Philosophy ends when science establishes the facts. This has been the case since the time when science got a reliable method. Therefore, I do not include the philosophy of the past in my demarcation criteria. Aristotle is not Wittgenstein. — David Mo
On spirituality: it is a vague word. It sounds like religion without god. I don't include spirituality as a kind of philosophy. — David Mo
Maybe we simply have to say "So much the worse for definitions," and leave it to intuition and specific situations.
— Xtrix
You can't avoid definitions. If you don't make them explicit, they will work in the background. And this is a source of pseudo-problems. — David Mo
But insofar as "science" presupposes "being", "the science of being", at best, begs the question, no? — 180 Proof
That's foundationalism, which is far from uncontroversial. — Pfhorrest
As I said, you can instead -- as critical rationalism would have it -- start with a survey of possibilities, reduce to absurdity some of them, and then proceed from whatever is left. — Pfhorrest
Just believing something yourself without adequate reason isn’t faith. To quote myself elsewhere:
I also don't mean just holding some opinion "on faith", as in without sufficient reason; I don't think you need reasons simply to hold an opinion yourself. I am only against appeals to faith, by which I mean I am against assertions — statements not merely to the effect that one is of some opinion oneself, but that it is the correct opinion, that everyone should adopt — that are made arbitrarily; not for any reason, not "because of..." anything, but "just because"; assertions that some claim is true because it just is, with no further justification to back that claim up. — Pfhorrest
As for Buddhism -- no Buddhist, that I'm aware of, asks you to accept the "wisdom of Siddhartha" on faith. Quite the opposite.
— Xtrix
I am not aware of any Buddhist arguing for Buddhist principles in a way meant to convince someone who doesn’t already believe them. It’s all meant to be taken as self-evident wisdom that just needed someone wise enough to point it out, and now that it’s been pointed out, you’ve just got to either accept it and find peace or go on suffering in your miserable unenlightened life. — Pfhorrest
The Buddhist ideas (in some traditions) of reincarnation really have nothing to do with the supernatural, any more than a cloud becoming rain is supernatural.
— Xtrix
The idea of any kind of self surviving death to live another miserable life of suffering is sort of a key motivating factor in Buddhism — Pfhorrest
This consciousness you speak of is nothing more than an abstraction.
So reason may be imperfect, but it's what we have and we should resign ourselves to it. Polishing it, perfecting it, handling it, but not inventing alternatives that are more lying than reason itself. — David Mo
I agree that the real (i.e. MEon, or other-than-being) is fundamental, not as an object of "science" (i.e. academic) but as the immanent horizon, or enabling-constraint, of struggle (i.e. existential). — 180 Proof
It's the activity of interpreting being through theories and concepts.
Okay, better - "being" as presupposed by "theories and concepts" (Collingwood? Spinoza?) — 180 Proof
or
"Philosophy is universal phenomenological ontology."
Agree? Disagree? Incoherent?
Incoherent. Seems (implicitly) 'epistemically anthropocentric', or idealist-essentialist (re: hypostatization). — 180 Proof
Suffering of the soul is caused by believing lies. The task then of philosophy is to determine a process by which lies can be distinguished from truth. Admittedly no easy task. — A Seagull
We have to be careful, though, not to equate philosophy with some kind of therapy. — Xtrix
Foundationalism concerns knowledge, yes, which has a long history in epistemology. I'm not concerned with epistemology. — Xtrix
So whether you start inductively or deductively doesn't much matter to me. — Xtrix
In my tentative semantics, "faith" is belief without evidence (or reason), whether personal opinions or universal prescriptions. Hence a little more general, and in that case, having "faith" in the airplane pilot or a belief that human beings are essentially "good" are matters of faith. — Xtrix
That's not what Buddhists argue at all -- if they ever do argue. — Xtrix
Not "any kind of self." Buddhists don't believe your individual personality survives after death. They do believe in continuation and transformation, as a cloud to rain or a dead leaf into soil, etc. At least in the variations I'm familiar with. I know in parts of Thailand they practically worship Buddha as a god, his statues are everywhere, and so maybe you can find beliefs in an afterlife there -- but from what I've read in the Sutras, Buddha himself never discusses the 'self' surviving or anything spooky like that. In fact, non-self is a basic tenant (anatta). — Xtrix
What remains still as philosophy is demarcated from science in that while philosophy relies only upon reason or evidence to reach its conclusions, rather than appeals to faith, as an activity it does not appeal to empirical observation either, even though within philosophy one may conclude that empirical observation is the correct way to reach conclusions about reality. — Pfhorrest
You're taking epistemological positions for granted, though. — Pfhorrest
Anatta is the cure to samsara. If there was no samsara to worry about, there would be no need for a special path to anatta: everyone would get there inevitably when they died. If it were not thought possible to maintain some (however false) sense of self through the cycle of death and rebirth, and so to continue suffering beyond death, then the way to end suffering would be simple: just die. It's only against that background presumption of samsara that Buddhism makes any sense. — Pfhorrest
That's like saying light is "what we gaze upon or look for". I don't think so. Rather: we see, as Plato might say, by light - by seeing, so to speak - which is not "given", not "seen" as such.Yes, "being" and "reality" I too would argue are not simply objects of science -- they're what we philosophize out of and about. In that case, being is a given. — Xtrix
By "presupposed" I understand, instead, conditions, or ontic commitments, which must obtain for 'thoughts and questions' to make sense, and not "what's thought and questioned" itself.Yes, being is presupposed -- it's what's thought and questioned.
