English
Noun
philosophers
- Plural of philosopher
Philosophy is "the study of the most general and
abstract features of the world and categories with which we think:
mind, matter, reason, proof, truth etc. In philosophy, the concepts
by which we approach the world themselves become the topic of
enquiry." The main branches of philosophy are
logic,
epistemology,
metaphysics,
ethics, as well as
philosophy
of mind,
political
philosophy, and
aesthetics. . Its
investigations use reason, striving to make no unexamined
assumptions.
The word philosophy is of
Ancient
Greek origin:
φιλοσοφία (philosophía), meaning "
love of knowledge", "love of
wisdom".
The philosophers of
East and
South
Asia are discussed in
Eastern
philosophy, while the philosophers of
North Africa
and the
Middle East,
because of their strong interactions with Europe, are usually
considered part of
Western
philosophy.
Branches of philosophy
To give an exhaustive list of the main branches
of philosophy is difficult, because there have been different,
equally acceptable divisions at different times, and the divisions
are often relative to the concerns of a particular period. However,
the following branches are usually accepted as the main ones.
Metaphysics
investigates the nature of being and the world. Traditional
branches are
cosmology
and
ontology.
Epistemology
is concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge, and whether
knowledge is possible. Among its central concerns has been the
challenge posed by
skepticism and the
relationships between
truth,
belief and
justification.
Ethics, or 'moral
philosophy', is concerned with questions of how persons ought to
act or if such questions are answerable.
Plato's early
dialogues include a search for definitions of virtue.
Metaethics
compares and contrasts various systems of ethics, and investigates
what ethics is. Ethics is also associated with ideas of
morality.
Philosophy
of Mind deals with the nature of the mind an its relationship
to the body, and is typified by disputes between
dualism and
materialism. In recent years
there is an increasing connection between this branch of philosophy
and
cognitive
science
Logic deals with
patters of thinking that lead from true premises to true
conclusions. Beginning in the late
19th
century,
mathematicians such as
Frege began a
mathematical treatment of logic, and today the subject of logic has
two broad divisions:
mathematical
logic (formal symbolic logic) and what is now called
philosophical
logic.
Aesthetics deals
with beauty, art, enjoyment, sensory-emotional values, perception,
and matters of taste and sentiment.
Political
Philosophy is the study of government and the relationship of
individuals and communities to the state. In includes questions
about law, property, and the rights and obligations of the
citizen.
Most academic subjects have a philosophy, for
example the
philosophy
of science, the
philosophy
of mathematics, and the
philosophy
of history. In addition a range of academic subjects have
emerged to deal with areas which would have historically been the
subject of philosophy. These include
Psychology,
Anthropology
and
Science.
Western philosophy
The history of
Western
philosophy is often divided into three periods:
Ancient
philosophy,
Medieval
philosophy, and
Modern
philosophy. For a map with the dates and places of birth of
most western philosophers see
here.
Ancient philosophy
Ancient philosophy is the philosophy of
the Graeco-Roman world from the fifth century B.C. to the fourth
century A.D. It is usually divided into four periods: the
pre-Socratic
period, the periods of
Plato and
Aristotle, and
the post-Aristotelian period (or
Hellenistic
period). Sometimes a fifth period is added that includes the
Christian
and
Neo-Platonist
philosophers. The most important of the ancient philosophers (in
terms of subsequent influence) are Plato and Aristotle.
The themes of ancient philosophy are:
understanding the fundamental causes and principles of the
universe; explaining it in an
economical and uniform way; the epistemological problem of
reconciling the diversity and change of the natural universe, with
the possibility of obtaining fixed and certain knowledge about it;
questions about that which cannot be percieved with the senses, or
which is an abstraction, for example
numbers,
elements,
universals, and
gods; the analysis of
patterns of
reasoning
and argument; the nature of
the good
life and the importance of understanding and knowledge in order
to pursue it; the explication of the concept of
justice, and its relation to
various
political
systems.
In this period the crucial features of the
philosophical
method were established: a critical approach to received or
established views, and the appeal to reason and
argumentation.
Medieval philosophy
Medieval philosophy is the philosophy
of
Western
Europe and the
Middle East
during what is now known as the
medieval era or the
Middle Ages,
roughly extending from the fall of the
Roman Empire
to the
Renaissance.
