Bertrand_Russell
Well-Known Member
Hi there, new to the forum, just popping by to see if anyone here is interested in philosophy ??
Thanks, Bert
Thanks, Bert
Hi there, new to the forum, just popping by to see if anyone here is interested in philosophy ??
Thanks, Bert
I am interested in whatever I find interesting.Hi there, new to the forum, just popping by to see if anyone here is interested in philosophy ??
Thanks, Bert
indeed, it is a double edged sword...with blades on the handle as well...Hi there, new to the forum, just popping by to see if anyone here is interested in philosophy ??
Thanks, Bert
I once asked a professor of philosophy "what is philosophy about" he answered "philosophy is about radically critical self-consciousness".
I am interested in whatever I find interesting.
indeed, it is a double edged sword...with blades on the handle as well...
Welcome to IO!
v/r
Q
So are ya channeling this philosophical mathematician?
If we are gonna get into denoting phrase you'll find a few here ready willing and able to keep up, but don't go to fast and lose us slower folks that are trying to follow. eg don't skip over anything you assume everyone should already know...as I don't.
and yeah....welkum.
Are you a pacifist socialist as well? How far does this go?
Do you think he hung out any with Linus Pauling?
So are ya channeling this philosophical mathematician?
If we are gonna get into denoting phrase you'll find a few here ready willing and able to keep up, but don't go to fast and lose us slower folks that are trying to follow. eg don't skip over anything you assume everyone should already know...as I don't.
and yeah....welkum.
Are you a pacifist socialist as well? How far does this go? Do you think he hung out any with Linus Pauling?
Bertrand Russell:
"I am just here to talk about the history of western philosophy."
Do you find Russian philosophy to be Western?
Coberst, you appear to be the local philosopher here. Who are your favorite philosophers ?
I like that operational definition.
western philosophy.
"The philosopher who is to be a guardian must, according to Plato, return into the cave, and live among those who have never seen the truth. It would seem that God Himself, if He wishes to amend His Creation, must do likewise; a Christian Platonist might so interpret the Incarnation. But it remains completely impossible to explain why God was not content with the world of ideas. The philosopher finds the cave in existance, and is actuated by benevolence in returning to it; but the Creator, if he created everything, might, one would think, have avoided the cave altogether".
Ref. - "A History of Western Philosophy", Bertrand Russell, Touchstone Publishers, page 130, 1945.
I am a retired engineer. I acquired an MA in philosophy along the way because I felt that my education left me as a hollow man. Also along the way I became a self-actualizing self-learner.
In my study of the works of the great minds of the past I discovered the works of George Lakoff.
er, so is that analytical, "Continental" or both??
and hi!
http://www.interfaith.org/forum/book-continental-philosophy-11830-4.html#post216403
Snoopy.
What if the benefit of enlightenment is always a better cave? If not, then what is the benefit? If someone is enlightened then they should be able to make life better or that enlightenment is no good, but in that case a better life leads to more contentment and less reason to pursue enlightenment. If on the other hand the benefit is not a better cave, then why bother?Bertrand Russell said:Can man move from ignorance to knowledge and then return to illuminate the other men ?
What if the benefit of enlightenment is always a better cave? ......
....If on the other hand the benefit is not a better cave, then why bother?
I find this passage quite powerful. It is not easily understood. What does Plato mean by “guardians’ , this is an important notion. Why would guardians have the motivation to return to the cave ? Why would the people feel that the guardian is “stupid” ? How can society recognize their guardians ?“This leads to the famous simile of the cave or den, according to which those who are destitute of philosophy may be compared to prisoners in a cave, who are only able to look in one direction because they are bound, and who have a fire behind them and a wall in front. Between them and the wall there is nothing; all that they see are shadows of themselves, and of objects behind them, cast on the wall by the light of the fire. Inevitably they regard these shadows as real, and have no notion of the objects to which they are due. At last some man succeeds in escaping from the cave to the light of the sun; for the first time he sees real things, and becomes aware that he had hitherto been deceived by shadows. If he is the sort of philosopher who is fit to become a guardian, he will feel it is his duty to those who were formerly his fellow-prisoners to go down again into the cave, instruct them as to the truth, and show them the way up. But he will have difficulty in persuading them, because coming out of the sunlight, he will see shadows less clearly than they do, and will seem to them stupider than before his escape”.
Reference – A History of Western Philosophy, p. 125.