Philosophy doesn't appeal to empirical observation? What would be considered "evidence" in that case? — Xtrix
I just don't think it's this straightforward. If we decide we want to define philosophy in his way, I fail to see the motivation for it. You're quite right that science was natural philosophy, with "nature" as physics, and physics as a variation of the res extensa- substance that's extended in space. I don't see much reason for so rigidly separating the two, despite claims of a special method. It betrays a reaction to Christianity and has hints of scientism. — Xtrix
In the context of the meaning of being (which I argue is what philosophy thinks). But in that case the nature of ἐπιστήμη is not being used in the sense you're using it, nor is "truth." — Xtrix
Whether or not there's an afterlife isn't relevant. — Xtrix
Though many of these works may deal directly with believing lies, it strikes me that the cause(s) of human suffering may not be fully and adequately incorporated in the narrow concept of 'believing lies.' — Statilius
That there are various scientific methods according to the various sciences and that they are the best way to present evidence about facts seems to me unquestionable. If you know of another method, I can reconsider my position.This, again, assumes a scientific method, and no one so far has demonstrated there is one -- as far as I can tell. — Xtrix
You don't say. Did Wittgenstein believe in prime mover and prima materia? First news.To this day we're in the shadow of Aristotle — Xtrix
The definition is only the use of the word. You may be aware of how you use it or not, but you cannot stop using it one way or another. That is its meaning.In everyday life, it's certainly not the case that definitions "work in the background" -- or if they do, it's exceptional. — Xtrix
You put a lot of things into your concept of consciousness. It is not the same to have perceptions as to capture the 'I'. Among other things because you do not grasp your "self" in the same way that you perceive a phenomenon. What is an empty abstraction is not the concept of consciousness, but the way you use it. It does not refer to anything concrete. The opposition between reason and consciousness that you make is meaningless.On the contrary, it is consciousness that we have, if we mean by this our lived world -- our experiences, our being — Xtrix
All these things can be studied from other branches of knowledge that are not philosophy. What makes them different from philosophy?Philosophy is the study of reality, knowledge, existence, beauty, and goodness, — Ciceronianus the White
A Philosophy of Mind topic may be 'do we register information in packets or is the sense of an object of one dimension?' — remoku
All these things can be studied from other branches of knowledge that are not philosophy. What makes them different from philosophy? — David Mo
I just think back to times long ago, when people lived in small tribes of hunter-gatherers. I imagine that people in those times did not experience suffering of the soul, albeit they would have experienced hardship of the body. I imagine they would not have suffered angst over strictures that they 'should' do this and 'should not' do that. Simpler times for the soul. — A Seagull
Well, what makes object-discourse different from meta-discourse? suppositions different from presuppositions? judgments different from criteria? knowing different from understanding? :chin:Philosophy is the study of reality, knowledge, existence, beauty, and goodness,
— Ciceronianus the White
All these things can be studied from other branches of knowledge that are not philosophy. What makes them different from philosophy? — David Mo
Interested in hearing various interpretations. — Xtrix
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