Thursday, April 19, 2018

Intro

In his Meditations, Renee Descartes argues that we cannot be certain, at this moment, if we are dreaming or awake. In the paper that follows, I will show how Descartes comes to this conclusion, by explaining the steps of his argument. Then, I will offer my own critique of his argument, by showing that we can in fact know if we are dreaming or awake.

Thursday, March 15, 2018

How do we really achieve the good in somebody? (Plato - Polemarcus

How do we really achieve the good in somebody? (Plato - Polemarcus)

2 inductive arguments against achieving the Good by harm

Premise 1: horses become worse if harmed
Premise 2: dogs become worse if harmed
Conclusion: Therefore, humans become worse if harmed.

own version
Premise 1: I don't become a better player-piano if someone punches in the face
Premise 2: I don't become a better basket ball player if somebody punches me in the face.
Premise 3: I don't become a better student by somebody hitting me.
Conclusion: It seems that physical violence does not add to my cognitive abilities.

2. inductive argument for how we become just

Premise 1: music cannot make people unmusical
Premise 2: riding a horse cannot make you a worse horseman
Conclusion: you cannot become unjust by exercising justice


Deductive argument of like by like

Premise 1: desired effects have to have similar causes
Explanation: For example, heat can only achieved by something that is hot.
Premise 2: justice is harmony
Conclusion: Justice cannot be achieved by something that destroys harmony. Therefore justice is achieved by participating in the Good.




Friday, December 1, 2017

Plato Arguments

Introduction:
- Thesis
- How are you going to reconstruct the text with respect to your thesis

First argument: (Might is right): Thrasymachus

- “Justice is the Advantage of the stronger,” Thrasymachus says.
- Survival of the fittest
- the idea that people who have power can do whatever they want
- what is Socrates response to that?

Second argument: (City argument): Thrasymachus

- Thrasymachus argument: Ruling group establish laws to their advantage and call it
“Justice”
- For example, a democracy sets down democratic law; A tyranny, tyrannic laws.
They then say that those laws are just for the ruled. Those who obey those laws are just,
while those who do not are punished for their unjust deeds.
- Socrates refutes: “for the stronger, and not of the stronger.”

Third argument: (Mistaken ruler argument): Socrates.
Rulers make mistakes.
But whatever the rulers set down must be done by those who are ruled, and this is just.
Socrates: then, according to your argument, it is just to do not only what is advantageous
for the stronger but also the opposite, what is disadvantageous.
Socrates: if rulers set down laws that are disadvantageous for themselves and the ruled
follow that, then justice would not be the advantage of the stronger.
Thrasymachus: It is what seems to the stronger to be the advantage of the stronger,
whether it is advantageous or not.
Precise sense Vs. common parlance
Rulers cannot do whatever they want. (because they make mistakes)

Fourth Argument (Ideal-doctor’s argument Money-Maker-Argument): Socrates

Induction
Premise 1: A doctor cares for the sick (the weaker)
Premise 2: A pilot cares for the passenger (the weaker)

----
Premise 3: A pharmacist cares for the sick.
Premise 4: Business he cares for the needs of his customer.

----
Conclusion: Each art cares for the advantage of the weaker

Deductive Argument

Premise 1: An art is only considered to be an art, if it enhances something that is bad.
Premise 2: A society gets enhanced by arts.
Premise 3: Weaker (not skilled people) benefit from a society that has arts.

Conclusion: That art is always for the advantage of the weaker.

cares for others;

Premise 1: An art is always for the advantage of somebody else.
the art cares of this deficiency, never for your own advantage)

- doctors and pilot’s examples. (it is the advantage of the weaker)


Conclusion: Ruler's always rule for the advantage of the weaker.


Fifth argument: (Sheep shepherd argument): Thrasymachus argument and Socrates response

Conclusion interpretation: What is Socrates idea of Justice?

Critique: What conclusion can you draw about justice based on your understanding. How would you criticize it? Is there something to amend? Are there implausibilities?

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

How to write an introduction

In his Meditations, Renee Descartes argues that we cannot be certain, at this moment, if we are dreaming or awake. In the paper that follows, I will show how Descartes comes to this conclusion, by explaining the steps of his argument. Then, I will offer my own critique of his argument, by showing that we can in fact know if we are dreaming or awake.

edited version:

In his Meditations, Renee Descartes argues that we cannot be certain if we are dreaming or awake, since dreams can have the same vivacity as being awake . In the paper that follows, I will show how Descartes comes to this conclusion, by explaining, firstly, his overall goal, namely a foundation of sciences, secondly how he criticizes our former foundations, and thirdly how from this unfolds a series of distrusts that ends with him questioning our state of being awake. Afterwards I will criticize Descartes for being to radical with his critique. Even though we are in a dream state this would be still our reality. In the end of my essay I will demonstrate an alternative to Descartes, namely a pragmatic philosophy that does not need an ultimate foundation but that focuses on the question of how we actually our lives.


State your overall goal: In the following paper, I will contest Descartes' assumption that states of being awake and states of dreaming are indistinguishable. In his Meditations, Renee Descartes argues that we cannot distinguish these states because both states have the same vivacity. In particular, I will show how Descartes comes to this conclusion, by explaining how he firstly attempts to find a foundation for sciences, how he secondly introduces his method of doubt, how thirdly criticizes our foundations of former knowledge, and how he finally arrives at this controversial claim. Then, I will offer my own critique of his argument, by showing that the question itself is rather theoretical than practical. My solution to the problem is therefore that we can derive a pragmatic sciences without an his extreme doubt. This we can assume that our reality is true for us.

