Re: aphilosophy
Posted: Mon Aug 22, 2011 9:32 pm
I re-refer to my essay for anyone who wants to read it.
Here is a link:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/62621120/A-Philosophy
So now im gonna get back to what may be aphilosophy, and address Chaz here, finally:
BTW: Chaz this is just the type of feedback I like: an appeal to clarify terms.
But I would ask if you have read the essay or just looked for a problematic statement. Next I would ask if you understand what Im saying, then if you agree or disagree with what Im saying.
CHAZ: What do you mean by ' Death is understood within as ‘unethical’ arena; death is anti
-human, it works against the efforts of what it is to be human: death is evil."?
A:if you have read the essay - I have attempted to distinguish between what I see as two different types of philosophy: methodological or technical, which I suggest is a defective philsophy, based in the certainty of death and the uncertainty of life;
Okay - you may well be familiar with the term strawman. You seemed to have devised a chimera - a philosophy that does just not exist, in order to satisfy the twin pillars of your argument. I don't know any branch of philosophy that I recognise with this description. No one is basing their philosophical position on the certainty of death etc...
and philosophy proper which teaches one how to die, for life is certain, death uncertain. I have implicated that ethics lay in the former form and that this ethics is an ethics of managing against death: death as the "anti-ethical" arena which informs the methodoloigcal form of our "ethical", which is to conclude that we manage against the certainty of death because it exists as the epitome of evil -- because life is uncertain, managing is what "makes good" of life: a truth-value.
Much of philosophy is based on the search for how to live the good life, and there are various branches that are more or less concerned with that, but once again I don't recognise your categories.
I implicate aphilosophy ironically from both orientations upon philsophy. If one is oriented in the philsophy of methodology, the philosphy that asserts a proper way to manage against the certainty of death, then 'aphosophy' could appear as its anthithesis: just observe without thinking. But it could also be that this former philsophy is not philsophy but 'aphilosophy. If one sees methodological philosophy as mere technology, then philsophy becomes the proper term of itself, and the technology becomes 'aphilosophy'.
The a- prefix doe not imply and antithesis, that would be antiphilosphy. The a- prefix implies a lack of philosophy. Say if Typist were asexual he or she would have no interest in sex; being an aphilospher would indicate not an anti-philosphy, but an absence of it. This might involve thinking, as philosophy and thinking are not the same things. But the idea you can 'just observe without thinking', is an amusing idea but you might as well say you can live without breathing, or have ears without hearing. You can shut your eyes and not see, but breathing, thinking and hearing is not an option. I think even Typist thinks sometimes.
ahh thank you for that 'a-' - point taken, but I dont think i changes my meaning
CHAZ:And in the following paragraph who is 'we'. Would that be you and the queen?
A:"We" would be those who are involved in the investigation proposed in the essay; Me, the author, and those who are reading the essay and likewise participating in the journey of understanding.
Sounds like the Royal 'we', if you know what I mean. You seek to include others as if what you are saying is unproblematic.
CHAZ:And how do you justify this howling non sequitur? ;"To assert that something philosophical is novel is to assert the certainty of death, which then provokes the individual against it, and to promote a proper way to live."
A:I believe I just addressed that above. Do you understand that philosophy offers nothing new? or do you think it is always coming up with new ideas?
As there was once a time when there were no humans, then it is the case that because the only philosophers are human, then everything said by a philosopher was at one time NEW.
Additionally, as I do not know everything that has ever been said by philosophy, and I am not likely to have read every word of it before I die, then for me (and most mortals), there is always something that is new to me in philosophy. When I conclude that there is nothing new , then I have given up on my life, or am pretending that I know all there is to know - which is bollocks. So to pretend that there si nothing novel about the contents of philosophy is bollocks.
None of which addresses your point; in fact it is the complete converse of it, as I have indicated that death is the only time I might consider that there is nothing new in philosophy.
"To assert that something philosophical is novel is to assert the certainty of death" seems like gibberish to me. Please explain what you mean! THen you can explain what you mean by what follows it - if you can.
it follows from my premises. If death is certain, in my uncertan life I attmept to come up with philosophy to inform me how I might negotiate experiences in life that remind me of that death is certain, such as expereinces that bring fear and anger. Thus such philosophy that aims at a strategy of negotiating such uncertainty of life, is reall against death: a philosophy of death.
I see now how impenetrable faith in the object is. The probelm in this essay is that most are invested in the truth of the object.
This is odd too;"...philosophy cannot teach us how to live without denying another their right to live
–even with our best intension"
Ethics always includes and excludes; it always denies another's right to live by asserting THE proper way to live, THE proper way to manage life against the certainty of death, which is implicated at ever turn in the uncertain life. It implicates the prioritized group who is correct, and the powerful group that will make all others come into thier group and agree with thier proper truth.
No idea what you are trying to get at here![/quote]
Nope - sorry but this is simply not true. Please state a philosophical scheme that does this and we can discuss what you mean.
No one is saying that the 'proper way to live manages against the certainty of death except the religious, unless you mean something else by it.
every time I assert a truth I am asserting a truth-value: an ethics that proposes that someone else is wrong.
I wonder if there is anyone who really understands what philsophy Has been aiming at.
Do you now? If you do, do you agree or disagree?
Anyone else have a take on what aphilosophy may be? [/quote]
I think you need to back up your claims about philosophy with the mention of specific philosophies, or specific philosophers.
I no expert in philosophy but I have studied quite a few; Plato , Aristotle, Epicurus, Hobbes, Spinoza, Hume, Darwin, Newton, Galileo, Russell - to be able to blag my way, but I simply do not recognise your understanding of what philosophy is.[/quote]
Tell me how you are not oriented upon the truth of the object? or, do you know what this means? What is ethics? have you come to understand what this means?
