Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2020 8:34 am
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 3:44 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 7:03 am
To be a serious philosopher, one cannot banked solely on common sense ...
If you think I'm advocating, "common sense," over rigorous reason, I am sorry I gave that impression. There is no way to know the truth other than clear non-contradictory reason.
I have no idea who you think a, "serious philosopher," might be, but if Russell is an example, he is an example of all that is wrong with what is called philosophy, especially all philosophers since Hume.
A serious philosopher is one who dig deep and wide, then present his arguments in a sequential and systematic manner.
In this manner, anyone can check the sequential premises to verify whether they are true or false.
A non-serious philosopher is one who use rhetoric and jumps to conclusion with flimsy premises without digging deep and wide.
An example of a non-serious philosopher is one who rely on dogma and faith without sound justifications.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 7:03 am
There is no need for a real apple or other physical object for scientist to study "models," of, "molecules, atoms, protons, electrons and quarks."
Then what do they study? They do not study models, they create the models to explain what they study, the actual chemical elements, which atoms were visualized to explain their properties, the behavior of actual physical bodies for which the concepts of mass, momentum, and gravity were formed to explain the behavior of those bodies.
It meant there is no need for a really-real apple [as you claimed] or other objects.
Scientist will study whatever is observed and hypothesized.
The concepts and labels are merely a convenience of communications.
I think you got your ideas from so-called, "serious philosophers," or some other pseudo-intellecutal academic con men. I believe you are too intelligent to have fallen for that nonsense on your own.
What counts is whether my arguments [whichever] are sound or not.
Bertrand Russell was a "serious philosophers" who dug deep and wide, and he always presented his arguments sequentially and systematically.
Such a presentation from him enable me to agree with him on some of his conclusion and disagree on others based on a rational analysis of his systematic arguments. And I know precisely at which point and on what premise I disagree with him.
No one can read Russell without at least admiring his writing, and I agree that many of his arguments are quite plausible. I cannot agree that, "a non-serious philosopher is one who use rhetoric," if you think that doesn't apply to Russell. His writing is full of interesting and entertaining rhetoric. Who else could reduce the entire debate between empiricists and idealists to, "no matter, never mind," or correctly explain that, "mathematics may be defined as the subject in which we never know what we are talking about, nor whether what we are saying is true." If you've you read his marvelous,
A History of Western Philosophy, and his shorter works that popularized philosophy, you know his writing style (and rhetoric) is one major reason for his success.
I have no doubt that Russell was a, "serious," philosopher if that means he sincerely took his own work seriously. After all, that was his profession. I also think, early on, he actually made some real progress in philosophy, but somewhere in his early years began to entertain ideas without any sound logical foundation, possibly because of the influence of Hume (concepts are little pictures in one's head) and Liebnitz (the best of all possible worlds) and his own fantasies about windowless monads. Once he and Whitehead (
Principia Mathemtica) and the other logical positivists, Ludwig Wittgenstein et. al. put their collective heads together and attempted to reduce reason to the manipulation of symbols (like Boolean algebra) they very nearly destroyed philosophy. [They were actually a little late, since Kant had already done that.]
I think you are absolutely right that to do philosophy right one must honestly examine everything, "deep and wide," as you put it, and apply rigorous reasoning to every question and be able to explain one's conclusions, "sequentially and systematically," again as you put it, which means allowing no baseless assumptions and no contradictions in any part of that reasoning.