1. Many philosophies that are deemed obscure or unreadable are written in an unfamiliar place and time. To truly understand Plato, Aristotle, and Socrates, you would have to live in ancient Greece (unless you're a scholar). — Wheatley
2. It could simply be a translation issue. Works written in German such as Kant and Hegel are much more difficult to understand in English than German. — Wheatley
3. You never really tried (intellectual laziness). It's much easier to dismiss something by claiming you don't understand it. You don't actually accomplish anything, but hey, at least you don't have to debate. — Wheatley
4. Lack of Knowledge. — Wheatley
It has already been done! I like the Britannica article on philosophy Link. Analytic philosophy (which you seem to be advocating) is merely a modern construct.So what it comes down to is, if you think philosophy is not about conceptual clarification, then it is up to you to present an account of philosophy that does involve conceptual clarification. — Banno
I'll say this: Your way of describing philosophy can be very useful for communication on the Philosophy Forum, but there's no god-like figure that can decree that this way is the correct way of doing philosophy.What I am advocating is called argument. When someone says something, if it doesn't make sense you can ask for clarification. Been that way since at least Socrates.
It's What We Do.
Supposing otherwise undermines the process in which we are engaged.
So yeah, my way is the right way. But it's not just me who says it is the right way. — Banno
...the rational, abstract, and methodical consideration of reality as a whole or of fundamental dimensions of human existence and experience.
Different languages have a different feel to it. — Wheatley
It's not poetry if you include critical reasoning. — Wheatley
What do you mean "do this without conceptual clarification"? That's just a general outline of philosophy, there are many kinds of philosophy, not all of them involve conceptual analysis.So you can do this without conceptual clarification? — Banno
Yeah, but it's even more unfamiliar when it comes from a foreign language.The same language has a different feel to it. These are not just issues of translation from French or German. — Banno
Non-poetic creative philosophy. Happy?Why... because you say so? Why can't PoeticUniverse write critical poetry? — Banno
I a lot folks dismiss ideas because they claim it lacks "clarity". The assumption seems to be that if an idea, or concept, is not easily comprehended it is therefore dishonest. There are some issues with this line of thinking. — Wheatley
But in academic setting, test scores and criticism from professors are meant weed out the kinds of people who spout nonsense. (Perhaps not.)Nonsense isn't like weeds, so that once you pull or dig it out, it would be gone for a least a while. — baker
Yes, especially on the internet where anyone can spout nonsense and get away with it.Nonsense is something far more systemic, complex, eluding direct action. — baker
How do you deal with such people?Many people think in black-and-white terms. They are not interested in understanding things, but in taking sides. So even when they read a (would-be) philosophical text, they do so with an intention of taking sides. If it turns out that they can't do so easily (because they agree with some things in the text, while disagree with others, and some they don't understand), they take this as a cue to oppose the text/the author. — baker
Seems like jibberish - then you are not looking at conciseness, you are a non intellectual on shape or lesser than me, or you're thinking perversely. — Varde
What I am advocating is called argument. When someone says something, if it doesn't make sense you can ask for clarification. — Banno
. I was only speaking about prose style.
On the other hand, to your credit, you tend to express yourself quite clearly, not in the convoluted way Husserl did. You can say that that's because he was ahead of his time. Maybe.
But then there are people, like Zahavi, who do explain Husserl very clearly. — Manuel
Reading through all the responses on this thread, it strikes me there are people who don't think a philosophical idea can be profound or important unless it is obscure or difficult. Maybe to them the effort required to figure something out is related to its value. — T Clark
Zahavi writes ‘clearly’ about Husserl. He is also a lightweight in comparison to Husserl who I think misses vital features of Husserl’s work. — Joshs
But I don't think the expressions he uses easies understanding. We'll have to disagree on that part. — Manuel
Well , profundity and importance tend to be synonymous with a certain notion of difficulty , dont they? — Joshs
Most of the exciting concepts in science I learned ( Darwinism, Newtonian and relativistic physics) unfolded this way. — Joshs
But then scepticism began creeping in with Hume , and Kant’s attempt to salvage the old verities forced him to let obscurity in via the unattainable thing-in-itself. — Joshs
Obscurity only made its way into the heart of truth with the post-Hegelian relativisms of Rorty, Kuhn and Feyerabend, Wittgenstein, Nietzsche, the phenomenologists , the Pragmatists, the social constructionists and the postmodernists. — Joshs
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