Medieval philosophy is defined partly by the rediscovery and
further development of classical
Greek
and
Hellenistic
philosophy, and partly by the need to address theological
problems and to integrate sacred doctrine (in
Islam,
Judaism and
Christianity)
with
secular
learning.
Some problems discussed throughout this period
are the relation of
faith
to
reason, the existence
and unity of
God, the object of
theology and
metaphysics, the problems of
knowledge, of universals, and of individuation.
Philosophers from the Middle Ages include the
Muslim philosophers
Alkindus,
Alfarabi,
Alhacen,
Avicenna,
Algazel,
Avempace,
Abubacer and
Averroes;
the Jewish philosophers
Maimonides and
Gersonides; and
the Christian philosophers
Anselm,
Peter
Abelard,
Roger Bacon,
Thomas
Aquinas,
Duns Scotus,
William
of Ockham and
Jean
Buridan.
Early modern philosophy (c. 1600 – c. 1800)
The early
modern period is usually considered to begin with the revival of
skepticism and with
the growth of modern physical science. The main themes of this era
are: the problem of how we can know anything about the world
outside our own minds; the dispute between
rationalists and
empiricists, rationalists
holding that the ultimate source of knowledge is reason,
empiricists, that any genuine knowledge must be justified by
experience; the nature of the
mind or self, and its relation to
the body, and the closely related problem of reconciling our belief
in
free
will with the emerging scientific picture of the physical
universe as
deterministic; attempts to
explain the relationship between
God and
science, and the rebirth of
political
philosophy.
Important figures include
Montaigne,
Descartes,
Francis
Bacon,
Locke,
Spinoza,
Leibniz,
Berkeley,
Hume,
and
Kant.
Chronologically, this era spans the 17th and 18th centuries, and is
generally considered to end with
Kant's systematic
attempt to reconcile Newtonian physics with traditional
metaphysical topics.
Later modern philosophy (c. 1800 – c. 1960)
Later modern
philosophy is usually considered to begin after the philosophy of
Immanuel
Kant at the beginning of the 19th-century.
German
idealists, such as
Fichte,
Hegel, and
Schelling,
expanded on the work of Kant by maintaining that the world is
constituted by a rational mind-like process, and as such is
entirely knowable.
Rejecting idealism, other philosophers, many
working from outside the university, initiated lines of thought
that would occupy academic philosophy in the early and mid-20th
century:
Contemporary philosophy (c. 1960 – present)
In the last
hundred years, philosophy has increasingly become an activity
practiced within the modern research university, and accordingly it
has grown more specialized and more distinct from the natural
sciences. Much of philosophy in this period concerns itself with
explaining the relation between the theories of the natural
sciences and the ideas of the humanities or common sense.
It is arguable that later modern philosophy ended
with contemporary philosophy's shift of focus from 19th century
philosophers to 20th century philosophers. Philosophers such as
Heidegger,
the later
Wittgenstein,
and
Dewey,
occupied philosophical discourses exemplified in thinkers such as
Derrida,
Quine,
Kripke, and
Rorty.
Eastern philosophy
Many societies have considered
philosophical questions and built philosophical traditions based
upon each other's works. Eastern and Middle Eastern philosophical
traditions have influenced Western philosophers. Russian (which to
many people still counts as Western), Jewish, Islamic, African, and
recently Latin American philosophical traditions have contributed
to, or been influenced by, Western philosophy: yet each has
retained a distinctive identity.
The differences between traditions are often well
captured by consideration of their favored historical philosophers,
and varying stress on ideas, procedural styles, or written
language. The subject matter and dialogues of each can be studied
using methods derived from the others, and there are significant
commonalities and exchanges between them.
Eastern
philosophy refers to the broad traditions that originated or
were popular in
India,
Persia,
China,
Korea,
Japan, and to an
extent, the
Middle East
(which overlaps with Western philosophy due to the spread of the
Abrahamic
religions and the continuing intellectual traffic between these
societies and Europe.)
Babylonian philosophy
- Further information:
Babylonian literature: Philosophy
The origins of
Babylonian
philosophy can be traced back to the
wisdom of early
Mesopotamia,
which embodied certain philosophies of life, particularly
ethics, in the forms of
dialectic,
dialogs,
epic poetry,
folklore,
hymns,
lyrics,
prose, and
proverbs. The
reasoning and
rationality of the
Babylonians
developed beyond
empirical
observation.
