It also explains why Popper managed to understand so much on his own, and open the way to Kuhn in the process. — Olivier5
I had in mind rather the kind of authors who say the nonsense featured in Sokal and Bricmont's “Fashionable Nonsense”. — Amalac
unlike with people like Derrida and Lacan (excluding his psychology, about which I haven't read enough to make a judgement). I bet their “ideas”(if you can even call them that) will not have any importance in the next 200 years. — Amalac
perhaps you could give me a brief explanation of how Heidegger's work helped or is contributing to scientific progress. — Amalac
Tell you what. You give me a list of who you consider to be leading suspects for unreadable philosophy , and I will summarize, simplify, and link their work to social scientists who have embraced them. — Joshs
The ‘postmodern’ writers I particularly admire are Derrida , Foucault, Deleuze, Heidegger ( yes, I consider him to be postmodern) , and Wittgenstein. — Joshs
To be fair , if your only exposure to ‘postmodern philosophy’ is Sokal’s book, you really need to read primary sources — Joshs
Matthew Ratcliffe is one of the leading writers on cognition and emotion. Here are two articles showing why he considers Heidegger’s work of affect and mood so relevant to current theorizing in psychology.
https://www.academia.edu/458309/Why_Mood_Matters
https://www.academia.edu/458222/Heideggers_Attunement_and_the_Neuropsychology_of_Emotion — Joshs
All written in perfectly clear and unpretentious language. — Olivier5
I’m still not sure what it’s supposed to mean, other that that you understand someone’s prose. — Joshs
You don't think there's a qualitative difference in writing quality between Husserl and Russell? — Manuel
How many of his books have you read?With regard to Popper, what you call ‘clear’ I call lacking in depth, — Joshs
I couldn't find that quote... — Wheatley
When a photograph isn't clear, there are two possibilities:
1. Something's wrong with your eyes. Correctable with the help of an ophthalmologist
2. The photograph itself is fuzzy/blurry. Impossible to correct. — TheMadFool
There’s that word ‘clear’ again. I’m still not sure what it’s supposed to mean, other that that you understand someone’s prose. With regard to Popper, what you call ‘clear’ I call lacking in depth, which leads me to the conclusion that clarity is in the mind of the beholder. — Joshs
If you are an academic who has been trained to read more, shall we call it 'technical' writing, then your reading experience is different. Abstruseness/complexity are relative terms. — Tom Storm
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