from what I think you probably understand by the word. — Wayfarer
The only time Husserl shows any hint of distain for science is in his analysis of psychology and how it has clung fastidiously to empirical science at the denial of the whole subjective experience of the human condition - it is a reasonable criticism of psychology and why, even today, there is s confliction between psychology and neuroscience, where psychology is being ‘reborn’ to some degree as the empirical sciences (in the form of neuroscience; or now coined ‘neuropsychology’) has pretty much supplanted the core of psychology and thus given psychology a stronger reason to differentiate itself from empiricism - this is quite obviously being shown in the current climate of ‘social sciences’ (not that it is much of a science and we’re finding rhetorical use of data as a large part of politics today on a scale previously unseen). — I like sushi
You always pretend that I don't understand the issue, whereas I just disagree with you very strongly. — fdrake
Husserl is referring to the use of mathematics in ‘science’. Mathematics made nature ‘factual’. From what I understand it was Husserl main interest to address the inevitable conflation of ‘truth’ and ‘fact’. — I like sushi
Husserl consistently criticizes empirical psychology (especially positivism and behaviorism) for its naturalism and objectivism...
The Vienna Circle advocated evaluating statements on the basis of whether they were meaningful (i.e. verifiable) or simply meaningless. In opposition to this general kind of scientific positivism, Husserl strongly opposed the view that the ‘natural conception’ of the world (understood as ‘naïve’) can be simply replaced by the ‘sophisticated’ scientific conception. For Husserl, entirely different attitudes are involved—and the scientific attitude isolated and formalized only what was measurable in the larger world of the subjective-relative.
Naturalism, positivism, and objectivism, are all forms of loss or distortion of subjectivity properly understood.
Husserl’s real target is the then-current positivist and neo-positivist interpretations of modern science (Crisis § 3), associated with Comte, Mach and the Vienna Circle (Husserl was familiar with Schlick and Carnap). The nineteenth century had been the great age of positivism, the doctrine that rejected all forms of speculation and restricted knowledge to be the contents of sensory experience. Auguste Comte (1798-1857), for instance, championed modern science against religious-mythic and metaphysical thought. For the positivists, science was objective, inductive, and experimental. Husserl regarded the positivists as holding an essentially mistaken conception of science due to their deliberate narrowing of the concept of reason: they denied the essential contribution of subjectivity and as a consequence had ‘decapitated’ philosophy (C 9; K 7).
So "it" can't be written or shouldn't be written? — ZhouBoTong
I am sure I am one of those for "whom it is not fitting", but what would be the danger in writing it? — ZhouBoTong
Why wouldn't he (god) or they (socrates, plato, etc) just write the truth — ZhouBoTong
As the vaguest of hints where to look ... I’d suggest you take into account the ‘intersubjective’ as being what binds the ‘prescienctific’ with the ‘scientific’ - Husserl’s deeply ambiguous rant about ‘thematic’ is something I don’t confess to be completely satisfied with and I’d need to look MUCH more deeply into his earlier works to guess the true context of his meaning. — I like sushi
There is no nature outside of an interpreted world — Joshs
Dinosaurs called, they want their time back. — fdrake
Socrates was a skeptic. Knowing that he and everyone else does not know the truth of such matters poses a threat. If the truth is not known then everything and nothing can fill the gap. So Plato provides a salutary teaching in place of the unknown and perhaps unknowable truth. But in order for this teaching to be accepted it must appear to be the truth itself.
In the dialogue Phaedo, which takes place when Socrates is about to die, the discussion turns to the fate of the soul. Although he is not afraid to die, some of his friends are fearful of death and so he attempts, as he says, to "charm away their childish fears". Someone objects that what he want is the truth. He offers various proofs and stories about the immortality of the soul, and while the careful reader is led to see that all of them fail, to this day some still believe that here we find the truth of the soul's immortality. But no one knows the truth of what happens to the soul at death or even what the soul is. This leads to what is called "misologic". Socrates says that there are some who fall in love with philosophy because they believe it will make them wise, but when it becomes clear to them that philosophy is unable to answer such questions they come to despise it for what they see as its failure. Socrates did not, so to speak, want philosophy to die with him. Those who are to philosophize must eschew childish stories but must not expect philosophy to do what it cannot do. — Fooloso4
There is no nature outside of an interpreted world
— Joshs
Dinosaurs called, they want their time back.
— fdrake — Joshs
"To describe the "world" phenomenologically means to show and determine the being of beings objectively present in the world conceptually and categorially. — Joshs
So the secret is that there is no secret? Regular people are just incapable of living with "I don't know"? — ZhouBoTong
Seems reasonable, but I think this idea is more explicitly stated in eastern philosophies (even the horrifically indirect Tao te Ching seems to be more explicit, "the way that can be told is not the true way"). — ZhouBoTong
Why are there such high levels of respect for Plato's vague hints? — ZhouBoTong
Is it just because it had a big impact on western culture? — ZhouBoTong
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