It is possible that Babylonian philosophy had an
influence on early
Greek
philosophy, and later
Hellenistic
philosophy. The Babylonian text Dialog of Pessimism contains
similarities to the
agonistic thought of the
sophists,
the
Heraclitean
doctrine of contrasts, and the dialogs of
Plato, as well as a
precursor to the
maieutic Socratic
method of
Socrates and
Plato.
Chinese philosophy
Philosophy has had a tremendous effect
on
Chinese
civilization, and
East Asia as a
whole. Many of the great philosophical schools were formulated
during the
Spring
and Autumn Period and
Warring
States Period, and came to be known as the
Hundred Schools of Thought. The four most influential of these
were
Confucianism,
Taoism,
Mohism, and
Legalism. Later on, during the
Tang
Dynasty,
Buddhism from
India
also became a prominent philosophical and religious discipline. (It
should be noted that Eastern thought, unlike Western philosophy,
did not express a clear distinction between philosophy and
religion.) Like
Western
philosophy,
Chinese
philosophy covers a broad and complex range of thought,
possessing a multitude of schools that address every branch and
subject area of philosophy.
Indian philosophy
In the history of the
Indian
subcontinent, following the establishment of an
Aryan–
Vedic
culture, the development of philosophical and religious thought
over a period of two millennia gave rise to what came to be called
the six schools of
astika, or
orthodox, Indian or Hindu philosophy. These schools have come to be
synonymous with the greater religion of
Hinduism, which
was a development of the early
Vedic
religion.
Hindu philosophy constitutes an integral part of
the culture of
Southern Asia,
and is the first of the
Dharmic
philosophies which were influential throughout the
Far East. The
great diversity in thought and practice of Hinduism is nurtured by
its liberal
universalism.
Persian philosophy
Persian philosophy can be traced back as
far as Old Iranian philosophical traditions and thoughts, with
their ancient
Indo-Iranian
roots. These were considerably influenced by
Zarathustra's
teachings. Throughout Iranian history and due to remarkable
political and social influences such as the
Macedonian,
the
Arab, and the
Mongol invasions of Persia, a wide spectrum of schools of
thought arose. These espoused a variety of views on philosophical
questions, extending from Old Iranian and mainly
Zoroastrianism-influenced
traditions to schools appearing in the late pre-Islamic era, such
as
Manicheism and
Mazdakism, as
well as various post-Islamic schools. Iranian philosophy after Arab
invasion of
Persia is
characterized by different interactions with the
Old
Iranian philosophy, the
Greek
philosophy and with the development of
Islamic
philosophy. The
Illumination
school and the
Transcendent
theosophy are regarded as two of the main philosophical
traditions of that era in Persia.
African philosophy
Philosophical traditions, such as
African
philosophy, are rarely studied by foreign academia. Since emphasis
is mainly placed on Western philosophy as a reference point, the
study, preservation and dissemination of valuable, but lesser
known, non-Western philosophical works face many obstacles. Key
African philosophers include the Fulani
Usman Dan
Fodio, founder of the
Sokoto
Caliphate of
Northern
Nigeria and
Umar Tall of
Senegal;
both were prolific Islamic scholars. Another African philosopher
worthy of note in the pre-colonial period was
Anton
Wilhelm Amo http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/amo.htm.
In the post-colonial period, different images of what could be
argued as "African" Philosophy from the level of epistemology have
risen. These could include the thoughts and enquiries of such
individuals as
Cheik Anta
Diop,
Francis
Ohanyido, CL Momoh, and
Chinweizu.
http://www.npi.ucla.edu/qualquant/definition.htm
The philosophy of the modern and contemporary
African world, including the diaspora, is often known as Africana
Philosophy. Key philosophers include
Frantz
Fanon, Kwesi Wiredu,
Paget Henry,
Lewis
Gordon, Mabogo Percy More and many others.
Philosophical doctrines
Realism and nominalism
Realism sometimes
means the position opposed to the 18th-century Idealism, namely
that some things have real existence outside the mind. Classically,
however, realism is the doctrine that abstract entities
corresponding to universal terms like 'man' have a real existence.
It is opposed to
nominalism, the view that
abstract or universal terms are words only, or denote mental states
such as ideas, beliefs, or intentions. The latter position,
famously held by
William
of Ockham, is
conceptualism.
Rationalism and empiricism
Rationalism is any view
emphasizing the role or importance of human reason. Extreme
rationalism tries to base all knowledge on reason alone.
