Perhaps - thus he [Socrates] should have asked himself - what is not intelligible to me is not necessarily unintelligent? Perhaps there is a realm of wisdom from which the logician is exiled? — Friedrich Nietzsche
Descartes had no insight apart from quibbling about evil demons and incoherent skepticism. He was purely concerned with the fictive as the source of his philosophy instead of the real. — Agustino
But the truth is intelligibility is only useful when it can predict consequences. — Agustino
Perhaps - thus he [Socrates] should have asked himself - what is not intelligible to me is not necessarily unintelligent? Perhaps there is a realm of wisdom from which the logician is exiled?
— Friedrich Nietzsche
WikipediaThe invention of Cartesian coordinates in the 17th century by René Descartes (Latinized name: Cartesius) revolutionized mathematics by providing the first systematic link between Euclidean geometry and algebra
Yeah, thanks for lecturing me on Nietzsche, I surely needed that :-}Nietzsche disagreed with Plato/Socratic emphasis on the Apollonian, he thought we are comprised of both Apollonian and Dionysian forces, each forming the limit of the other and each necessarily present and equal in a healthy person. — Cavacava
Descartes is known for his coordinate system regardless of his other philosophical achievements. — Cavacava
How about you guys stop bothering with mere examples and discuss what this thread is about? This thread isn't about Descartes, nor about his achievements or lack thereof. This thread is about discussing the idea that "the unintelligible is not necessarily unintelligent" and what consequences this idea has for philosophy.Yeah, but apart from mathematics, and laying the foundation for science, and setting out the foundations of knowledge, what did Descartes ever do for us? — unenlightened
When else is intelligibility useful?Really? I can see no justification for such a conclusion whatsoever. — Barry Etheridge
This thread is about discussing the idea that "the unintelligible is not necessarily unintelligent" and what consequences this idea has for philosophy. — Agustino
When else is intelligibility useful? — Agustino
Ye shall know them by their fruits.How would one know? — unenlightened
Perhaps you meant INTELLIGENT, not intelligible. Take Donald Trump. His unintelligible actions had the intelligent consequence of winning him the Presidency. How did he outsmart all the pundits and managed what mostly no one would have thought possible? And think about it - all the big heads, with all the facts backing them up - they all lost, and the baboon who didn't give a shit about any facts won - why?I don't see how the unintelligible can have any intelligible consequences. — unenlightened
And is understanding itself not useful? Don't we become better people the more we understand?How about when it facilitates understanding? — aletheist
Take Donald Trump. His unintelligible actions had the intelligent consequence of winning him the Presidency. — Agustino
Again, I don't want to quibble over Descartes - it's really not important, that's not the topic of this thread. Descartes served merely as an example - merely as the representative figure for modern philosophy - he's not known as the Father of it for nothing is he? — Agustino
Take other examples. Someone falling prey to his cognitive biases may consistently perform action X better than someone who doesn't. Yet this seems befuddling and strange - indeed unintelligible. But acting unintelligibly isn't necessarily acting unintelligently. This raises a significant problem. We typically consider our actions, and plan our life whether in mundane affairs, or in more daring goals - at least in modern society - by attempting to be intelligible at all costs. But if what is unintelligible isn't necessarily unintelligent, then does it not follow that we are cutting ourselves off from options which may be intelligent? How must we change the way we operate in order to profit, rather than be harmed from unintelligibility? — Agustino
How is it deception? Why is it that an action is deceptive if it's not intelligible? It's deceptive only for the person who expects and demands that you act intelligibly, but to say so, is merely to assume that one should be the kind of logician Nietzsche criticises.Any time we act intelligently, but our actions are made to appear unintelligible, this is an act of deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure - many people in fact lose because they win the wrong battles. That's what immorality consists in. Winning at the wrong time - that's acting immorally usually. Whenever you act in a way that contravenes morality, you are putting yourself up for a great future loss - for only a temporary and short-term victory.winning is not always intelligent. — unenlightened
Intelligible is something that makes sense according to the prevailing worldview/culture - in other words, an action that others can understand."intelligible" from "intelligent" — aletheist
