What, unconvinced of your own conclusion? :smile: — Pussycat
The only error I see is this thing with the categories.
Exactly! This is Adorno's charge against Heidegger. — Pussycat
I'd never thought of that, that the aforementioned categories would refer to Kant's and not Heidegger's own. I think it would be really cryptic of Adorno to mix two different projects into one, without explicitly saying so, and therefore I do not agree. Besides, Heidegger's fundamental ontology has its own categories, what does it needs Kant's for? — Pussycat
I think that you are over-thinking it, and over-complicating things, while it is simple. No matter what the problematic with Kant's categories is, they are not the focus here. Heidegger illegitimately moves past Kant, Kant is not even his stepping stone, just an obstacle that he bypasses out of whim, there is nothing of Kant in Heidegger, nothing at all, not even subsumption. — Pussycat
How about norms that encourage people to share emotionally difficult subjects? In particular, men? Caught in the vice of 'toxic masculinity' that they embody if they talk about their feelings, but also if they don't? A vice that is tightened by the males and females both in their lives? — Jeremy Murray
BTW, I hope it okay to use so much personal anecdote. I don't do so to find answers or express my own case as much as I find the anecdotal illustrative of broader trends. — Jeremy Murray
Have you read "The Myth of Normal" by Gabor Mate?
I didn't say that Heidegger is pre-critical, but that his philosophy of fundamental ontology is:
In those categories to which fundamental ontology owes its resonance and which they for that reason either deny or so sublimate, that they can no longer give rise to unwelcome confrontations, is to be read how much they are the imprints of something missing and not produced, however much they are its complementary ideology.
— Adorno
I read "unwelcome confrontations" as "conflict" or "critique". Then, the categories of fundamental ontology (Being, Dasein, Present-at-hand, Ready-at-hand, Care, Destiny etc), either do not (deny) confront the ontology, or integrate into (sublimate) it. In fact, these categories give the ontology its power. But, Adorno sees deprivation in them, as he treats them negatively, as well as complicity. — Pussycat
Where is he saying this? What's been missing? You mean Being? — Pussycat
But anyway, I think your mistake was here:
Kant's effort to theoretically vindicate humanity and being and time as Ur-phenomena does not halt the destiny of resurrected ideas (that are resurrected by Heidegger). Concepts were criticized (by Heidegger) even in especially philosophical areas as Kant's dogmatic hyposteses. Kant's transcendence of the soul in the paralogism chapter is met with the aura of the word Dasein. For Kant's attack on treating the soul as something empirically indeterminable Heidegger employs the question of "being" as originary.
— Moliere
It wasn't Kant's efforts but Heidegger's. Concepts were not criticized by Heidegger, but by Kant. In fact, Adorno's charge against Heidegger is that he didn't engage at all critically and philosophically with them, but only ritualistically disposed of Kant's critique. — Pussycat
I very much doubt that Adorno sees any merit to Heidegger's (non) critique. He most probably was appalled by Heidegger's writings, in both content and form, although I am not sure which one he abhorred the most. — Pussycat
Despite this, in order to rope in critical philosophy, an
immediate ontological content is imputed to this latter. Heidegger’s
reading of the anti-subjectivistic and “transcending” moment in Kant
is not without legitimation.
The effort to theoretically
vindicate humanity and being and time as Ur-phenomena does not halt
the destiny of the resurrected ideas. Concepts, whose substrate is
historically passed by, were thoroughly and penetratingly criticized
even in the specifically philosophical area as dogmatic hypostases; as
with Kant’s transcendence of the empirical soul, the aura of the word
being-there [Dasein: existence], in the paralogism chapter; the
immediate recourse to being in the one on the amphiboly of the concept
of reflection. — Adorno
Modern ontology does not appropriate that Kantian
critique, does not drive it further through reflection, but acts as if it
belonged to a rationalistic consciousness whose flaws a genuine
thinking had to purify itself of, as if in a ritual bath
By no means however is this objective interest to be
equated with a hidden ontology. Against this speaks not only the
critique of the rationalistic one in Kant, which granted room for the
concept of a different one if need be, but that of the train of thought of
the critique of reason itself.