Rationalism typically starts from premises that cannot coherently
be denied, then attempts by logical steps to deduce every possible
object of knowledge.
The first rationalist, in this broad sense, is
often held to be
Parmenides (fl.
480 BCE), who argued that it is impossible to doubt that thinking
actually occurs. But thinking must have an object, therefore
something beyond thinking really exists. Parmenides deduced that
what really exists must have certain properties – for
example, that it cannot come into existence or cease to exist, that
it is a coherent whole, that it remains the same eternally (in
fact, exists altogether outside time).
Zeno of
Elea (born c. 489 BCE) was a disciple of Parmenides, and argued
that motion is impossible, since the assertion that it exists
implies a contradiction.
Plato (427–347 BCE)
was also influenced by Parmenides, but combined rationalism with a
form of
realism.
The philosopher's work is to consider being, and the essence of
things. But the characteristic of essences is that they are
universal. The nature of a man, a triangle, a tree, applies to all
men, all triangles, all trees. Plato argued that these essences are
mind-independent 'forms', that humans (but particularly
philosophers) can come to know by reason, and by ignoring the
distractions of sense-perception.
Modern rationalism begins with
Descartes.
Reflection on the nature of perceptual experience, as well as
scientific discoveries in physiology and optics, led Descartes (and
also
Locke) to the
view that we are directly aware of ideas, rather than objects. This
view gave rise to three questions:
- Is an idea a true copy of the real thing that it represents?
Sensation is not a direct interaction between bodily objects and
our sense, but is a physiological process involving representation
(for example, an image on the retina). Locke thought that a
'secondary quality' such as a sensation of green could in no way
resemble the arrangement of particles in matter that go to produce
this sensation, although he thought that 'primary qualities' such
as shape, size, number, were really in objects.
- How can physical objects such as chairs and tables, or even
physiological processes in the brain, give rise to mental items
such as ideas? This is part of what became known as the mind-body
problem.
- If all the contents of awareness are ideas, how can we know
that anything exists apart from ideas?
Descartes tried to address the last problem by
reason. He began, echoing Parmenides, with a principle that he
thought could not coherently be denied: I think, therefore I am
(often given in his original Latin:
Cogito ergo
sum). From this principle, Descartes went on to construct a
complete system of knowledge (which involves proving the existence
of God, using, among other means, a version of the
ontological
argument). His view that reason alone could yield substantial
truths about reality strongly influenced those philosophers usually
considered modern rationalists (such as
Baruch
Spinoza,
Gottfried
Leibniz, and
Christian Wolff), while provoking criticism from other
philosophers who have retrospectively come to be grouped together
as empiricists.
Empiricism, in
contrast to rationalism, downplays or dismisses the ability of
reason alone to yield knowledge of the world, preferring to base
any knowledge we have on our senses. John Locke propounded the
classic empiricist view in
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding in 1689, developing a
form of
naturalism
and
empiricism on
roughly scientific (and Newtonian) principles.
During this era, religious ideas played a mixed
role in the struggles that preoccupied secular philosophy.
Bishop
Berkeley's famous
idealist
refutation of key tenets of
Isaac Newton
is a case of an Enlightenment philosopher who drew substantially
from religious ideas. Other influential religious thinkers of the
time include
Blaise
Pascal,
Joseph
Butler, and
Jonathan Edwards. Other major writers, such as
Jean-Jacques
Rousseau and
Edmund
Burke, took a rather different path. The restricted interests
of many of the philosophers of the time foreshadow the separation
and specialization of different areas of philosophy that would
occur in the 20th century.
Skepticism
Skepticism is a philosophical attitude that
questions the possibility of obtaining any sort of knowledge. It
was first articulated by
Pyrrho, who believed
that everything could be doubted except appearances.
Sextus
Empiricus (2nd century CE) describes skepticism as an "ability
to place in antithesis, in any manner whatever, appearances and
judgments, and thus […] to come first of all to a suspension of
judgment and then to mental tranquility." Skepticism so conceived
is not merely the use of doubt, but is the use of doubt for a
particular end: a calmness of the soul, or
ataraxia. Skepticism poses
itself as a challenge to
dogmatism, whose adherents
think they have found the truth.
Sextus noted that the reliability of perception
may be questioned, because it is idiosyncratic to the perceiver.
