Yeah, those are the guys. Existentialists belong to that class also.

I recently started a full reading of the Western canon. I figure a
chronological reading of all the formative texts in the Western
culture will give me a better understanding of how our understanding
of the world developed as it did. I finished Homer and Aeschylus, and
I'm currently on Sophocles. Descartes, Leibniz, and Spinoza are on
most encompassing lists, as are Sartre and Neitzche, so I'm expecting
to learn something by reading the formative works that existed in the
same or immediately prior timeframe. Hard to decide whether the
rationalists were pushing religious apologetics or if they were forced
by the church to develop their worldview as they did.

(Anyway, I find it all to be crap, as Descartes' formative claim,
"cogito ergo sum" is false. If you've already eliminated every
experience and object from consideration, then there are no ideas or
concepts to think of, resulting in no thought.)

So far, I'd heavily recommend reading Aeschylus' Promethius Bound.
Mythological, yes, but definitely gives you an idea of the
appreciation that the Greeks had for technological advancement. I wish
Americans would appreciate tech advancement, instead of shunning the
resulting interconnectedness. The Greeks would have killed for our
leisure.

On Sep 4, 5:42 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> Mike :
> Guess this is  what you are talking about--
>
> PHIL 13: Modern Philosophy:  Continental Rationalism
>
> A study of early modern philosophy in the  Continental rationalist
> tradition of the seventeenth and early eighteenth  centuries. Focus is on the 
> major
> works of Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz, with  some attention to responses
> from their contemporaries (e.g., Arnauld, Gassendi,  Mersenne). Central
> themes include substance, matter, mind, the laws of nature,  space and time, 
> God,
> truth, necessity and contingency.  DARTMOUTH
>
> ( Presumably this course gets into modern day  interpreters of this
> philosophy )
>
> -----
>
> Hmmm. Tell you the truth, I have not paid  much attention to this school of
> thought since studying
> Des Cartes quite a few years ago. Would be  a good idea to get into Spinoza
> and Leibniz, but
> this has never been a high priority.  Still, to construct a new philosophy,
> "Radical Centrist Realism"
> we might call it, at some point it would  be a good idea to revisit the
> rationalists. Why, after all,
> are our working assumptions valid and the  political assumptions of our
> competitors
> not valid ? If we recommend political  policy, what truth tests are crucial
> in formulating
> such policy ? And so forth.
>
> Who more interests me these days is Hume,  however, for all kinds of
> reasons. I have
> been collecting materials toward a study  of his philosophy and have a
> pretty decent
> file now. I'm especially interested in his  utopian political system since,
> after all, if we cannot
> know  --with certainty--  that  the realm of experience allows prediction,
> then on
> what basis can a "Good" political society  be constructed ?  And much else
> that
> follows from the whole Humean  outlook.
>
> Billy
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> message dated 9/4/2011 2:16:48 P.M.  Pacific Daylight Time,
>
> [email protected] writes:
>
> My response to your points about math and  existentialism are the same:
> there's an unaccountable aspect to continental  rationalism that comes
> forth every few years. To combat it requires  knowledge of logic and
> mathematics, as the philosophical systems eschew  empiricism in favor
> of an internal consistency.
>
> Then again,  rationalism vs. empiricism ends up being a personal
> preference. It is  unsettling how accurately mathematics can address
> how things  work.
>
> On Sep 3, 2:29 am, [email protected] wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > See my  comments in BF,  below
> > Billy
>
> >  ------------------------------------------------------------
>
> >  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

-- 
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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