Here is a link:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/62621120/A-Philosophy
So now im gonna get back to what may be aphilosophy, and address Chaz here, finally:
BTW: Chaz this is just the type of feedback I like: an appeal to clarify terms.
But I would ask if you have read the essay or just looked for a problematic statement. Next I would ask if you understand what Im saying, then if you agree or disagree with what Im saying.
CHAZ: What do you mean by ' Death is understood within as ‘unethical’ arena; death is anti
-human, it works against the efforts of what it is to be human: death is evil."?
A:if you have read the essay - I have attempted to distinguish between what I see as two different types of philosophy: methodological or technical, which I suggest is a defective philsophy, based in the certainty of death and the uncertainty of life;
Okay - you may well be familiar with the term strawman. You seemed to have devised a chimera - a philosophy that does just not exist, in order to satisfy the twin pillars of your argument. I don't know any branch of philosophy that I recognise with this description. No one is basing their philosophical position on the certainty of death etc...
and philosophy proper which teaches one how to die, for life is certain, death uncertain. I have implicated that ethics lay in the former form and that this ethics is an ethics of managing against death: death as the "anti-ethical" arena which informs the methodoloigcal form of our "ethical", which is to conclude that we manage against the certainty of death because it exists as the epitome of evil -- because life is uncertain, managing is what "makes good" of life: a truth-value.
Much of philosophy is based on the search for how to live the good life, and there are various branches that are more or less concerned with that, but once again I don't recognise your categories.
I implicate aphilosophy ironically from both orientations upon philsophy. If one is oriented in the philsophy of methodology, the philosphy that asserts a proper way to manage against the certainty of death, then 'aphosophy' could appear as its anthithesis: just observe without thinking. But it could also be that this former philsophy is not philsophy but 'aphilosophy. If one sees methodological philosophy as mere technology, then philsophy becomes the proper term of itself, and the technology becomes 'aphilosophy'.
The a- prefix doe not imply and antithesis, that would be antiphilosphy. The a- prefix implies a lack of philosophy. Say if Typist were asexual he or she would have no interest in sex; being an aphilospher would indicate not an anti-philosphy, but an absence of it. This might involve thinking, as philosophy and thinking are not the same things. But the idea you can 'just observe without thinking', is an amusing idea but you might as well say you can live without breathing, or have ears without hearing. You can shut your eyes and not see, but breathing, thinking and hearing is not an option. I think even Typist thinks sometimes.
ahh thank you for that 'a-' - point taken, but I dont think i changes my meaning
CHAZ:And in the following paragraph who is 'we'. Would that be you and the queen?
A:"We" would be those who are involved in the investigation proposed in the essay; Me, the author, and those who are reading the essay and likewise participating in the journey of understanding.
Sounds like the Royal 'we', if you know what I mean. You seek to include others as if what you are saying is unproblematic.
CHAZ:And how do you justify this howling non sequitur? ;"To assert that something philosophical is novel is to assert the certainty of death, which then provokes the individual against it, and to promote a proper way to live."
A:I believe I just addressed that above. Do you understand that philosophy offers nothing new? or do you think it is always coming up with new ideas?
As there was once a time when there were no humans, then it is the case that because the only philosophers are human, then everything said by a philosopher was at one time NEW.
Additionally, as I do not know everything that has ever been said by philosophy, and I am not likely to have read every word of it before I die, then for me (and most mortals), there is always something that is new to me in philosophy. When I conclude that there is nothing new , then I have given up on my life, or am pretending that I know all there is to know - which is bollocks. So to pretend that there si nothing novel about the contents of philosophy is bollocks.
None of which addresses your point; in fact it is the complete converse of it, as I have indicated that death is the only time I might consider that there is nothing new in philosophy.
"To assert that something philosophical is novel is to assert the certainty of death" seems like gibberish to me. Please explain what you mean! THen you can explain what you mean by what follows it - if you can.
it follows from my premises. If death is certain, in my uncertan life I attmept to come up with philosophy to inform me how I might negotiate experiences in life that remind me of that death is certain, such as expereinces that bring fear and anger. Thus such philosophy that aims at a strategy of negotiating such uncertainty of life, is reall against death: a philosophy of death.
I see now how impenetrable faith in the object is. The probelm in this essay is that most are invested in the truth of the object.
This is odd too;"...philosophy cannot teach us how to live without denying another their right to live
–even with our best intension"
Ethics always includes and excludes; it always denies another's right to live by asserting THE proper way to live, THE proper way to manage life against the certainty of death, which is implicated at ever turn in the uncertain life. It implicates the prioritized group who is correct, and the powerful group that will make all others come into thier group and agree with thier proper truth.
No idea what you are trying to get at here![/quote]
Nope - sorry but this is simply not true. Please state a philosophical scheme that does this and we can discuss what you mean.
No one is saying that the 'proper way to live manages against the certainty of death except the religious, unless you mean something else by it.
every time I assert a truth I am asserting a truth-value: an ethics that proposes that someone else is wrong.
I wonder if there is anyone who really understands what philsophy Has been aiming at.
Do you now? If you do, do you agree or disagree?
Anyone else have a take on what aphilosophy may be? [/quote]
I think you need to back up your claims about philosophy with the mention of specific philosophies, or specific philosophers.
I no expert in philosophy but I have studied quite a few; Plato , Aristotle, Epicurus, Hobbes, Spinoza, Hume, Darwin, Newton, Galileo, Russell - to be able to blag my way, but I simply do not recognise your understanding of what philosophy is.[/quote]
Tell me how you are not oriented upon the truth of the object? or, do you know what this means? What is ethics? have you come to understand what this means?