The appearance of individual things changes depending on whether
they are in a group: for example, the shavings of a goat's horn are
white when taken alone, yet the intact horn is black. A pencil,
when viewed lengthwise, looks like a stick; but when examined at
the tip, it looks merely like a circle.
Skepticism was revived in the early modern period
by
Michel
de Montaigne and
Blaise
Pascal. Its most extreme exponent, however, was
David Hume.
Hume argued that there are only two kinds of reasoning: what he
called probable and demonstrative (cf
Hume's fork).
Neither of these two forms of reasoning can lead us to a reasonable
belief in the continued existence of an external world.
Demonstrative reasoning cannot do this, because demonstration (that
is,
deductive
reasoning from well-founded premises) alone cannot establish
the uniformity of nature (as captured by scientific laws and
principles, for example). Such reason alone cannot establish that
the future will resemble the past. We have certain beliefs about
the world (that the sun will rise tomorrow, for example), but these
beliefs are the product of habit and custom, and do not depend on
any sort of logical inferences from what is already given certain.
But probable reasoning (
inductive
reasoning), which aims to take us from the observed to the
unobserved, cannot do this either: it also depends on the
uniformity of nature, and this supposed uniformity cannot be
proved, without circularity, by any appeal to uniformity. The best
that either sort of reasoning can accomplish is conditional truth:
if certain assumptions are true, then certain conclusions follow.
So nothing about the world can be established with certainty. Hume
concludes that there is no solution to the skeptical
argument – except, in effect, to ignore it.
Even if these matters were resolved in every
case, we would have in turn to justify our standard of
justification, leading to an
infinite
regress (hence the term regress skepticism).
Many philosophers have questioned the value of
such skeptical arguments. The question of whether we can achieve
knowledge of the external world is based on how high a standard we
set for the justification of such knowledge. If our standard is
absolute certainty, then we cannot progress beyond the existence of
mental sensations. We cannot even deduce the existence of a
coherent or continuing "I" that experiences these sensations, much
less the existence of an external world. On the other hand, if our
standard is too low, then we admit follies and illusions into our
body of knowledge. This argument against absolute skepticism
asserts that the practical philosopher must move beyond
solipsism, and accept a
standard for knowledge that is high but not absolute.
Idealism
Idealism is the epistemological doctrine that
nothing can be directly known outside of the minds of thinking
beings. Or in an alternative stronger form, it is the metaphysical
doctrine that nothing exists apart from minds and the "contents" of
minds. In modern Western philosophy, the epistemological doctrine
begins as a core tenet of Descartes – that what is in the
mind is known more reliably than what is known through the senses.
The first prominent modern Western idealist in the metaphysical
sense was
George
Berkeley. Berkeley argued that there is no deep distinction
between mental states, such as feeling pain, and the ideas about
so-called "external" things, that appear to us through the senses.
There is no real distinction, in this view, between certain
sensations of heat and light that we experience, which lead us to
believe in the external existence of a fire, and the fire itself.
Those sensations are all there is to fire. Berkeley expressed this
with the Latin formula esse est percipi: to be is to be perceived.
In this view the opinion, "strangely prevailing upon men", that
houses, mountains, and rivers have an existence independent of
their perception by a thinking being is false.
Forms of idealism were prevalent in philosophy
from the 18th century to the early 20th century. Transcendental
idealism, advocated by
Immanuel
Kant, is the view that there are limits on what can be
understood, since there is much that cannot be brought under the
conditions of objective judgment. Kant wrote his
Critique
of Pure Reason (1781–1787) in an attempt to reconcile the
conflicting approaches of rationalism and empiricism, and to
establish a new groundwork for studying metaphysics. Kant's
intention with this work was to look at what we know and then
consider what must be true about it, as a logical consequence of,
the way we know it. One major theme was that there are fundamental
features of reality that escape our direct knowledge because of the
natural limits of the human faculties. Although Kant held that
objective knowledge of the world required the mind to impose a
conceptual
or
categorical
framework on the
stream of pure sensory data – a framework including space
and time themselves – he maintained that
things-in-themselves existed independently of our perceptions and
judgments; he was therefore not an idealist in any simple sense.
Indeed, Kant's account of things-in-themselves is both
controversial and highly complex. Continuing his work,
Johann
Gottlieb Fichte and
Friedrich Schelling dispensed with belief in the independent
existence of the world, and created a thoroughgoing idealist
philosophy.