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Being and Time - Dasein

The ontic priority of the Question of Being

what is science for Heidegger?

Science occurs as a basis for knowledge. But is this true?

Science can be defined as the TOTALITY of true propositions

(Definition of propositions: Propositions are sentences that can be either true or false.)

What is the difference between totality and whole?

The totality is the sum of all parts, but it does not yet explain how all of these parts are working together, nor does it give us an idea of the whole.

Heidegger claims that this definition of science is not complete.

It seems sciences overlook the fact that they are made by humans and in this sense Heidegger points out that they have the Being of humans.

Human's being is defined as Da-Sein.

Heidegger makes a qualification that being scientific is not the only way of how Da-sein (that is humans that have being) is.

What is Da-sein?

"The ontic distinction of Da-sein lies in the fact that it is ontological." (Heidegger, 10)

What is ontic? Ontic is everything that is something. E.g. tables, chairs, clouds, thoughts, and so forth.

The ontic characteristic of Dasein is its ontology.

Well, what is ontology then?

An ontology describes a distinct understanding of all beings that occur in the world. For example, we could have objects of thoughts and objects of the physical order. Now, we can distinguish them further as animated objects and inanimate objects in the physical order and so forth. An ontology attempts to map all of the objects that we deal with.

Heidegger specifies in which way we are actually ontological. He says that most of the time we do not build ontologies and in this sense we are rather pre-ontological. This means that we have the potential to build an ontology but most of the time we do not engage in this activity.

What is existence?

Descries the way of how you relate to your life.




Monday, November 6, 2017

Being and Time - Analysis

First paragraph, central thought:

- The questions of metaphysics (beyond physics)

Metaphysics is related to questions of religion. In particular, which belief is rationally justified, and what makes a good belief.

- This question has been trivialized

Second paragraph, central thought:

- It talks about Being as the fundamental metaphysical question

Explanatory thought: The question of Being occurs to be appropriate for a metaphysical investigation. Simply asking for the beyond would be impossible, since we are finite creatures that cannot supersede their horizon of thinking. For this reason, we ask for the limits of our thinking. The known limit of our thinking is Being.

- Being: It is trivialized as the emptiest thought, the most general concept.

Third paragraph

- Our understanding is based on concept that were delivered to us through history
- The impact our thinking. Therefore, we have to clarify how they influence us.

1st prejudice:

Being is the most universal concept.

We have to keep in mind that this is a prejudice. This means there are contradictions that emerge if we say that being is in everything the same. (example of Being as the same substance in two different things attributes two properties to Being that are contradictory.)

The prejudice reduces Being to a being that is in everything. Being, however, is more.

2nd prejudice:

Being is undefinable because we cannot use the standard way of how we usually define. This means that we cannot use genus and specific difference. But this does not imply that we cannot talk about Being.

The reason why there is no definition of being and why there is a limit to Being is what Being is.

3rd prejudice

Being is self-evident

that means Being is in everything we do and everyone has an implicit understanding.

A closer examination, however, will reveal that the unclarity of Being is the fundamental concern of our lives.














Wednesday, October 25, 2017

arguments plato

Thrasymacus' argument

Premise 1: A just shepherd takes care of his sheep for the sheep’s well-being.
Premise 2: An unjust shepherd takes care of his sheep for his own advantage.
Conclusion: The just man directs the advantage to the weaker, and the unjust man takes the advantage for himself.

Premise 1: Shepherds care and fatten the flock.
Premise 2: Shepherds make more of a profit for themselves of a fat flock.
Conclusion: Therefore the art of a shepherd is for his own advantage.

Premise 1: Ruling is an art.
Premise 2: The ruler's art is to care for his people
Premise 3: The better the people the more the ruler benefits from caring for the people.
Conclusion: Therefore a ruler rules for his own benefit.

Socrates' counter argument


 Premise 1: The best doctor takes the best care of all of his patients.
Premise 2: The best shepherd takes care of his sheep without killing.
Conclusion: The best people of their art only care for their art.

Premise 1: Justice is an art
Premise 2: An art cannot be just if it is for personal gain.
Conclusion: Rulers cannot be just because they use power for their own purpose.

Premise 1: People who are good at an art take care of the weaker in a specific situation.
Premise 2: All arts have a reciprocation with benefit for the master.
Conclusion: The best of an art will receive a benefit while still providing an advantage to the weak.

Premise1: Shepherd's art surely cares for nothing but for providing the best that it has been set over.
Premise 2: Rulers demand wages to balance it out because what they are getting is for the benefit of others.
Conclusion: No art or kind of rule provides for its own benefit.

Premise 1: People do not do the art on free will, but demand wages as compensation.
Premise 2: wages are not attached to the art itself. A true shepherd is a shepherd also if he does not get compensation.
Premise 3: The wage-earners art does not furnish anything, while other arts have a direct intent that is not the wages but that what it is supposed to achieve.
Conclusion: Therefore no art or kind of rule provides for its own benefit, but for the advantage of the weaker
Premise 4: Ruling is an art
Concusion: Ruling is for the advantage of the weaker.
Premise 5: Ruling is establishing a form of justice.

Conclusion: Therefore justice is for the weaker.



A later argument

Premise 1: Rulers rule from necessity.
Premise 2: Rules must maintain rules for their own benefit, since otherwise everything would be chaos

Conclusion: Without rulers there would be chaos and thus no art could be established. This would also deny the art of money making.