What is at issue is not thinking but a thinking that is insular and self-referential. A thinking that calls itself philosophy — Fooloso4
So were you suggesting that perhaps his thinking is a bit insular and self-referential? — Joshs
You left me with a quote but it would require a new thread to even begin to do it justice. — Joshs
Oh yes. My comment was addressed to the epithet "elitist hobby", that philosophy outside the academy is (still) more than that. — 180 Proof
Here’s a little secret (don’t let it get around). Learning how to think is a prerequisite for learning how to live. Pursuing ideas for their own sake is pursuing life for its own sake. — Joshs
Deepak Chopra — Alkis Piskas
What are these standards of quality?Philosophy should be open to all who want to participate, but it should have minimum standards of quality, — Manuel
And yet that's 'what's right' with it! :up:There are a multitude of places where philosophy 'went wrong'! — creativesoul
This is just a personal and offhand description. So, there are no standards.[Re: What are these standards of quality?]I'd say intellectual honesty and coherence at a basic level. — Manuel
Where is that community? Who and how many of them are there? What and where can one find what does the majority of such community say about Chopra?[Re: Who is to judge?] The community of people engaged in philosophy, especially those who make contributions to the tradition. — Manuel
I don't remember having ever not allowed anything to come in philosophy as long as it is pertinent with philosophy. Doing such a thing, would be too arrogant and stupid.it sounds as if you would be willing to allow everything in. — Manuel
I just want to show that one cannot put boundaries to any philosophy that talks about these subjects. If that were the case, 80% of the known philosophers would be considered outside boundaries. — Alkis Piskas
I'm not defending Chopra or his work. Maybe I shouldn't include him among the "representatives" of the new "wave", current or trend in philosophy. I don't know. And, honestly, I don't much care. — Alkis Piskas
I don't see the relevance.Is Charles Manson philosophy? — Manuel
Taken seriously by whom? OK, certainly not by scientists. But certainly yes, by his colleagues. And also by thousands of people, who have benefitted from his talks, books and medicine.But you should care if someone like Chopra is taken seriously. It degrades the quality of ones thought. — Manuel
The science that supposedly tells us the world is inherently valueless itself presupposes that the world, or at least key aspects of it, is rational and that we can understand this rationality. Hence, physical laws, explanations and models in place of a shrug and grumble about our arbitrary world. But if this is the case, then attempts to ground values in the inherit rationality of social structures doesn't seem doomed even if we accept core premises of the "valueless" view. — Count Timothy von Icarus
For the most part, "the world is purposeless, a brute fact, and all things are determined by and reducible to little billiard balls bouncing around in space and this necessarily reduces ethics, aesthetics, and even logic to illusions," is still the dominant viewpoint taught in schools. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Read Bertrand Russell's 'A Free Man's Worship', one of his early philosophical polemics and still a canonical statement of that outlook. The reason Eastern or eastern-inspired philosophies have a following is because they put back into the world what the Enlightenment abstracted away from it. — Wayfarer
What if Russell is right and what if the push back towards idealism, New Age and Eastern thought are just a reflection that people can't handle the truth — Tom Storm
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