The most notable work of this
German
idealism was
G.W.F. Hegel's
Phenomenology
of Spirit, of 1807. Hegel admitted his ideas weren't new, but
that all the previous philosophies had been incomplete. His goal
was to correctly finish their job. Hegel asserts that the twin aims
of philosophy are to account for the contradictions apparent in
human experience (which arise, for instance, out of the supposed
contradictions between "being" and "not being" ), and also
simultaneously to resolve and preserve these contradictions by
showing their compatibility at a higher level of examination
("being" and "not being" are resolved with "becoming") . This
program of acceptance and reconciliation of contradictions is known
as the "Hegelian
dialectic". Philosophers in
the Hegelian tradition include
Ludwig
Andreas Feuerbach, who coined the term projection as pertaining
to our inability to recognize anything in the external world
without projecting qualities of ourselves upon those things,
Karl
Marx,
Friedrich
Engels, and the
British
idealists, notably
T.H. Green,
J.M.E.
McTaggart, and
F.H.
Bradley.
Few 20th century philosophers have embraced
idealism. However, quite a few have embraced Hegelian dialectic.
Immanuel Kant's "Copernican Turn" also remains an important
philosophical concept today.
Pragmatism
main
Instrumentalism
Pragmatism was founded in the spirit of finding a
scientific concept of truth, which is not dependent on either
personal insight (or revelation) or reference to some metaphysical
realm. The truth of a statement should be judged by the effect it
has on our actions and truth should be seen as that which the whole
of scientific enquiry will ultimately agree on. This should
probably be seen as a guiding principle more than a definition of
what it means for something to be true, though the details of how
this principle should be interpreted have been subject to
discussion since Peirce first conceived it. Like Rorty many seem
convinced that Pragmatism holds that the truth of beliefs does not
consist in their correspondence with reality, but in their
usefulness and efficacy.
The late 19th-century American philosophers
Charles
Peirce and
William
James were its co-founders, and it was later developed by
John
Dewey as
instrumentalism. Since
the usefulness of any belief at any time might be contingent on
circumstance, Peirce and James conceptualised final truth as that
which would be established only by the future, final settlement of
all opinion. Critics have accused pragmatism of falling victim to a
simple fallacy: because something that is true proves useful, that
usefulness is the basis for its truth. Thinkers in the pragmatist
tradition have included John Dewey,
George
Santayana,
W.V.O. Quine
and
C.I.
Lewis. Pragmatism has more recently been taken in new
directions by
Richard
Rorty,
John Lachs,
Donald
Davidson and
Hilary
Putnam.
Phenomenology
Edmund Husserl's
phenomenology was an
ambitious attempt to lay the foundations for an account of the
structure of conscious experience in general. An important part of
Husserl's phenomenological project was to show that all conscious
acts are directed at or about objective content, a feature that
Husserl called
intentionality.
In the first part of his two-volume work, the
Logical Investigations (1901), he launched an extended attack on
psychologism. In
the second part, he began to develop the technique of descriptive
phenomenology, with the aim of showing how objective judgments are
indeed grounded in conscious experience – not, however, in
the first-person experience of particular individuals, but in the
properties essential to any experiences of the kind in
question.
He also attempted to identify the essential
properties of any act of meaning. He developed the method further
in Ideas (1913) as transcendental phenomenology, proposing to
ground actual experience, and thus all fields of human knowledge,
in the structure of consciousness of an ideal, or
transcendental,
ego. Later, he attempted to reconcile his transcendental standpoint
with an acknowledgement of the intersubjective
life-world in
which real individual subjects interact. Husserl published only a
few works in his lifetime, which treat phenomenology mainly in
abstract methodological terms; but he left an enormous quantity of
unpublished concrete analyses.
Husserl's work was immediately influential in
Germany, with the foundation of phenomenological schools in Munich
and Göttingen. Phenomenology later achieved international fame
through the work of such philosophers as
Martin
Heidegger (formerly Husserl's research assistant),
Maurice
Merleau-Ponty, and
Jean-Paul
Sartre. Indeed, through the work of Heidegger and Sartre,
Husserl's focus on subjective experience influenced aspects of
existentialism.
Existentialism
Although they didn't use the term, the
nineteenth century philosophers
Søren
Kierkegaard and
Friedrich
Nietzsche are widely regarded as the fathers of existentialism.
Their influence, however, has extended beyond existentialist
thought.
