From the novice perspective, there were words (not many) I had to look up (like fideism), but that seemed fair. Otherwise you would be defining terms the whole time, so it seemed ok to expect a little effort from the reader. — ZhouBoTong
First, I like the way that hexagonal chart comes together, but is that supposed to represent all philosophy? Or just showing the correlation between a few of the major philosophies? Most "philosophies" I can think would fit into one of the categories, but say, 'philosophy of education' doesn't seem to fit anywhere...and I would assume we could think of a few more? — ZhouBoTong
You say that all that is needed to 'do' philosophy is personhood, and the potential topics are vast...does this mean that ANY serious thinking counts as philosophy? I guess that is reasonable, but seems a bit weak? (not sure if weak is the right word, vague? incomplete?...??) — ZhouBoTong
On a related note, you mention an important aspect of philosophical thought, "This reflexivity allows you to look upon your thoughts in the third person as though they were someone else's thoughts that you were judging, allowing you to assess the validity of the inferences you make, and so to do logic, to tease apart the relations between your various ideas." I have social problems that I think very much stem from me doing WAY too much of what you describe here. That being said, I have also found this reflexive analysis of our own thoughts to be so repulsive to many people that you can actually see pain on their faces when they are challenged to explain their thinking. Does this suggest a decent chunk of the population just has no interest in philosophy because they have very little interest in the "why's" of life? — ZhouBoTong
I did define fideism when I first used it in the book, back in the chapter Against Fideism. I do try to avoid making people look up unusual words, but I also assume that people are reading the whole thing from beginning to end. — Pfhorrest
Yeah, that is intended to be representative of all of philosophy, though of course many of those sections could be further subdivided, especially the "Knowledge & Reality" and "Justice & Morality" ones. I would put philosophy of education in the "Knowledge & Reality" section, as education is about the institutes of knowledge (and a later essay in the book is even titled On Academics, Education, and the Institutes of Knowledge). — Pfhorrest
Nah, I don't mean that any serious thinking counts as philosophy, just that the faculties needed to do philosophy are the same faculties that constitute personhood. Those same faculties can be applied to things other than philosophy, though all at least tangentially related to it in the ways elaborated on in this essay. — Pfhorrest
a decent chunk of the population has little interest in philosophy, but I don't think it's out of any kind of inherent disinterest, but more out of a feeling of overwhelm and helplessness. — Pfhorrest
I suspect that for a whole lot of people, the task of examining their own thoughts and feelings is like that. They take a peek in their own mind, see a huge mess that they can barely begin to even comprehend never mind to improve upon, get stressed and overwhelmed at the very prospect of beginning such an enormous project, and "NOPE!" out before even beginning it, because they have more important things to do like relaxing enough tonight to get to sleep early enough to be awake enough in the morning to do their job well enough to keep getting paid enough to keep paying their landlord to let them stay inside their home instead of getting kicked out onto the street.
For most of them, I imagine, even that chain of implications is too daunting to think about, and just "relax enough to get to sleep" is about all they've got the mental strength left to handle. This isn't their fault, but the fault of the harsh world we live in, and I believe that if people were less traumatized by life, far more of them would be inclined, and able, to do things like philosophy. — Pfhorrest
Hmm, I am unconvinced by that placement of philosophy of education. Why does education belong with physical science more than ethical sciences? Why does it belong with knowledge of reality more than acquisition of language? All six domains seem to include specific subjects that are taught and learned, I don't see what makes one section different in respect to education? — ZhouBoTong
Ok, I think I get this. We all have the ability to do philosophy, but that is not to say everyone uses this ability? There needs to be intention? Sorry if I take everything you say and try to put into dumber words...that is just how my brain confirms it is understanding...but I would guess it often leaves something out from the original message. — ZhouBoTong
Those are good points. I guess I was thinking of it as belonging there because that's the facet of education that I've focused on in my own essays, but yeah, there is learning to be done in every field. My first thought is that perhaps philosophy of education spans and intersects all of the fields, in the same way that history (which you'll note is not depicted on that chart) spans and intersects all fields. And really, much of education in any subject just is learning the history of that subject, getting caught up on what has already been studied so far, so those seem to fit together well. — Pfhorrest
If I am understanding this correctly, it sounds like philosophy is about analyzing the best way to analyze a particular field...well if education is about analyzing the best ways to teach and learn a particular field, there is at the very least a massive overlap. So while I am not suggesting that, education=philosophy, "philosophy of education" may be redundant when compared to "philosophy" - even the meaning "love of wisdom" sounds related to education. — ZhouBoTong
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