If you look up the definition of the noun form of 'a being' in any dictionary, — Wayfarer
Okay. Put a freeze on elections. Climate deniers are removed from office. A climate coup is enacted. Media must apply for new registration. Those that print contrary reports are to be fined or threatened with imprisonment. Corporations are put on notice.
As I said, only China and India will contribute CO2. — Brett
In English, the word ‘being’ applies to living creatures. Chairs and other object are artifacts, objects, tools, etc, but they’re not designated as ‘beings’. As I say, this is simple English albeit with philosophical implications. — Wayfarer
What is interesting is that neuroscientists and biologists are beginning to make claims about consciousness where this used to be off limits. — Harry Hindu
If its everywhere, it universal. Objects appear in my visual field as an instinctive act - without any intent of objectifying anything. It isnt cultural. It is biological. — Harry Hindu
I dont understand why people still resort to pointing to long-dead philosophers claims as if they'd say the same thing knowing what we know today. That's not interesting. What is interesting is that neuroscientists and biologists are beginning to make claims about consciousness where this used to be off limits. — Harry Hindu
But I think that the fact that we can't differentiate "beings" from "things" actually conceals a very profound philosophical truth. A chair is not a being, but a cow is a being. When Heidegger talked of 'forgetfulness of being', was he talking about forgetting his car keys? — Wayfarer
Beings are capable of perceiving, whereas inanimate objects (minerals, for instance) are not. Is it 'strange and eccentric' to say that? — Wayfarer
Although it may not be a conscious decision, all thought and action implicity assumes the subject-object distinction — TheMadFool
But perhaps you have a specific thesis with respect to subject/object that you think is basic to (or assumed by) modern science? Perhaps you could give some examples of how it applies. — Andrew M
Substance dualism? On your view, how do Popper and Kuhn presuppose it? — Andrew M
I was. Except consciousness, which inescapable under any conditions of human action whatsoever, depending on what one thinks consciousness to be, of course. — Mww
The reason this matters, is that habit cannot explain the first learning of what may eventually become habitual. Pure reason, on the other hand, has no problem with it. — Mww
But in modern times, Popper and Kuhn are probably the main influences (and Positivism before that). — Andrew M
It's true I can see other people as 'objects' in a sense. But think about the implications of that. When you refer to other persons, you use personal pronouns. You don't treat them as objects, as 'it' - at least, I hope not! - because you implicitly recognise that they are subjects themselves, and not just objects to be picked up and put down. — Wayfarer
Re Heidegger - I've only picked up bits and pieces. I am loath to study him in depth and detail. — Wayfarer
No doubt, and is the ground for refutation of Hume’s human action by mere habit, or, which is the same thing, convention. — Mww
I can tie my shoe via mere image without conscious thought because I already know all there is to know about tying shoes, that is, by habit. — Mww
Subjects are called 'beings' for a reason; whereas objects lack being. — Wayfarer
In a scenario where Alice sees Bob, Alice is the seeing subject and Bob is the seen object. — Andrew M
A philosophical basis would have to be something substantive, non-trivial, something that is both consequential, and that could plausibly be constituted differently and have different consequences. — SophistiCat
This seems to be too thin for a philosophical basis. Can you elaborate? Not the specific meaning of "subject/object" (I think we have clarified that part), but how you think that forms the philosophical basis. — SophistiCat
The image of tying a shoe is much more the case than the thought, “I am tying my shoe”. — Mww
I think it’s a distinction without a difference. All subjects are objects. — NOS4A2
In my analysis this marks the advent of the distinctively modern outlook, formed by the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, which sought to sweep away all of the ambiguities and obscurities associated with metaphysics and view the world and its problems solely through the perspective of scientific rationalism. However as various critics of the Enlightenment have long since noted, this too embodies a kind of metaphysics, or rather, attempts to address many of the questions associated with metaphysics through the perspective of naturalism. — Wayfarer
With reference to the OP, do you see the world in some other way? what other way would there be to see the world? — tim wood
Or at least Ockham. — bongo fury
The notion of subject/object is me thinking as subject in relation to the world as object, not the world as subject/object in itself, which is how I understood the question, re: “see the world that way”. — Mww
If you want to study the subject, which is not necessarily the same as developing a personal philosophy, I strongly recommend studying it historically. Start with the pre-Socratics, then read forward - widely, synoptically and historically. Try and get a feel for the questions that were being grappled with and the historical circumstances in which they arose. Get a feeling for dialectic - that is one of the most elusive aspects of philosophy. Don’t neglect Plato. Find some question that nags at you, then try and find sources that seem to be dealing with the same questions. Learn to feel the questions, not simply verbalise them. — Wayfarer
It would be well to recall that Einstein originally constructed his model of the universe out of nonverbal signs, 'of visual and some of muscular type.' As he wrote to a colleague in 1945: 'The words or the language, as they are written or spoken, do not seem to play any role in my mechanism of thought. The psychical entities which seem to serve as elements in thought are certain signs and more or less clear images which can be "voluntarily" reproduced and combined.' Later, 'only in a secondary stage,' after long and hard labour to transmute his nonverbal construct into 'conventional words and other signs,' was he able to communicate it to others. — Galuchat
The best exploration of the nature of a 'market' is Ludwig Von Mises's Human Action. — Virgo Avalytikh
For anyone who knows, is there a book in which Chomsky lays out his own political philosophy (since he very clearly has one) from the ground up, as it were?