...
It indeed tolerates the assumption of an in-itself
beyond the subject-object polarity, but leaves it quite intentionally so
indeterminate, that no sort of interpretation however cobbled together
could possibly spell an ontology out of it. If Kant wished to rescue that
kosmos noetikos [Greek: cosmos of the intellect] which the turn to the
subject attacked; if his work bears to this extent an ontological moment
in itself, it nonetheless remains a moment and not the central one — Adorno
The logical paralogism consists in the falsity of an argument in respect of its form, be the content what it may. But a transcendental paralogism has a transcendental foundation, and concludes falsely, while the form is correct and unexceptionable. In this manner the paralogism has its foundation in the nature of human reason, and is the parent of an unavoidable, though not insoluble, mental illusion. — Kant, CPR, link in post
2. Two phenomenological spaces are orthogonal iff variations in one do not affect the other, e.g. shape is orthogonal to color because we can change a blue sphere into a red one without changing its shape, or change a sphere into a cube without changing its color. — Pneumenon
I'm still struggling slowly through "Question and Answer". — Jamal
Red/green simultaneity doesn't seem to fit either of those models. What I picture is: A person sees the color brown, and is able, at the same time, to see both red and green "within" the brown. And no, I don't know what "within" means, exactly. — J
Is happiness the goal for you? I align more with Buddhist non-attachment, but that too is not available only through rationality. — Jeremy Murray
So what would you (and other posters) nominate as starting points for 'better conversations'? Where is the need greatest? Where can philosophy best intersect with social science today? — Jeremy Murray
For many, or at least, certainly for myself, mental illness begins with hypersensitivity and an excess of reflective ruminating. 'Too much thinking' has been precisely my problem. — Jeremy Murray
Better concepts such as? — Jeremy Murray
I can't recall back to the beginning of this thread, but participating over the past few days, I see a lot of dialogue that belongs to the 'better conversations' category. — Jeremy Murray
Excellent NY times article on AI impact on writing, generally — Wayfarer
think synesthesia refers to experiencing a sensation in two different sensory modes, rather than two versions of the same mode, like red and green. But maybe simultaneous red/green perception can happen, which would be relevant to the OP's question. — J
Sound to like you’ve thought a lot about these themes and have acquired wisdom. — Tom Storm
I doubt it. I think we need face-to-face discussions in real time, not the anonymous often polemical world of forums. But who knows? — Tom Storm
The issue for many people is that normal behaviours have previously been described as mental illness; homosexuality, even feminism. Of course, many religious folks might still agree. And now trans identities… even many progressives view this as mental illness. — Tom Storm
People also talk about mental illness as if it is romantic and needs to be defended as merely a kind alternative lifestyle that the evil mainstream can’t handle. — Tom Storm
Long story short, we need much better public conversations about mental health and mental illness? — Jeremy Murray
Well, it depends on the charges and claims made. I’m not interested in revisiting this fairly intractible debate, but I will say that if a particular psychiatrist takes the view that they are not infallible, that patient rights should be upheld, that medication is not compulsory, and that the patient should have a say in all treatment (which is how it works here for the most part), then I think we're mostly good. But no doubt there are people so hateful of psychiatry that nothing will ever excuse or redeem it. And there have been awful practices. The Foucauldian charge of social control will always be popular. I feel this way about interior designers. :wink: — Tom Storm
I think psychiatry probably arouses more hatred than almost any profession (even lawyers and politicians). — Tom Storm
There is no single project of psychiatry. — Tom Storm
t's also worth noting that the psychiatry gurus are often psychiatrists themselves; people like Thomas Szasz, R.D. Laing, David Cooper, Franco Basaglia, Peter Breggin, and Giovanni Jervis. There's a lot of self-criticism built into the profession. — Tom Storm
I've worked with many psychiatrists over three decades, some brilliant, some dullards. None of them have ever held a view that what they do is objective. They would see thier profession as a mix of science, art, culture and intersubjective agreement.
