Chapter 1 Notes:
What
Actually IS Philosophy?
-Study of
Thought.
-Broadly the study of the “nature of knowledge”, reality, existence,
reason, values, beauty,
time, causation, language, government.
-Specifically could be the study of the above as applied to anything –
i.e. – the philosophy of
Science, history, or business
…………. Or bowling, hunting, or quilting.
-May or may not be done as an academic discipline.
-Academic
Philosophy: As a university discipline.
i.e. Hegal and Russell
-Practical everyday
philosophy: The art of applying
philosophical skills to normal
Problems
-Career Philosophers
other than professors: Lawyers,
journalists, writers, artists
-Growing need for
critical thinking in 21st century.
Millennials are wanting this
and employers are
needing this.
:20th Here’s the job, do it.
:21st Here’s what we want, create it.
-Critical
Attitude – one of Questioning.
-Seeking
Truth: Can be Skeptical, yet
Open-Minded.
-Having “Rational Disinteredness”. A good referee has this. A bad referee gets sucked into the game.
Philosophy and being Practical.
-See All Options to a problem, not just what society has conditioned you
to see.
-Think outside the Box, but in a structured way.
-Questions absolutely everything, but in a respectful way.
-To see the Other Perspectives and Other People’s Perspectives.
-A Key to understand how other people might think.
-A Key to understand what might be motivating someone or someone’s
actions.
-It is possible to see philosophy in almost everything.
-It helps you to try to see it through the eye of the critic, regardless
of how basic they might
seem, or how irrational they might seem.
The ability to question, reason, negotiate,
pass rational, logical mostly non-emotional judgment, and to continuously weigh
options pays big bucks and is in large demand.
-There is no
mystical value to philosophy, but it can be therapeutically good for a person.
-Philosophy
“can” help a person to rise above his/her own cultural bias/acceptance.
-Values and one’s philosophy are
connected. Thought and action are
connected.
-It is possible for an entire
culture to develop a philosophy that is generally not
acceptable.
: Nazi Germany
: American Slavery
-Philosophy
can help a person understand that everyone has bias to a degree, some more than
others.
-Author
suggests Philosophy is practical for understanding assimilation of current skills needed for the times we live in.
-Oracle of
Delphi: Know Thyself.
Philosophy’s Body of Knowledge
-Philosophy has a body of
knowledge like any other academic discipline such as math,
chemistry, or history.
-As there are different
perspectives in the disciplines, there are also different perspectives in
philosophy, and it’s always
changing. Example in nutrition: Eggs have too much saturated
fat and should not be eaten or eggs have Omega
Fats, which the body needs, and should be eaten. Example in Philosophy: All knowledge must be rational and come from
a-priori principles (Descartes), or there are no a-priori principles therefore
all Knowledge must be based on experience, and therefore the most we can hope
for is a feeling of what might be true (Hume).
-Some argue that philosophy was
the first body of knowledge.
-Philosophy’s
Body of Knowledge is sometimes cultural:
-Western Philosophy: Based on Greeks and Romans.
-Eastern Philosophy: Based on Eastern
Culture and Eastern Religions.
-Postmodern:
Denies that there is a body of knowledge to philosophy.
-Philosophy’s
Body of Knowledge has various directions that have similar themes:
-Purpose: Metaphysics
-Knowledge: Epistemology
-Right and Wrong: Ethics
-Making Sense: Logic
-Beauty: Aesthetics
-Each of
these themes have various dimensions, and can then have depth from that
dimension – or a “body of knowledge within the body of knowledge”. Example:
Calculus requires an understanding of Trigonometry which is related to
Mathematics. Logical Positivism requires
an understanding of Empiricism, which is related to Philosophy.
-Philosophy
has basic “themes” that are “perennial” (come back again and again)
-Is human action pre-determined or not, or both and to what degree? (A metaphysical
-Is human action pre-determined or not, or both and to what degree? (A metaphysical
argument)
-Is knowledge based on known
truths and rationalized from there, or do we experience
all knowledge? (An
epistemological argument)
-What is good conduct and how
should we therefore live? (Ethical)
-Is human purpose to: Have Fun, be dutiful, be kind, all of the
above or none of the
above? (Metaphysical)
-Philosophy DOES have an element of religion, but is it one of many
elements.
