Mike :
Sartre ?  OK, that makes some things clear.  My reading of him is spotty.
Best thing of his I have read is the short book called "Intimacy."   Much 
in it
that is REALLY SICK, however, the lesson in it is one of sensitization to  
reality,
in that case, raw sexuality. Or sexuality when morality breaks down.
 
What are human beings capable of doing ?  Some of it is downright  morbid.
All of it, nonetheless,deserves serious thought.
 
Think I've read about 3/4th of everything Nietzsche has written.But for me  
it
all boils down to Zarathustra. Also spotty as far as Kierkegaard goes,  and
parts are off the reservation for me  --he liked to pick petty  fights-- 
but when
he was on target he could nail it. And always made a connection to the  
Bible.
 
BTW, while there is no problem in using the word "centrism" as a short  form
for Radical Centrism, we aren't really centrists in the usual sense. Of  
course,
Ernie will parse things differently, and he has his own set of emphases,  
but
one way to look at it is maybe to call RC, "Extreme Centrism." Not in  the
sense that we demonstrate in the streets and blow up stuff, but in  that
we sometimes combine positions that in all conventional contexts are
diametric opposites. To use my example, on a number of moral issues
I am not much different than your average Baptist. However, when  it
comes to stem cell research and evolution, my views are solidly Left  wing.
 
These are not halfway compromises in any way. I hold these positions 
very strongly, with conviction. Well, not so much as far as stem cells  go,
but certainly with respect to evolution. And certainly for several
key moral issues.
 
This was perhaps the biggest reason I was attracted to RC in the first  
place.
I didn't fit anywhere else.
 
Yes, a thorough grounding in intellectual tradition is a terrific  
objective.
The only caution is that not everyone will want to make that kind of  
investment
of time and effort. I'd also like to have far better computer skills  and
savior faire than  I currently have, which surely is a worthy  objective,
but I have insufficient motivation to get there. So, we all cut each  other
some slack and try to learn from each other, whatever we can.
 
But for anyone who does value Western ( or other ) intellectual  tradition,
you certainly are more than welcome. It is as clear as a bell that this  is
important and can be really useful.
 
I'm more of an HL Mencken type myself.
 
Thanks for the comments
 
I'm guessing that, like me, your last name tells a unique story
unconnected  to anything that journalists are most concerned about  these 
days.
 
Billy
 
---------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
message dated 9/5/2011 7:14:20 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

My idea  of existentialism is mostly based on Sartre.  I'd classify
Nietzsche  as a wildcard, but that's only based on my reading of The
Gay  Science.

Out of a full reading of the Western Canon, I think, in the  end, I'd
feel generally more well-rounded and confident to join the  fight.
There will come a point sooner or later when centrists will need  to
advance their positions in direct, earnest debate, and being able  to
pull examples and stories from the entirety of Western history  from
memory will become absolutely invaluable.  While centrism  will
definitely need their own Russell Kirks and Herbert  Crolys
(intellectuals who can bring careful and reasoned response), I  see
myself as the William F. Buckley of centrism: someone who can  bring
the battle right to the forefront in an entertaining, cohesive  and
convincing manner.

I'm definitely nowhere near that level yet,  even with a MPA, PoliSci
BA, and years of employment in public sector  finance.

On Sep 4, 8:23 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> Comments  in BF in  text
>
> message dated 9/4/2011    [email protected] writes:
>
> Yeah, those are the guys.  Existentialists belong to  that class also.
> To return to the  question, who do you  classify as Existentialists ?
> I know full  well that Nietzsche was a   student of Spinoza, for example,
> but  to consider him a Rationalist seems to  be a stretch. Maybe you
>  could explain when  you have some free  time.
>
> 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  Neitzsche, 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.
> Not  a bad idea, at some point,  to also look into the  non-Western canon.
> Essentially this means Asia, but you  also get  something along the lines
> of pre-Socratic thinking by reading  such things as Native American 
oratory,
> essentially records of  tribal  leasers' statements at treaty meetings, 
and
> so  forth.
>
> (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.)
> That's one way to think about his method. Another way is to  see  the
> utility value
> of philosophical subtraction, viz,  eliminating all non-essential  
> possibilities
> before  allowing yourself to arrive at a conclusion. You  hardly have to
>  accept his conclusion about a thinking essence being the  ultimate  
Archimedean
> point.
> After all, a cogito has a beginning and  will have an earthly end,  and
> questions
> about origins  and destiny also are a necessary part of the mix  
>
>  Reflecting about it, this is an extension of  Ockham's razor, seeking  
the
> simplest and most elegant solutions available.  And that  seems self
> evidently
> valuable and valid. You know, what is  non-essential to a proof or
> conclusion ?
>
> When  you eliminate all the extraneous stuff only then can you get  to
>  what is really important.
>
> 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.
>
> Agreed.
> But there are additional  considerations. Like language. Of course, even
> there
> you  can find uses for math, but  mostly linguistics is about all kinds  
of
> "soft" phenomena, since words  are often more like silly putty  than like
> pieces of granite. Then there  are fields like Process  Theology,  which 
is
> based on an understanding of  biological  systems. Also the whole subject
> of narration, viz, story  telling. Hence Sartre's and Camus' novels,
> Dostoevsky's epic  fiction, and  the like. There's also a good deal of
> story telling  in Kierkegaard.  And what about "popular philosophy"?
>
> The  great value of a book by  Camus or Dostoevsky is that almost  anyone
> can read  a novel and get  the gist of the  philosophy. Hence, while I 
have
> little use for her stuff, the  appeal of Ayn Rand. What would a totally
> different kind of novel  be like  which started from Radical Centrist
> assumptions and  values  ?
>
> Guess what I'm  asking is what are your  objectives ? What would  you
> like to  accomplish through  your study of philosophy  ?
>
> Billy
>
>  -----------------------------------------------------
>
> 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]_
>  (mailto:[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


 

-- 
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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