Intelligent doesn't have a special philosophical definition. Intelligible on the other hand you could claim has - it follows a logical structure. But even if that's the chosen definition - it's not always intelligent to follow a logical structure.As I suspected - that is not how either of those words is normally defined, especially within philosophy. — aletheist
How is it deception? Why is it that an action is deceptive if it's not intelligible? It's deceptive only for the person who expects and demands that you act intelligibly, but to say so, is merely to assume that one should be the kind of logician Nietzsche criticises. — Agustino
How does this follow? Nietzsche and me are challenging precisely this - that something has to be intelligible in order to be intelligent. I disagree - it doesn't.You describe the act as "intelligent". Therefore it is inherently intelligible — Metaphysician Undercover
This has nothing to do with hiding your true motives at all. I don't see how you'd draw that conclusion... In fact I do see how it follows. It follows only if we both accept the premise that what is intelligent must also be intelligible.It is quite clear that what is at stake here is the issue of hiding your true motives from others, in your dealings with these people. Generally speaking (except in situations like I mentioned), this is morally reprehensible. — Metaphysician Undercover
How does this follow? Nietzsche and me are challenging precisely this - that something has to be intelligible in order to be intelligent. I disagree - it doesn't. — Agustino
But acting unintelligibly isn't necessarily acting unintelligently. — Agustino
This has nothing to do with hiding your true motives at all. I don't see how you'd draw that conclusion... In fact I do see how it follows. It follows only if we both accept the premise that what is intelligent must also be intelligible. — Agustino
Is this for real? Is this for example about deception:Along with your examples, what is being described here is deception, acting intelligently in a way so as the actions appear unintelligible. — Metaphysician Undercover
Take another final example. Deep Blue is being perfectly intelligible against Kasparov. It checks every single move, and checks every single consequence and into the future. It checks millions of moves. But Kasparov obviously doesn't. His mind doesn't function by checking millions of possibilities. While it is true that skipping millions of possibilities is unintelligible because hey - there may be one which has great future benefits, and how can you know without thinking through it? - what Kasparov's mind does is that it automatically doesn't see 99% of possible moves, and instead focuses on the 1% which actually have a real chance of being winning moves. So here lies the whole thing - it's not about being intelligible - it's not about having the biggest brain. It's about knowing what to focus on. The computer doesn't know what moves to focus on, and thus seeks to check everything, even blatantly stupid moves it will check. This is the unintelligible - what Kasparov's mind does vs the intelligibility of the computer. What his mind does is unintelligible - you can't say HOW he eliminates those 99% worthless moves, and focuses on the 1% which has potential. And yet - it's not unintelligent - it is in fact VERY intelligent, and it is Deep Blue who is being stupid.
In fact, I find it fascinating the difference between how computers function and how human minds function. Computers have a very brute kind of intelligence. Even the more intelligent algorithms, they're not as capable as the human mind is in eliminating possibilities in a flash - they don't have insight. But the human mind follows principles. In chess for example, controlling the centre, developing your pieces, castling as soon as possible, etc. These are principles - dogmas. But the computer has no principles to follow - it's all math and calculation for it. But these dogmas, which seem unintelligible, actually are quite intelligent because they cut through the fluff right away. How is it that the human mind can develop such dogmas? And how does the mind form them? — Agustino
Explain this to me please. The act may be intelligent to me, but not also intelligible. For example, I don't understand how specifically it will help me, but yet I still believe it will, and hence it appears to be intelligent to me.And, as I said, the intelligent act is inherently intelligible to the one who is acting or else it would not be an intelligent act. — Metaphysician Undercover
Explain this to me please. The act may be intelligent to me, but not also intelligible. For example, I don't understand how specifically it will help me, but yet I still believe it will, and hence it appears to be intelligent to me. — Agustino
Is this for real? Is this for example about deception: — Agustino
Explain this to me please. The act may be intelligent to me, but not also intelligible. For example, I don't understand how specifically it will help me, but yet I still believe it will, and hence it appears to be intelligent to me. — Agustino
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