Sunday, December 20, 2015
Thursday, December 17, 2015
FF UK
Filozofická fakulta Univerzita Karlova v Praze (Department of Philosophy Charles University in Prague) Unedited / Flexaret 5 / Fuji PRO 400H © Copyright 2015 mdvb |
Labels: pictures
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
explosion sans disjunctive syllogism and (v in).
┝ (A • ~A) ⊃ B
1. A • ~A
(assumption)
2. A (• out)
3. ~A ⊃ B (⊃
in)
4. ~A (• out)
5. B (MP)
6.
(A • ~A) ⊃ B (CP)
on perspectives.
“Two men are sometimes found to perceive very similar
perspectives…”
Bertrand Russell, Our
Knowledge of the External World
That’s weird. I’ve never perceived a perspective. Much less
have I perceived two other persons perceiving very similar perspectives. Or
should I say: I’ve never perceived my perspective of two other persons
perceiving very similar perspectives. But maybe Russell has a special perspective-perceiving
faculty which allows him to perceive not only his own perspectives but also the
perspectives of others?
Wednesday, December 09, 2015
Sunday, December 06, 2015
A v ~A = bivalence
Look. If you say that excluded middle is the thesis that either A or not
A and your use of ‘or’ is truth functional, then you’re saying that at least
one of two statements is true: A or A’s
negation. To say that A is true or not A is true
is just to affirm bivalence. Therefore, if you express excluded middle with a
truth functional ‘or’ then you’ve expressed bivalence. End rant.
Saturday, December 05, 2015
Dostoevsky and Aristotle on life.
Dostoevsky’s
ridiculous man tells us that,‘“The consciousness of
life is higher than life, the knowledge of the laws of happiness is higher than
happiness”—that is what must be fought!’
It appears that Aristotle has similar
sentiments:
“…but still, in the case of virtue, the
most valuable thing is not to have knowledge of it, but to know from what
sources it arises. For what we wish is to be courageous, not to know what
courage is; to be just, not to know what justice is; in the same way as we wish
to be healthy rather than to know what being healthy is, and to be in a good
state, rather than to know what it is to be in a good state.” (Eudemian
Ethics I, 9)
A question I have for the ridiculous man:
Though you deny that the consciousness of life is higher than life, do you also
deny that the consciousness of life is required for life?
Friday, December 04, 2015
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