| |||||||||||
| |||||||
| Important Notice |
| Uncategorized Philosophy branches often overlap making it difficult sometimes to fit it into the proper category. If this is the case, post in this forum. |
![]() |
| | | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| |||||
| Quote:
![]() That is a real father thing, be glad your old man is concerned enough to protest. In my opinion he is a least partly right, it is something you should be worried about, making a decent living once you leave your father home is important, BIG TIME!! Perhaps you could get involve in something which seems likely to teach you somethng marketable--that might help! Also if you told him philosophy is a way to keep the wheels turning, that when he is a little older he should consider it himself. In ones senior years something like this could ward off dementia. It is however dangerous to give advice, sometimes it can be quite damaging. So whatever you decide, practise, examine it to make sure it does not offend and it is not disrespectful, practise it again, then talk to your father about it. Good Luck!!
|
| |||||
| Quote:
Last edited by Holiday20310401; 06-07-2008 at 09:43 PM. Reason: add some words |
| |||||
| Quote:
![]() Your reason is an excellent one, tell him even if you are a working man you would still like to have an intellectual life. There are a number of kinds of poverty, the one most people seem to worry most about is financial, another is emotional poverty, spiritual poverty and intellectual poverty, ideally you would not like to be poor in any of the above catagories. Sometimes, if you are born into a working class family as I was, there just is little to no intellectual life. Perhaps the people that surround you are of a like nature, that makes for a difficult time. If you wish an intellectual life, know that your context tends to define you, you must, if this is something you want for yourself, be aware, and so guarded, about letting your context define you.-------hope it is of some help!! |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - boagie for the above post! | ||
| |||||
|
Looks like your father is expressing his own philosophy in regards to discussing philosophy. The working man, the burger flipper, the doctor, the lawyer and everyone else in this entire world has a philosophy including your father. Discussing philosophy with others is a great thing because in our physical world we don't have enough people around us who care to discuss philosophy. They'd rather discuss BS. As you go through life you will develop your own philosophy which you will carry with you through your job and throughout your entire life. It's your philosophy that will shine through in all that you do and your philosophy that will give you purpose and understanding. It's an attribute to desire to understand more. My parents don't like my discussing philosophy either. They'd rather me discuss how Jesus saves and show up at church on Sunday and believe in what they believe. However, there are those that can walk through life never questioning reality and truth and just go along with the flow and then there are those that desire more and there's absolutely nothing wrong with it. Keep it up. The seed of desire is within you and that's a great thing. So next time your father says something like that, ask him if that's his philosophy on it? Maybe you could ask him what his own philosophy is on getting a good job or building a career. He also has a philosophy but maybe he calls it something different.
__________________ "By a divine paradox, wherever there is one slave there are two. So in the wonderful reciprocities of being, we can never reach the higher levels until all our fellows ascend with us." - Edwin Markham |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Justin for the above post! | ||
| ||||
| Re: Why Philosophy?
I'm very much afraid Justin that your Dad is right. Philosophy in the real world is pointless. You go to the academic philosophers and they act abstract question that has been ask over and over again, answered over and over again, commented over and over again. You can read billion of pages of treatises and it will amount to the same original question. How about street philosophy? the philosophy of the masses, about lifeview? Well your dad must have this too... Action and Praxis, lifeview, intentions, actions. Ideas + Work. One can not act with out a set of moral view. How to view the world? If its all about money, you can just rob a bank to gain some. If its about sex, then go rape some. If its about power, go play online (hehehe). But we don't act in that way (at least the majority of we) . Tell our dad why? I don't think anybody can call that question pointless. Plato ask that same question in his Republic. |
| ||||
| Re: Why Philosophy? Would you give the same advice on your deathbed? Would you tell the future generations to focus on what we currently consider to be important?
|
| |||||
| Re: Why Philosophy?
Holiday Philosophy is important in one way, but in other ways it's useless. Philosophy is discussing your ideas and perspectives with other people, hopefully reaching something that's a universal truth although in 99 out of 100 cases we get nowhere. Philosophy is the action of questioning something around you or within you to reach some kind of knowledge about what ever the subject might be, that's why it's important for us. But on the other hand, to know why things are the way they are doesn't change them, they are still the way they are. So yes, it's kind of useless if you don't value knowledge as something worth persuiting. For me personally, I don't know any other way besides philosophy, I can't imagien myself not wanting to know why things are the why they are. Teachers have hated me for questioning every little thing in their class (like in early math classes I asked why Pi where ~3.14 and how they came to that number, the teacher couldn't tell me and got annoyed with me because of it). I don't know how you can explain to your father why you want to do it as it's a personal reason. But if it where me, I would ask him when he stoped questioning things around him and why, because nomather how you look at it, you should always question everything. Hope I helped a little atleast!
__________________ "When men are pure, laws are useless; when men are corrupt, laws are broken." - Benjamin Disraeli http://www.wizzyofsweden.com |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Wizzy for the above post! | ||
| |||||
| Re: Why Philosophy?
The study of philosophy is far from pointless; far from worthless - even in practical form. Of what worth is, through study, understanding yourself and forming a perspective of all questions big and small? I sense that the critisisms here seem to center around some of the more ambiguous and lofty questions philosphy can conjure. But what of ethics? What of the appreciation of beauty? Who here can deny the absolute and practical worth of having a clear understanding of how knowledge is gained? My gosh... Studying many of the five branches of philosphy gently changes the focus of the mind towards a more focused approach to life; decision making is sharpened, critical thinking is empowered, appreciation of what one has deemed right and wrong is enriched. Holy tamales... I think it beyond questioning that only the most unenlightened person whose skimmed barely the basics of philosophy would see it as pointless. It is the way we empower our minds - how can this *not* lead to a fuller, more successful life? In every thread of thought, every question we answer (big and small) it makes its way. No, it's not pointless - not by any definition. |
| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Khethil For This Useful Post: | ||
| |||||
| Re: Why Philosophy?
No need for me to restate the defenses of philosophy. But I will say your father is probably right about metaphysics. |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Philosophy of politics as a subcategory of philosophy of ethics. | diamantis | Ethics | 0 | 08-07-2008 05:49 AM |