Skepticism and dialects seem to come from a lack of certainty. A lack of common sense. From fear. From low self esteem. Distrust of one's self. — Mystic
Skepticism and dialects seem to come from a lack of certainty. A lack of common sense. From fear. From low self esteem. Distrust of one's self.
I think most serious philosophical questions are based on this.
How else to explain doubting the senses,solipsism,descartes demon — Mystic
Skepticism and dialects seem to come from a lack of certainty. A lack of common sense. From fear. From low self esteem. Distrust of one's self.
I think most serious philosophical questions are based on this.
How else to explain doubting the senses,solipsism,descartes demon etc,etc. — Mystic
Skepticism and dialects seem to come from a lack of certainty. A lack of common sense. From fear. From low self esteem. Distrust of one's self.
— Mystic
Not always. Philosophical inquiry can perfectly well come from the realization that appearances can be deceptive. A greater power of observation and analytical thought, curiosity, etc., etc. — Apollodorus
Where would you apply that, other than in relation to optical illusions and similar? — baker
But would you apply reasoning like this to things like other minds,the existence of a self,etc,etc.Where would you apply that, other than in relation to optical illusions and similar?— baker
In politics, in personal relationships, and many other areas. You may buy something made in China that appears to be great only to later find that this is not the case. You may think that a social movement is a good cause only to find that it is more like a weird cult. You may think that an email is genuine only to find that it is spam, etc., etc....
But the question is how a person will interpret and handle such "deceptive appearance".In politics, in personal relationships, and many other areas. You may buy something made in China that appears to be great only to later find that this is not the case. You may think that a social movement is a good cause only to find that it is more like a weird cult. You may think that an email is genuine only to find that it is spam, etc., etc.... — Apollodorus
Are some things not directly obvious,intuitive and axiomatic? — Trinidad
But would you apply reasoning like this to things like other minds,the existence of a self,etc,etc.
Are some things not directly obvious,intuitive and axiomatic? Or is proof and philosophically reasoning needed for everything? — Trinidad
But the question is how a person will interpret and handle such "deceptive appearance". — baker
How would our confident non-philosopher from the OP interpret it? — baker
Is there anything that you regard as true without reasoning? — Trinidad
The fact you exist,does that need reasoning? — Trinidad
I was simply illustrating cases where experience tends to contradict appearance and may cause someone to start analyzing things philosophically. In other words, the motivating factor doesn't need to be "lack of self-esteem" as the OP suggests. — Apollodorus
but he does not reflect philosophically. — baker
I'm saying you don't need reasoning to know that you exist. It's self evident. — Trinidad
And if a person plays sports or meditates they can see working out problems can be done without linguistic thinking. — Trinidad
but he does not reflect philosophically.
— baker
And, above all, he does never doubt himself. That would seem to be a reasonable assumption. — Apollodorus
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