I have seen the unwillingness to talk about the hard topics in psychology - suicide, depression, addiction, psychosis, etc. - just in the people around me since I was young.
And I've been exposed to the best arguments of the anti-psychiatry contingent as well. They lose me when they talk about psychosis.
Long story short, we need much better public conversations about mental health and mental illness? I think this would honestly reduce some of the problems we see with overdiagnosis. — Jeremy Murray
I find real solace in darker philosophies sometimes. It helps combat that sense of doom that comes with despair. I flipped through Ligotti again last night after mentioning him here, and when he quotes Mainlander "Life is hell, and the sweet still night of absolute death is the annihilation of hell", I find it comforting to recognize my suffering, at it's worst, so eloquently expressed, and shared by another.
Of course I know that my beliefs are symptoms, but the power of philosophy, or dark, emotional art, is one of the few strategies I have to fight the worst of depression. — Jeremy Murray
Definitely how I ended up experiencing existentialism when I reconnected to philosophy a couple of years ago. — Jeremy Murray
We do not seem to have improved. The idea that mental illness and mental health are best addressed by professionals is part of the problem, but I have had excellent experiences with counselling as well.
Have you? Or other positive interventions / rituals? — Jeremy Murray
I don't know. Everyone I've ever met who was living "on disability" (receiving SSI payments) was doing pretty well. — frank
Now my advocacy has been towards a capabilities focus, looking at the valued human capabilities that are restricted, and what supports enable the person to actually realise them. — Banno
He's talking about the Australian version of this. — frank
You have disability insurance through Social Security. It's pretty generous — frank
1. A disability is permanent.
2. A disability involves a substantial reduction in functional capacity.
3. A disability must affect a person’s ability to work, study, or take part in social life, and they must likely need long-term supports. — Banno
The impairment must be functional and permanent and require support. That's very much following the medical model. It reinforces the deficit model, framing disability as a problem for an individual body, not as a disjunction between that body and its environment. It presumes the evaluative place of a "normal" body, an unquestioned baseline. It arbitrarily rejects chronic illness, which would otherwise count as a disability. It ignores lived experience of fluctuating or episodic disability. — Banno
Thanks for doing your homework... :wink: — Banno
Now my advocacy has been towards a capabilities focus, looking at the valued human capabilities that are restricted, and what supports enable the person to actually realise them. In this framing consideration of the impairment is replaced by consideration of what supports are needed to allow the person to achieve their capabilities. "assistance with daily living" and "mobility supports" changes to "self-care" and "social participation".
This approach has wide recognition, and underpinned the initial vision of the NDIS, but met opposition in the implementation, the bean-counters not being familiar with capabilities-based metrics. The dynamic between medical and social models is ongoing.
Given that dynamic, considerations involving critical theory are a long way from the centre of the discussion. — Banno
Is medical disease also a social construct? If not, how do we draw the line between social construction and empirical fact? — Joshs
Do you find any solace in talking about these things?
I always have, personally, but feel the philosophical frame has helped me feel a different form of solace in understanding, or perhaps even wisdom. — Jeremy Murray
Why not just that some folk dance on their legs, others in their chair?
Note that this removes the impairment? — Banno
It seems different from whether I can see something as both red and green, which clearly I cannot. — J
The wheelchair user is also incapacitated by being unable to dance, and that can not be ameliorated. — J
Osteological studies of Scottish soldiers from the Battle of Dunbar 1650, and The York 113, show that amongst the common soldiery were folk who would now be considered disabled. The presence of individuals with health stress or impairments did not exclude them from being enlisted or captured as soldiers; they were treated as ordinary foot-soldiers, and thrown into the same grave. Their impairment did not exclude them from participation in the social exercise of making war. — Banno
