What do these questions have in common?
Are humans selfish?
Are sciences objective? Is philosophy subjective?
Does free will exist or is it an illusion?
I believe a big part of philosophical research is making categories, so I wanted to see what people who are at least a bit interested in philosophy (therefore on this forum) would intuitively have in mind when they read these questions.
Update:
Another question that has the same common link with the first four is : "Are humans big in size?"
Are sciences objective? Is philosophy subjective?
Does free will exist or is it an illusion?
I believe a big part of philosophical research is making categories, so I wanted to see what people who are at least a bit interested in philosophy (therefore on this forum) would intuitively have in mind when they read these questions.
Update:
Another question that has the same common link with the first four is : "Are humans big in size?"
Comments (32)
Aren't all philosophical topics anthropocentric?
:up:
Quoting Skalidris
In my opinion, yes, but you simply asked for opinions of what was common about the questions you posed in the OP. Anthropocentric was the first commonality between them that came to mind.
I have read Carl Sagan's, list of the great demotions many times so anthropocentrism is something that should always warn the human race to remain humble as we stumble our way towards any kind of absolute truth about any aspect of the universe.
:smile:
I will go with @universeness: They are all anthropocentric questions.
Yet, I can't see the prupose of this topic. It could just be part of a quiz of a philosophy or even psychology college class.
In the implicit meaning the questions give to these terms.
Sorry, I didn't mean to play the teacher, and I'm not expecting an academic answer, I'm just trying to understand the intuition behind philosophical concepts.
To be more clear, to me they all lead to the same problem once they're debated, even if the terms are clarified.
Stiil, I can't see any considerable philosophical intuition or experience required to see what these questions have in common.
But anyway, it's not important. My comment was rather a useless critique from my part. My bad. Sorry.
By stipulating “philosophical research” sufficient to answer the questions, isn’t an academic answer implied?
Quoting Skalidris
What problem? Sans debate, the problem doesn’t arise?
Those “a little bit interested” can offer opinion. Is that enough?
Selfishness is an individualistic trait, objectivity is against the individual perspective (hence Rands new revolutionary Objectivism), subjectivism is the individual perspective, free will is a question has a lot to do with individual agency
These questions seem to be looking for answers/certainty founded on some kind of metaphysical objectivity, which as far as I am aware is not possible. There are specialist communities in philosophy or science which would have available narratives or 'answers' to such questions for us to consider if we are capable of understanding the complexity of their theorised positions.
From a personal perspective what these questions have in common is that their answers make no discernible difference to how I live my life.
1. Ethics: (human) selfishness
2. Epistemology: science, philosophy and their objectivity/subjectivity
3. Metaphysics (ontology): free will, exists/illusory
Components of philosophy that are missing:
4. Logic
5. Aesthetics
Buddhism is agnostic (skepticism) about everything, preferring to remain uncommitted, no taking sides in a debate + Buddhism makes it a point to keep metaphysics at a bare minimum to prop up its ethics (karma, hadta but God, no comment).
Eureka! What ties these 4 questions together is religion.
My post is typical of knowledge without praxis.
I sense a disturbance in the Force. :snicker:
They read like exam questions. Vague and general, to give candidates the challenge of clarifying and explaining.
Do animals have rights?
What is truth?
Causes and co-incidences - what is the difference, if any?
Is democracy important and, if so, why?
And:
Did you know that after your philosophy degree you will spend the rest of your life making powerpoint slides to explain why previously optimistic forecasts should be revised downwards? If so, how?
Yes, how does it lack logic? What makes these questions illogical?
Quoting Mww
Are all philosophers doing research in academia? I don't think so.
Quoting Mww
Enough? What do you mean?
Quoting Tom Storm
Yes. So what would you ask if you want to know more about the "selfish/selfless nature" of a human being?
Quoting Cuthbert
They're more than vague, don't you think they would mislead the students?
Well, a question specific to justification would've been nice. For example, what evidence do we have for ... ?