The main target of Kierkegaard's writings was the
idealist philosophical system of
Hegel which, he
thought, ignored or excluded the inner subjective life of living
human beings. Kierkegaard, conversely, held that "truth is
subjectivity", arguing that what is most important to an actual
human being are questions dealing with an individual's inner
relationship to existence. In particular, Kierkegaard, a Christian,
believed that the truth of religious faith was a subjective
question, and one to be wrestled with passionately.
Although Kierkegaard and Nietzsche were among his
influences, the extent to which the German philosopher
Martin
Heidegger should be considered an existentialist is debatable.
In
Being and
Time he presented a method of rooting philosophical
explanations in human existence (Dasein) to be analysed in terms of
existential categories (existentiale); and this has led many
commentators to treat him as an important figure in the
existentialist movement. However, in The Letter on Humanism,
Heidegger explicitly rejected the existentialism of
Jean-Paul
Sartre.
Sartre became the best-known proponent of
existentialism, exploring it not only in theoretical works such as
Being
and Nothingness , but also in plays and novels. Sartre, along
with
Albert Camus
and
Simone
de Beauvoir, all represented an avowedly atheistic branch of
existentialism, which is now more closely associated with their
ideas of nausea, contingency, bad faith, and the absurd than with
Kierkegaard's spiritual angst. Nevertheless, the focus on the
individual human being, responsible before the universe for the
authenticity of his or her existence, is common to all these
thinkers.
Structuralism and post-structuralism
Inaugurated by the
linguist
Ferdinand
de Saussure, structuralism sought to ferret out the underlying
systems through analysing the
discourses they both limit and
make possible. Saussure conceived of the sign as being delimited by
all the other signs in the system, and ideas as being incapable of
existence prior to linguistic structure, which articulates thought.
This led continental thought away from humanism, and toward what
was termed the decentering of man: language is no longer spoken by
man to express a true inner self, but language speaks man.
Structuralism sought the province of a hard
science, but its positivism soon came under fire by
poststructuralism, a wide field of thinkers, some of whom were once
themselves structuralists, but later came to criticize it.
Structuralists believed they could analyse systems from an
external, objective standing, for example, but the
poststructuralists argued that this is incorrect, that one cannot
transcend structures and thus analysis is itself determined by what
it examines, that systems are ultimately self-referential.
Furthermore, while the distinction between the signifier and
signified was treated as crystalline by structuralists,
poststructuralists asserted that every attempt to grasp the
signified would simply result in the proliferation of more
signifiers, so meaning is always in a state of being deferred,
making an ultimate interpretation impossible.
Structuralism came to dominate continental
philosophy from the 1960s onward, encompassing thinkers as diverse
as
Michel
Foucault and
Jacques
Lacan.
The analytic tradition
The term analytic philosophy roughly designates a
group of philosophical methods that stress detailed argumentation,
attention to semantics, use of classical logic and non-classical
logics and clarity of meaning above all other criteria.
Michael
Dummett in his Origins of Analytical Philosophy makes the case
for counting
Gottlob
Frege The Foundations of Arithmetic as the first analytic work,
on the grounds that in that book Frege took the linguistic turn,
analysing philosophical problems through language.
Bertrand
Russell and
G.E. Moore are
also often counted as founders of analytic philosophy, beginning
with their rejection of British idealism, their defense of realism
and the emphasis they laid on the legitimacy of analysis. Russell's
classic works The Principles of Mathematics,
On Denoting
and
Principia
Mathematica, aside from greatly promoting the use of classical
first order logic in philosophy, set the ground for much of the
research program in the early stages of the analytic tradition,
emphasising such problems as: the reference of proper names,
whether existence is a property, the meaning of propositions, the
analysis of definite descriptions, the discussions on the
foundations of mathematics; as well as exploring issues of
metaphysical commitment and even metaphysical problems regarding
time, the nature of matter, mind, persistence and change, which
Russell tackled often with the aid of mathematical logic. The
philosophy developed as a critique of
Hegel and his
followers in particular, and of grand systems of
speculative
philosophy in general, though by no means all analytic
philosophers reject the philosophy of Hegel (see
Charles
Taylor) nor speculative philosophy. Some schools in the group
include
logical
atomism,
logical
positivism, and
ordinary language. The motivation behind the work of analytic
philosophers has been varied. Some have held that philosophical
problems arise through misuse of language or because of
misunderstandings of the logic of our language, while some maintain
that there are genuine philosophical problems and that philosophy
is continuous with science.
