Mole
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- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 20,282
I suppose I was thinking of the idea that everyone is, at some level, a philsopher.
Most of us are anti-philosophers.
I suppose I was thinking of the idea that everyone is, at some level, a philsopher.
Other than a declaration by you that being rejected and marginalized is a requirement for being a philosopher, what basis do we have for such dichotomies?
That was a masterful removal of context.
one of my main goals in life is to be firm in what i believe and to make my actions consistent with it.
Quite so.
And the followers of King Arthur are following in the footsteps of the good people of Athens who put our first philosopher, Socrates, to death.
And this is our tragedy, as the best of Western culture stems from Socrates.
This must surely be a misconception. Socrates tried to bring about the end of civilization by advocating for a dictatorship of philosophers along the lines of Brave New World. Fortunately he and his disciple Plato were prevented from gaining power.
God forbid that I should contradict the Lion King, but I believe it was Plato's Republic that talked about philosopher kings; on the other hand Socrates did not seek power, rather he taught us how to think.
But using the slippery slope argument I can demonstrate that the corruption of Socrates' methods of thinking led to the ultimate corruption of Plato.
Using a valid argument, I can demonstrate that Plato and Socrates' philosophies cannot be distinguished because Plato doctored all of the publications. Because Socrates never wrote anything down.
Using an ad hominem argument, I can demonstrate that Socrates married an underage girl when he was an old man just to have kids.
These three prove my point irrefutably.
I admit you are very difficult to refute.
Is philosophy relevant to actions?
I love a nice long philosophical thread as much as the next guy.
However, I've often wondered about the interaction between philosophical ideas and real world actions.
For a while I took the position that there is no interaction. Needless to say, I got refuted. Clearly there can be interaction, and sometimes very important real world consequences occur as a result of philosophy.
However, how common is this in the judgment of this forum's readers? I tend to think it is minimal, but I'm basing that off of my personal experience. It would be useful to know what others think.
I think this might be circular logic, but I was thinking that a philosophy, no matter how grand or mundane, informs the actions and if it didn't, then it wasn't a philosophy to that person in the first place.
YES! Logic does that for a person.![]()
I answer on the basis of my own personal experience too, philosophy as I understand it is vital to my own decision making and my own life.
Religion and philosophy are the mainstays of my beliefs, I treat a lot of the other important theories which furnish me with knowledge and skills as emanations or reflections in one way or another of religion and philosophy in some shape or guise.
Its not logic, its not difficult to refute.
Its just Schaupenour's skilful argumentation, it is a parlour game, it does not serve truth, it only serves those engaging in debate as a contest or sport.
It is the same as the Sophists and Sophistry of Socrates and Plato's day which they challenged.