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Johan Autio

the value of philosophy by Bertrand Russell - 3 views

  • effects upon the lives of those who study it
  • 'practical' man
  • goods of the mind that the value of philosophy is to be found
  • ...48 more annotations...
  • aims primarily at knowledge
  • ives unity and system to the body of the sciences, and the kind which results from a critical examination of the grounds of our convictions, prejudices, and beliefs
  • as soon as definite knowledge concerning any subject becomes possible, this subject ceases to be called philosophy, and becomes a separate science
  • astronomy
  • psychology
  • questions
  • no definite answer can be given, remain to form the residue which is called philosophy
  • There are many questions
  • must remain insoluble to the human intellect
  • plan or purpose
  • consciousness
  • good and evil
  • the answers suggested by philosophy are none of them demonstrably true
  • it is part of the business of philosophy to continue the consideration of such questions, to make us aware of their importance, to examine all the approaches to them, and to keep alive that speculative interest in the universe which is apt to be killed by confining ourselves to definitely ascertainable knowledge
  • We cannot, therefore, include as part of the value of philosophy any definite set of answers to such questions
  • he value of philosophy must not depend upon any supposed body of definitely ascertainable knowledge to be acquired by those who study it.
  • he value of philosophy is
  • in its very uncertainty
  • imprisoned in the prejudices
  • habitual beliefs of his age or his nation, and from convictions which have grown up in his mind without the co-operation or consent of his deliberate reason
  • enlarge our thoughts and free them from the tyranny of custom
  • Thus, while diminishing our feeling of certainty as to what things are, it greatly increases our knowledge as to what they may be; it removes the somewhat arrogant dogmatism of those who have never travelled into the region of liberating doubt, and it keeps alive our sense of wonder by showing familiar things in an unfamiliar aspect
  • philosophy has a value
  • through the greatness of the objects which it contemplates, and the freedom from narrow and personal aims resulting from this contemplation
  • instinctive man
  • philosophic life is calm and free
  • The private world of instinctive interests is a small one, set in the midst of a great and powerful world which must, sooner or later, lay our private world in ruins.
  • escape is by philosophic contemplation
  • it views the whole impartially
  • does not aim at proving that the rest of the universe is akin to man
  • enlargement of the Self
  • best attained when it is not directly sought
  • desire for knowledge is alone operative
  • adapts the Self to the characters which it finds in its objects
  • not obtained when, taking the Self as it is, we try to show that the world is so similar to this Self
  • form of self-assertion and, like all self-assertion, it is an obstacle to the growth of Self which it desires, and of which the Self knows that it is capable
  • Self-assertion, in philosophic speculation as elsewhere, views the world as a means to its own ends
  • In contemplation
  • we start from the not-Self, and through its greatness the boundaries of Self are enlarged; through the infinity of the universe the mind which contemplates it achieves some share in infinity.
  • those philosophies which assimilate the universe to Man
  • Knowledge is a form of union of Self and not-Self;
  • There is a widespread philosophical tendency towards the view which tells us that Man is the measure of all things, that truth is man-made, that space and time and the world of universals are properties of the mind, and that, if there be anything not created by the mind, it is unknowable and of no account for us
  • it has the effect of robbing philosophic contemplation of all that gives it value
  • What it calls knowledge is not a union with the not-Self, but a set of prejudices, habits, and desires, making an impenetrable veil between us and the world beyond
  • true philosophic contemplation,
  • satisfaction in every enlargement of the not-Self
  • barrier between subject and object, such personal and private things become a prison to the intellect
  • The free intellect will see as God might see, without a here and now, without hopes and fears, without the trammels of customary beliefs and traditional prejudices, calmly, dispassionately, in the sole and exclusive desire of knowledge -- knowledge as impersonal, as purely contemplative, as it is possible for man to attain
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