If they are misled, then their answers will not be so good. The better they get at clarifying and explaining, the better their answers. I get one point for noting that the question is misleading and vague. Then I get more points for showing how and why it's misleading, what clearer questions are relevant and how to go about answering them. That's why it's easy to set exam questions but hard to evaluate the answers.
I would be unlikely to be asking this kind of question in the first place. I don't find terms like selfish or selfless particularly useful.
What evidence do we have to demonstrate that humans are selfish? I still think the question emerges from an illogical reasoning in the first place.
Yeah okay, maybe it's useful in the educational system as it is now...
Post update
What if the fifth question is : "Are humans big in size?"
Still no obvious common problem?
The answers to your questions can be opinions. No logic involved and hence to broach the topic of logic, a question that's specific to justification needs to be asked.
Yes. We know this because when we see humans from the top of a high tower we are amazed at how small they look. If humans were actually small then we would not be surprised that they look small. We don't view bees from a long way off and marvel at how small they appear, for example. Bees are already small and we know it.
I wrote the last para a few days ago and now realise that there are many counter-examples. We all know the Mona Lisa is small. It's still surprising when you see how small it is.
So I'm struggling with the question whether humans are big, in particular whether they are big in size. They are definitely big in other ways: they have had a big influence on my life and I suspect that if it were not for human beings then I might not exist at all.
Physically, we're somewhere at the bottom; mentally, we top the list.
Maybe so. But that makes it paradoxical that the planet would be in a better state for life if we'd left the decisions to the less intelligent creatures.
Aye, it is so! There's this awkward phase in life - adolescence it's called - everyone goes through. That be my best defense for intelligence.
A good observation mon ami!
There's this Wikipedia article on randomness that claims that true randomness is, get this, impossible. There's always a pattern and our job as inquisitve apes is to find it and collect our dopamine reward. :snicker:
Wait...What? You're actually debating it? It's ironic, right?
Quoting Agent Smith
Thank you! You directly put it on a scale because you know that "big/small" doesn't give much information. It's the same with the other questions, they implicitly drive people to debate it as if it was 2 separate concepts rather than a scale.
A better way to ask the question would be "How tall is the average human?" or "How tall are humans compared to other species on earth?".
But, for some reasons, when people ask these questions :
Are humans selfish?
Are sciences objective? Is philosophy subjective?
Does free will exist or is it an illusion?
They debate 2 positions instead of creating a scale. Even if we define what "selfish" means, having the answer "yes or no" isn't very informative. Aristotle made a separation of self-love (philautia) into people who love themselves and act morally and those who love themselves and act immorally. In that sense we're all "selfish", we're all focused on ourselves, our needs, but the difference is that some people's need include making others happy, and for other people, it does not as much, so that makes them more selfish. I don't think the question "are we focused on our own needs?" is very interesting, to me it's kind of obvious that we are. In the end we do what we do for a reward, which is the good feelings, whether it's triggered by making others feel good or not. But what's more interesting is to study how our needs include caring about others, and how it varies from people to people.
I don't understand why philosophy is so binary. Why they like to take two opposite concepts and prove they both have problems instead of creating one in between... Like Rationalism vs. Empiricism for example.
Not ironic. Merely skittish. It was good enough for Plato.
I propose we call it Transcendental Idealism - reconciling reason and experience.
If you want my opinion, I'd say contraries can be resolved usin' the via media approach; with contradictories, it's impossible and a choice hasta be made, between mind and heart - the former accepts only sense and the latter yearns for peace. Looks like we can't have 'em both since one's the negation of the other.
Perhaps it's a lack of imagination on [s]our[/s] my part! As they say where there is a will, there is a way. We could enjoy the best of both worlds, but as soon as we realize everything has pros and cons we're faced with Protagorian-style counterdilemmas.
The Buddha's madhyamaka is, it appears, not to affirm both sides on an issue, but to deny both. The middle then is actually not in the middle like it is in fuzzy logic where different degrees of truth & falsehood exist on a scale/spectrum, but in some place which is, at present, beyond my event horizon. Suffice it to say that I'm utterly bewildered (aporia). That'a all she wrote.