As a non-philosopher I find this is dense and hard to follow, but very interesting.
It sounds like you are advocating for a metaphysical, shall we even say, 'faith based' belief? But obviously not in the traditional sense.
In essence, you seem to be saying that analytic philosophy's approach is too narrow and limiting and serves to keep metaphysics safely at bay and 'the unfamiliar world and its stunning issues' contained. And you are suggesting that the future of philosophy and some notion of transcendence may be found in using the phenomenological method and the metaphysics it 'opens up' to our awareness (sorry if the language is clumsy). Is this a fair summary?
What is it that you think lies beyond the censorious methodologies of analytic philosophy? Where do suppose the phenomenological approach takes human beings for it to be called a 'new religion'? — Tom Storm
I don't think it's usually about greatness. — frank
It's just that words are sometimes like fingers and some of experience falls through the open hands of language. — frank
To be sure, blind folk are able to talk of the warmth of red and the chill of blue. They can use colour words in much the same way as the sighted. But what they cannot do is to choose the correct word for some object that is before them, to say if it is yellow or it is green. — Banno
Our experiences are effable. What is beyond discourse is the elementals of our experience, your beloved, qualia.And since we do talk about our experiences, they are not ineffable. — Banno
Furthermore, in one of my references on philosophy, they indicated that Husserl, toward the end of his career, wrote that the dream of putting the sciences on firm foundations was over. Rather tragic end to one who began phenomenology to put all the sciences on secure footing. Talking about a dead end — Richard B
And here you are! — frank
Makes sense...Ciceroni-anus the execrable...or excremental... :joke:
23 minutes ago — Janus
frank
Ah, but I wasn't summoned, you see. That would require evocation by use of a name, as one would the Lord of the Flies, i.e. Beelzebub, the chief follower of Satan/Lucifer in Milton's Paradise Lost. — Ciceronianus
the firm footing for science in transcendental subjectivity, — Joshs
Transcendental consciousness is an absolute subjectivity that cannot be an object and. cannot be given reflectively. Because it can never be an object, one cannot say. anything about it or characterize it.
Janus
wants to talk about Himalayan politics. — Banno
the firm footing for science in transcendental subjectivity,
— Joshs
Transcendental consciousness is an absolute subjectivity that cannot be an object and. cannot be given reflectively. Because it can never be an object, one cannot say. anything about it or characterize it.
Ineffable :cool:
How many scientists have even heard or read of this? — jgill
What you don't seem to get is that saying that there is a concrete object "mountain" "there" which we all independently experience and talk about is not so much wrong as it is just one possible way of talking about a situation we actually cannot get to the bottom of. It is the least thoughtful, naive way of thinking about it. — Janus
I'm thinking that the "something" which gives rise to the human experience commonly referred to as "mountain"... is the mountain.Another way of speaking about it; that is to say that there is "something" unknowable which gives rise to the human experience commonly referred to as "mountain" — Janus
So where does that leave ↪Janus? — Banno
Actually, ianus is the significant part of the appellation, typically used in Latin in adjectives formed from proper names. — Ciceronianus
So where does that leave ↪Janus
? — Banno
So, what is it we can't say about mountains? — Banno
So I can't quite see what it is you are saying. — Banno
This may be limited characterization of Anglo American philosophy. W. V. Quine, one who belongs is such a tradition, said the following in Word and Object, "There are, however, philosophers who overdo this line of thought, treating ordinary language as sacrosanct. They exalt ordinary language to the exclusion of one of its own traits: its disposition to keep on evolving." — Richard B
What is it you are claiming here? — Banno
So there must be something else, some other explanatory means that can account for brains AMONG the trees and tables and coffee cups of the world. In other words, brain talk is not foundational. — Constance
Materialism takes an objective model and applies it across the board, but this leads to an existential alienation, as if what we really are is forever distant in t he "out thereness" of things, and one could argue that this kind of thinking in the modern age, so bound to its objectifying methods, is what has led to the crisis of identity. — Constance
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