There is no treatise (suggramma) by me on these subjects, nor will there ever be.
We don't know exactly what Socrates positions are, because we cannot easily split Plato from Socrates. — schopenhauer1
Plato's Socrates — Fooloso4
How do we know that Socrates was JUST a dialectic mystic, and didn't have substantial positions on the questions? — schopenhauer1
I don't know what is implied by "JUST". Dialectical thinking takes as its starting point substantial positions. I do not know and have not claimed that Socrates was a mystic. Plato's Socrates does make extensive use of mythology and images of transcedence, but he distinguishes between mythos and logos. At the limits of logos he often turns to mythos, but I think he does so because myths are salutary, not because they reveal the truth of the matter. — Fooloso4
Presumably you are making a point about Socrates and Wittgenstein contra other philosophers ... — schopenhauer1
There is mental floss and there is philosophy. — schopenhauer1
Mental floss can be part of philosophy, but in the way that doing math exercises helps strengthen your math abilities. — schopenhauer1
I have not addressed the extent to which they differ from other philosophers. — Fooloso4
If by mental floss you mean maieutics, then it is an essential part of what Socratic philosophy is. — Fooloso4
Maieutics is not about mental exercises. It is about critical examination of beliefs, assumptions, opinions, and claims. Questioning takes priority over answers. — Fooloso4
Ok, so what are you pointing out? — schopenhauer1
my argument still stands — schopenhauer1
just replace it with Maieutics — schopenhauer1
Maieutics is not a mental exercise. — Fooloso4
Amounts to the same thing. — schopenhauer1
Plato for example took to constructing an answer. — schopenhauer1
I want to say that there is something about the experience of reading Wittgenstein, and thinking along with him, that is reminiscent of how it feels to read Plato. The excitement of exploration. It's quite rare. — Srap Tasmaner
To fold four sheets of paper into eight leaves. Apparently.quire — Fooloso4
One difference is that Wittgenstein's writing leads less to aporia than to a change in gestalt, a reconsidering of the way in which something is to be understood. — Banno
We might look to differences as well as similarities. One difference is that Wittgenstein's writing leads less to aporia than to a change in gestalt, a reconsidering of the way in which something is to be understood.
Presumably, there are folk who cannot see the duck, only the rabbit. It's not a surprise that they feel excluded. — Banno
:up: :up:There is mental floss and there is philosophy. Mental floss can be part of philosophy, but in the way that doing math exercises helps strengthen your math abilities.. You aren't really a mathematician unless you use some of those skills for constructing proofs, etc. — schopenhauer1
Questioning takes priority over answers. — Fooloso4
a matter of inquiry not solving problems with definitive answers — Fooloso4
:fire:... these hypotheses do not put an end to questioning. They lead to and guide further questioning. — Fooloso4
Mental floss can be part of philosophy, but in the way that doing math exercises helps strengthen your math abilities.. You aren't really a mathematician unless you use some of those skills for constructing proofs, etc. — schopenhauer1
I prefer toothpicks to floss. Is that the right understanding of the metaphor? Or is maieutic practice like the comfort of a silk cocoon? — Banno
(Theaetetus 150b-e)Now, my skill of midwifery is, in general, similar in character to theirs, but it differs by delivering men and not women, and by looking after their souls rather than their bodies when in labour. But the greatest thing about my skill is that it is able to test, in every respect, whether the mind of the young man is bringing forth an image and a lie, or something genuine and true.
Now, I do have this in common with the female midwives: I bring to birth no wisdom. And many people reproach me for this, since I ask questions of others while I myself proclaim nothing about anything, because I have no wisdom. Their reproach is true, but the reason is that the god compels me to act as a midwife and has prevented me from giving birth.
So of course, I myself am not at all wise nor have I any invention that is born of my own soul. However, it is different for those who associate with me. Some of them also appear quite ignorant at first, but as our relationship proceeds, all whom the god allows, progress to a wonderful degree. Such is their own belief and that of others, and it is obvious that they have never learned anything from me; rather, they have discovered, from themselves, much that is beautiful and have brought it to birth. However, both I and the god are responsible for the delivery. The proof is that over the years, many who were ignorant of this regarded themselves as responsible, despised me, and went away sooner than they should, persuaded either by themselves or by others. But once they had left me, they miscarried whatever remained within them through bad company, and destroyed whatever fruits I had delivered from them, through improper care. Placing more value on images and lies than upon the truth, they ended up being regarded as ignorant, both by themselves and by everyone else.
What could the value of metaphysical speculation consist in if not to show us that metaphysics is undecidable, and not a matter of reaching some theorem which is guaranteed to be correct by rigorously following the rules? The analogy with mathematical exercises seems quite weak to me. — Janus
(511b)Well, then, go on to understand that by the other segment of the intelligible I mean that which argument itself grasps with the power of dialectic, making the hypotheses not beginnings but really hypotheses—that is, steppingstones and springboards—in order to reach what is free from hypothesis at the beginning of the whole.
(Culture and Value)When you are philosophizing you have to descend into primeval chaos and feel at home there.
(T 4.112)Philosophy is not a body of doctrine but an activity.
(PI 123)A philosophical problem always has the form: “I simply don’t know my way about".
(Republic 394d).... we must follow the argument wherever, like a wind, it may lead us
Wittgenstein's writing leads less to aporia than to a change in gestalt, a reconsidering of the way in which something is to be understood. — Banno
Why are you making this a "one or the other" scenario? Some of philosophy is to critique a position, and some is to construct it. — schopenhauer1
At some point it is good to construct one's own views.. "Know thyself!". — schopenhauer1
I think that would be ridiculous as far as how humans should communicate in good faith to each other.. A little is ok.. but if all your philosophy is meant for YOU to de-mystify MY philosophy, without ME being the one with the burden of explaining MY philosophy, I think that is arrogant. — schopenhauer1
I like to think more in terms of insights than in terms of views. (Metaphysical) system building I see as a strange for of poetry, and exercise of the imagination, a game not to be taken seriously once you realize that a metaphysical view can never be the truth but is rather just a possible way of imagining things to be. — Janus
I don't understand knowing yourself as a matter of "constructing views"...quite the opposite; I think it is a matter of relinquishing views, and the need for certainty that motivates them. — Janus
I don't know what you are referring to. None of what you are saying in that post seems to have any bearing on what I had said. If you care to explain how it relates to specific things I wrote, that might help. — Janus
Ok, so the supposedly "open doors" of Wittgenstein is quite closed in your mind in terms of imaginative possibilities for reality... — schopenhauer1
At some point, you make a case. — schopenhauer1
A lot of people, it seems including yourself, like his style which I described, and I was saying what my problem is with this. — schopenhauer1
We are, however, never free from hypotheses. We remain in the realm of opinion. We never attain knowledge of the beginning (arche) of the whole. — Fooloso4
When you are philosophizing you have to descend into primeval chaos and feel at home there.
(Culture and Value)
That is to say, in the midst of opinion. — Fooloso4
Philosophy is not a body of doctrine but an activity.
(T 4.112)
A philosophical problem always has the form: “I simply don’t know my way about".
(PI 123)
We begin from where we are. As Socrates says:
... we must follow the argument wherever, like a wind, it may lead us
(Republic 394d). — Fooloso4
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