See my comments in BF,  below
Billy
 
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message dated 9/2/2011 9:08:15 P.M. Pacific  Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes:

Random thing I was thinking about:

In the era  of Plato and Aristotle, philosophy encompassed (among its
many topics)  rhetoric, law, aesthetics, psychology, the natural
sciences and  mathematics.  Philosophers were the learned individuals
in society who  genuinely loved knowledge.  With the maturation  and
professionalization of the sciences, philosophy has  increasingly
splintered itself away into a husk containing mostly  metaphysics and
an obsession with word definitions and symbols.  With  Pragmatism's
rejection of even metaphysical vagueries and Karl Popper's  objection
to the infinite definition dilemma toward the beginning and  middle of
the 20th century, philosophy became the discipline of  nothing.  This
discipline became a series of rules of action, as if  mankind was to
descend into a land of automatons, reacting in predictable  patterns to
predictable stimuli.  Naturally, the existentialists  decided to one-up
the pragmatists by removing even rules, and entirely  disconnect
philosophy from objective reality.


I think you are making a connection that  isn't there. Existentialists
were disconnected from objective  reality ? ? ?  Who do you consider
to have been Existentialists  ?  In my book, actually in the books of 
classes
I took in the subject as a  philosophy many years ago, the list includes
Kierkegaard, Camus, Sartre,  Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, etc, and not just
theoreticians like Heidegger and,  to a lesser extent, Jaspers.
 
For K, C, S, N, and D, how on  earth can anyone say they were disconnected
from reality ? Well,   Nietzsche in his last few years, but otherwise ?
 
There were  other philosophies that also were anything but disconnected 
from  reality,
like Futurism /  Futurismo.  Plus, still current, Philosophy of History. 
Yes,  this
is an entire  field with a rather extensive literature. And, of course,  
there
is Philosophy  of Religion, Philosophy of Science, and specialities  like
Buddhist  Philosophy ( I had an independent studies course in the subject  
).


Are we to say that philosophy is now solely the exploration  of
logically consistent viewpoints of life?  Is it the glue that  holds
everything together?  If so, how can a modern individual call  him/
herself a "philosopher" without attempting to reclaim science  and
seeking to understand everything?  Can a  philosopher legitimately be
crappy at math and science and still claim some  level of philosophical
legitimacy?



 
Your point about science is well  taken.  I'm not so sure about math, 
however.
OK, you need some math, and the  more the better, at least usually.
But I have some real doubts.  

A friend recently became a doctor  of forestry. To reach his goal he needed
to take a series of classes in  higher math. But what in the world for ?
He would have been far better off  with other classes, seems to me,
in geography, history of public  forests, and even such things as
communications as it relates to  getting the message out to
others via advertising, film, TV,  and etc.
 
Forestry isn't philosophy but the  same principle applies.
Which does a philosopher need  more ?  OK, it depends on the kind
of philosophy, but for most  kinds it would make far better sense to
take classes in marketing  strategies, or game theory, or literature.
 
If philosophy loses the study of logic to professionalization, I  think
continued philosophy is as good as dead.  Honestly, what else is  left
for philosophy?



Seems to me that we need a philosophy of  Radical Centrism. Not sure exactly
what this would comprise, but it  would necessarily include systems theory,
social psychology or equivalents,  political philosophy, and so forth,
 
 
 
 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group:  http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and  blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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