Ctk wrote:1) What I am suggesting by thinking was trying to model it around Carl Jung's(and other psychologists) theory of personality types in which a person can be said to be thinking when there is an aim to what they are doing, while what is called as "intuition" would be brainstorming ideas. Again, I do not stand by this theory but rather I wanted to know that if there is a general consensus regarding this way of reasoning that is logical and has an aim. While another which is more of brainstorming, free flowing of ideas in which the a person can contemplate them.
Brainstorming has an aim. In fact, every form of thought has an aim, I can't think of something that doesn't. It is to do with intentionality being an automatic mechanism, we just automatically "make" things have an aim. We uncontrollably steer our own thoughts all the time. I think it's very difficult to be able to split it up into different types of thinking, the only thing you can be somewhat certain of is the subject of thinking and which parts of your mind are used in that process... for instance erotic thought is very different from mathematical analysis, but it's hard to make simple divisions except by using the conscious content and the bodily reaction as qualifiers. So you have mathematical and you have erotic thought, but neither of them has more or less an aim. Perhaps mathematics is more procedural at times, but that's about it... no determinate separation except by content and by bodily reaction.
Ctk wrote:2) When you talk about social anthropology, how would you distinguish it from philosophy? Isn't the difference based on the fact that social anthropology is a social science meaning that you need to go and empirically test your ideas.
Theorizing is not (necessarily) philosophizing if that's what you're getting at, so the difference is more than just empirical tests.
Ctk wrote:Like doing research studies with an specific community of people, to answer an specific question. Therefore, can a person philosophize about social anthropology question be said to be doing philosophy or anthropology?
If you philosophize you do philosophy. The subject is anthropology. If you make anthropological theories, you are theorizing about anthropology. The division is clear and simple. Philosophizing about a science goes under the Philosophy of Science heading though, and so you would be discussing not subjects "through anthropology", there isn't a chain of connection if I've understood what you're trying to get at, you are philosophizing about the science of anthropology, discussing things like its legitimacy, the ethics of its methodologies, or whether it subscribes to common rules of logic or whether it breaks them, and whether that is good or bad.
Ctk wrote:Wouldn't this philosophizing be unable to pass as anthropology since the person is not using the methods of anthropology?
Answered above. Philosophizing does not yield anthropological products, though philosophy can lead to anthropological clues, clues that can develop into theories. For instance, let's say you have a society and in it you have a institution who deals with medical aid...
A philosopher might ask, in ontological terms: "What is it to be a recipient of medical aid?", he might go over and ask the people what they think and he might find out that it is such and such, and he will go home, sit in his chair, and he will tell himself: "Well, it is clear that a recipient can feel 'thus' and 'thus' and 'thus' about medical aid, and the recipient will be in 'this' and 'this' and 'this' situation before they receive medical aid, and they are from 'here' and 'here', so it seems clear that a recipient of medical aid is someone who has a combination of these features".
A social anthropologist might ask: "How is it to be recipient of medical aid?", and he will go and stay at the medical institution, inquiring, perceiving, taking notes, until, he comes at the notion of larger picture of how it is to be a recipient of a medical aid. From this picture, he draws a theory of relations, a theory of facts surrounding people's experiences, their reasons, their feelings, their means and abilities, the typicality of the institutional workings and the way it works to service and manages to service. All this the anthropologist then tries to confirm at the best of his or her ability, using tools and methods. At last they have not a sum of reasoning from experience (philosophers also use experience a lot, just not necessarily as the ultimate truth), but a thorough explanation of all significant features of the institution, and how they relate to produce what is by theory deemed to be the case of how it is to be a recipient of medical aid.
See the difference? The type of knowledge you end up with, has a completely different type of usefulness. In one case, you are ascertaining what may be said of a recipient to make it a recipient. In another case, you are exploring the whole experience and picking up on interesting leads inside the whole experience, using it to get back at your original question to complete it with a 360-degrees explanation. At least that's the wunder-science... in reality there's a lot of weak science being produced which makes little difference in total, except perhaps as part of some movement of science (supporting other people's claims or trying to confirm them).
Ctk wrote:3) I found your point of argumentative style interesting. Anyone else could also answer this question. Isn't the way of doing philosophy by using an argumentative style?
No. See my thread about the crafting of philosophy if you want an example of a process by which you can end up with philosophical products:
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=12763
Ctk wrote:Meaning that a person interested in philosophy needs to make an statement and support it with reasons as to why this is the case.
They don't have to. Many people have their own personal philosophies about things. But to be taken seriously in social circles, you have to be able to communicate it, an argumentative style will help you, but you could just state an idea and say "because of this-x". You can present an argument without having any particular "style" per se, or it is a style but a minimalistic one where methodological argumentation is at its minimum in diversity and quantity. A single argument is sometimes enough, if the idea is good enough. While somebody, I guess most people, like "covering up" their tracks, and to do this they have to develop an argumentative style in which to deal with the constant back and forth.
Ctk wrote:Wouldn't this be in contrast with other disciplines like history, in which they mainly rely on understanding the facts and then finding the causes. While philosophy would be on a constant state of arguing over ideas?
All disciplines argue of ideas, history is absolutely no exception, plenty of arguing there. For instance, both Norway and Denmark claim to be the birthplace of the Viking chieftain who conquered Normandy and spawned the bloodline that later conquered England in the Norman conquest of England. Both parties have good claims, and so it becomes a matter of "choosing" who you'd like to be right. Is English royalty Norwegian or Danish of origin? (I might be missing some change of dynasty in asking this last question, since I don't know the history of England that well, despite Englishmen having produced tons of stories, series and movies about themselves).
Ctk wrote:4) Can you give me a concrete example as to a epistemological or ontological philosophical truth? Is there a body of philosophical knowledge which is considered absolutely true? Aren't most of these ideas constantly up for debate?
But individuals believe in them, and hold them to be true. Not always constantly, maybe you have a Communist or an Anarchist phase in your life, I had a bit of both some years ago. We are in motion, but when we do believe in them, they take hold on us and we act with those truths as assumption for guiding our actions. And we don't necessarily believe in any body of work, few people do I think (religious people excluded) but in individual assumptions and arguments. We believe in things that are said to us and which we find reasonable or persuasive. The Scientific Method is a quite large field of epistemological truth which people for the most part subscribe to as a body of work, though some details may wary as science is forever improving itself. Ontologically I think everyday life is a big product of our own ontological views of the world... what does it consist of? How is it put together? What are those new things we see all the time? We ask ourselves these things all the time, especially for those who participate in hyper-culture where things change all the time and you have to learn new stuff all the time to keep up.
We gather ontological truths to find good basis' for thinking... an ontological truth isn't necessarily a truth of course, we can be deceived, but that is a spiral of questions which an individual cannot assume to have any control over. You suppose that the means you have at your disposal to ask and get answer is good enough, and you produce a "truth" out of this, helping you to see the world in a more effective manner. You gain some wisdom about how the world is put together, and this wisdom is your friend in surviving and thriving.