-What is beauty, and is there
such a thing as pure beauty? (Aesthetic)
-What is “good” What is “just”
What is “truth”? (Aesthetic and Metaphysical)
-What is our responsibility, if
any, to the state?
Main Veins of Philosophy:
Metaphysics
Epistemology
Ethics
Aesthetics
Logic
Other Large Commonly Studies Veins: In these veins of the body of knowledge of
philosophy, they are all actually elements of one or all of the above:
Political Philosophy: What is government?
What should be the role of government?
Is there a better or best government?
Philosophy of History: What is
history? Is it what really happened or
what we wanted it to be? Is history
actually journalism? Is there history or
are there “histories”? If there are only
“histories, then is there really “history”?
Philosophy of Science: What is
science? What qualifies something as
being scientific? What is the scientific method, and who says that is the right
method?
Philosophy of Education: What is education? What is the purpose of education?
Philosophy of Bias – phenomenology – the chance and degree that bias can
be eliminated.
Philosophy or Race, Religion, Culture, Liberalism, Conservatism
There are many other large categories commonly studied.
Minor Philosophies
Philosophy
of ________________ (You insert basically whatever you want)
Philosophy Based on Regions/Time
Frames/Religions:
Western Philosophy:
Eastern:
Ancient Egyptian:
Jewish:
40’s USA – United to defeat the one defined enemy
50’s USA – Prosperity - Conservatism
60’s USA - Rebellion to war/cultural revolution.
Philosophy based on Specific Philosophers/Leaders/Artists:
Plato
Aristotle
Kantian
Husseral/Ponty
- Phenomenology
Jeffersonian/Hamiltonian
Arguments
Marx/Adam
Smith Arguments
Whitman/Emerson/Thoreau
–(American Writers)
Dewey
(American Educator)
John Lennon
(Singer-Song Writer)
Senator
Grassley (Political)
Claude
Debussy (Musician)
Picasso
(Artist)
Traits of Most all Philosophy:
11 Love of Wisdom
22 Seeking Truth
33 Reason
44 Study of Thought
55 Critical Questioning
66 Open Mindedness
Greek Philosophers
Pre-Greek:
Island of Miletus (500 BC) – Discussions of what the Earth is made up of.
-Atomists: Anaximander, Pythagoras
-Zeno: Paradox of Movement
-Had arguments about infinity
and divisibility
Greeks
-All Greeks believed in fate and
the Devine.
-They had no mind-set of a life without purpose.
-Purpose, fate, and a spiritual dimension all existed a-priori without
question.
Socrates: (No real proof that he actually existed)
-The Socratic Method:
-The unexamined Life not worth
Living.
-Moderation
-Corruption of the Youth,
Sentences to death by his peer. Could
have escaped.
Plato:
-Student of Socrates.
-Wrote the
Dialogues.
-Started the
“academy” which was the first school.
-Practiced
deductive reasoning, which is going from large ideas to small details.
-Plato Believed
in the concept of “forms”
-Plato Believed
in the concept of a three dimensional person:
The Physical/Mental/Spiritual
-Plato Believed
in the “Divided Line” concept between physical world and spiritual world.
: Seen and unseen.
: Decay and non-decay.
Aristotle:
-Student of
Plato
-Later
started his own school “Lyceum”
-Practiced
inductive reasoning, which is going from small observations to large ideas.
: This turned into the concept
of “experimentation”
: Aristotle believed in probability
in experimentation.
: This turned into the
“Scientific Method” that we still use today.
-Aristotle
was an extreme classifier and labeler.
He invented the “Classification System” for animals.
-Aristotle
named many animals.
-Aristotle
rejected forms.
-Aristotle
believed that worrying about the unseen was a waste of time.
-Truth had to be seen and experienced and lived in the physical world.
-How we lived in the physical world matters – “ethics”.
Alexander (The Great):
-Student of
Aristotle
-Was not
actually Greek – was from Macedonia
-Became a
warrior, and conquered the known world.
-Spread
Greek Culture throughout the world – known as “Hellenistic Culture”.
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