I've noticed this phenomena among the people who (unfortunately) participate in most philosophy-oriented threads. They are utterly convinced that they know the answer (or at least can explain why no answer exists) to absolutely every problem in philosophy (you know, those questions that many of the smartest people ever have pained over for thousands of years). I'm curious as to whether that bizarre hubris is a widespread phenomenon, or if it just applies locally to the type of people who participate in philosophy-oriented threads.
So:
Is there any philosophical question that you don't know the answer to?
How could I resist? I am an arrogant, non philosopher who frequently joins philosophical threads with all the answers. This is perfect.
First my bias: whatever its value to an individual, I put the study of philosophy below economics in its usefulness to society.
Why have "the smartest people ever" never solved any of the so important philosophical questions they have tried to answer for the last 4000 years? It is quite simple, they have been using the wrong method. Philosophy tries to find answers to questions about existence and knowledge and ethics etc.
using ratiional methods that cannot be address through hard science.
For 4,000 years we have had very smart men trying over and over again to use reason to answer the same basic questions and they have all failed to prove anything substantial. Hmmm doing the same thing over and over and over again and expecting a different result. Sounds like insanity to me. I would have thought that really smart people would have said "maybe we are on the wrong track" or "we are using the wrong tools to answer these questions". But if your only tool is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
4000 years of failure by philosophers does not mean that the answers are difficult. All it means is that their approach is a poor choice. The philosophical road does not provide answers. The questions they ask cannot be answered by logic. They have trapped themselves in a no-man's-land between real science and the irrational.
So back to Fifty's question.
Are you looking for people who know the answers to "problems in Philosophy" or answers to the questions posed by philosophers that they have been unable to answer? They are not the same questions.
I haven't any answers to the problems faced by those who indulge in philosophical discussion, but I do know (ie firmly believe) the answers to most of questions that philosophers have not been able to answer for the last 4000 years. And it is not because I am particularly smart. It is just that I have not bound myself to to a methodology that is useless in findiing the answers they are looking for.