— Virgo Avalytikh
It sounds as if the answer is 'No'. — Virgo Avalytikh
In any case, 'power' and 'justification' still have not been defined. Expressions of 'power' are indeed everywhere, which is why they are multivalent and don't admit of an easy, monolithic definition that unites them. I might be justified in pulling a child back from a busy road, but that still doesn't give a 'justification condition'. What precisely is the condition of justified coercion? Multiplying examples does not give us such a condition. — Virgo Avalytikh
The best exploration of the nature of a 'market' is Ludwig Von Mises's Human Action. A market is 'free' to the extent that it is not subject to invasion, and the best exploration of the nature of this invasion is Rothbard's Power and Market. For an application of Locke's classical liberalism to the ethical categories of libertarianism (e.g. property, aggression), see Ibid., The Ethics of Liberty. — Virgo Avalytikh
I really don't think it's necessary to get quite this prickly. I have not attacked Chomsky. My query was just that - a query — Virgo Avalytikh
Not gibberish, just vague. Take 'power' for instance: 'power', like other foundational concepts in political philosophy, like liberty, rights, obligation, equality, etc., admit of numerous conceptions. They do not come pre-interpreted for us. — Virgo Avalytikh
And what of 'justification'? What, in principle, would or could constitute a 'justification' of a coercive institution? — Virgo Avalytikh
As for the claim that workers should own the companies in which they work, there is nothing axiomatic about this. — Virgo Avalytikh
Political philosophy in general benefits greatly from being presented in a cumulative, systematic form, beginning from first principles and making plain the assumptions at work. — Virgo Avalytikh
But, among his (more than 100) books, I have yet to find one in which he lays out his political philosophy with clarity, reasoning his way up from first principles. — Virgo Avalytikh
The point is, right-libertarianism's opposition to the State and advocacy for the free market are logical derivations from its more fundamental opposition to aggression. 'Aggression' is not left as a vague banner behind which to rally, but is defined in terms of a system of property which is explored and defended at length, and which itself has a tradition going back to Locke. And this is not unique to the 'right': Marxist philosopher Gerry Cohen also manages to present himself in this way (he is far and away the best Marxist, precisely on account of his clarity). — Virgo Avalytikh
The issue is that Chomsky is not particularly persuasive, except to the already-convinced, and this is owing to the relative informality of his approach. — Virgo Avalytikh
I did this to show that it is perhaps misleading to suggest that the reason we breath is to speak, and that to equate ‘language’ with some innate capacity is kind of leaning in this direction too - as there is no hard physical evidence for some ‘language module’ anymore than there is for some ‘conscious module’. — I like sushi
I’m new to this myself. Would you use ‘thought’ instead of ‘intelligence’? I’m still trying to determine whether it’s true that ‘thoughts are "sentences in the head", meaning they take place within a mental language’. (Wikipedia.) — Brett
My belief is, language doesn't have a strictly scientific explanation. It's associated with intelligence, and I don't know if intelligence is something that can be understood through the evolutionary perspective; that once we become language-using, meaning-seeking beings, then we've escaped the gravitational pull of biology. — Wayfarer
Have you read Heidegger's What is Metaphysics? All about the concept of being emerging from the dread of nothingness. It's awesome. — frank
What I bemoaned was the lack of a work of systematic political philosophy in which the reader is led to anarcho-syndicalism from a set of first principles. I observed that neither Chomsky nor his heroes (Rocker, Proudhon, Bakunin) seem to have produced such a work. — Virgo Avalytikh
That sounds wonderful - the problem is that this is a statement which would also be endorsed by figures who arrive at radically different conclusions from Chomsky, figures who have written with far more clarity and systematicity. So much is left unsaid; hence why a systematic political programme would be welcome. — Virgo Avalytikh
So much is left unsaid — Virgo Avalytikh
No confusion here. — I like sushi
