A basic question: what do people think of Philosophy, if they have no university background in it, or if they largely don't bother with philosophical books either.
I ask cause i will soon be presenting some stuff on this cursed and fallen order (philosophy) to some people in a education (primarily book-reading)-linked setting.
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I am pretty sure that the general public tends to have a negative view of 'Philosophy', and i can see why. Most philosophy in current education or everyday life is either not really philosophy, or is so watered-down and sporadic that it might as well be thought of as general opionated view. Moreover, if someone actually says something more tied to philosophical books, they often are not very well-versed in the subject either, so they come across as self-proclaimed thinkers and again cause other people to think lowly of philosophy.
Which is why my own plan for those meetings/discussions/talks is to first of all highlight that philosophy is not about some impossibly abstract issue, but about the core of human thought, well-being, logic, and knowledge of one's self.
Of course, like any other subject, it can get very abstract, but this doesn't mean it is very abstract to begin with. I am sure not many 6-year olds would view a clear organising value in math if they were not presented with arithmetic, but with calculus. But without the ideas that arithmetic is created and sustained by, the latter is of no value either.
I ask cause i will soon be presenting some stuff on this cursed and fallen order (philosophy) to some people in a education (primarily book-reading)-linked setting.
*
I am pretty sure that the general public tends to have a negative view of 'Philosophy', and i can see why. Most philosophy in current education or everyday life is either not really philosophy, or is so watered-down and sporadic that it might as well be thought of as general opionated view. Moreover, if someone actually says something more tied to philosophical books, they often are not very well-versed in the subject either, so they come across as self-proclaimed thinkers and again cause other people to think lowly of philosophy.
Which is why my own plan for those meetings/discussions/talks is to first of all highlight that philosophy is not about some impossibly abstract issue, but about the core of human thought, well-being, logic, and knowledge of one's self.
Of course, like any other subject, it can get very abstract, but this doesn't mean it is very abstract to begin with. I am sure not many 6-year olds would view a clear organising value in math if they were not presented with arithmetic, but with calculus. But without the ideas that arithmetic is created and sustained by, the latter is of no value either.