In 1921,
Ludwig
Wittgenstein published his
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, which gave a rigidly "logical"
account of linguistic and philosophical issues. At the time, he
understood most of the problems of philosophy as mere puzzles of
language, which could be solved by investigating and then minding
the logical structure of language. Years later he would reverse a
number of the positions he had set out in the Tractatus, in for
example his second major work,
Philosophical
Investigations (1953). Investigations was influential in the
development of "ordinary language philosophy", which was promoted
by
Gilbert
Ryle,
J.L. Austin,
and a few others. In the United States, meanwhile, the philosophy
of
W. V. O.
Quine was having a major influence, with such classics as
Two
Dogmas of Empiricism. In that paper Quine criticizes the
distinction between analytic and synthetic statements, arguing that
a clear conception of analyticity is unattainable. He argued for
holism, the thesis that language, including scientific language, is
a set of interconnected sentences, none of which can be verified on
its own, rather, the sentences in the language depend on each other
for their meaning and truth conditions. A consequence of Quine's
approach is that language as a whole has only a very thin relation
to experience, some sentences which refer directly to experience
might me somewhat modified by sense impressions, but as the whole
of language is theory-laden, for the whole language to be modified,
more than this is required. However, most of the linguistic
structure can in principle be revised, even logic, in order to
better model the world. Notable students of Quine include
Donald
Davidson and
Daniel
Dennett. The former devised a program for giving a semantics to
natural language and thereby answer the philosophical conundrum
'what is meaning?'. A crucial part of the program was the use of
Alfred
Tarski's semantic theory of truth. Dummett, among others,
argued that truth conditions should be dispensed with in the theory
of meaning, and replaced by assertibility conditions. Some
propositions, on this view, are neither true nor false, and thus
such a theory of meaning entails a rejection of the law of the
excluded middle. This, for Dummett, entails antirealism, as Russell
himself pointed out in An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth.
By the 1970s there was a renewed interest in many
traditional philosophical problems by the younger generations of
analytic philosophers.
David Lewis,
Saul
Kripke,
Derek Parfit
and others took an interest in traditional metaphysical problems,
which they began exploring by the use of logic and philosophy of
language. Among those problems some distinguished ones were: free
will, essentialism, the nature of personal identity, identity over
time, the nature of the mind, the nature of causal laws,
space-time, the properties of material beings, modality, etc. In
those universities where analytic philosophy has spread, these
problems are still being discussed passionately. Analytic
philosophers are now also interested in the methodology of analytic
philosophy itself, with
Timothy
Williamson, Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford, publishing
recently a book entitled The Philosophy of Philosophy. Some notable
figures in contemporary analytic philosophy are: Timothy
Williamson,
Theodore
Sider,
John
Hawthorne,
Alvin
Goldman,
Peter van
Inwagen,
Graham
Priest,
Scott
Soames,
Nathan
Salmon and, of course,
Saul Kripke,
who is currently lecturing at CUNY. Analytic philosophy has
sometimes being accused of not contributing to the political debate
or to traditional questions in aesthetics, however, with the
appearance of
A
Theory of Justice by
John Rawls and
Anarchy, State and Utopia by
Robert
Nozick, analytic political philosophy acquired respectability.
Analytic philosophers have also showed depth in their
investigations of aesthetics, with
Roger
Scruton, Richard Wollheim, Jerome Levinson and others
developing the subject to its current shape.
Ethics and political
Human nature and political legitimacy
From ancient times,
and well beyond them, the roots of justification for political
authority were inescapably tied to outlooks on human nature. In The
Republic,
Plato declared that
the ideal society would be run by a council of
philosopher-kings,
since those best at philosophy are best able to realize the good.
Even Plato, however, required philosophers to make their way in the
world for many years before beginning their rule at the age of
fifty. For
Aristotle, humans
are political animals (i.e. social animals), and governments are
set up in order to pursue good for the community. Aristotle
reasoned that, since the state (
polis) was the highest form of
community, it has the purpose of pursuing the highest good.
Aristotle viewed political power as the result of natural
inequalities in skill and virtue. Because of these differences, he
favored an aristocracy of the able and virtuous. For Aristotle, the
person cannot be complete unless he or she lives in a community.
His The Nicomachean Ethics and The Politics are meant to be read in
that order. The first book addresses virtues (or "excellences") in
the person as a citizen; the second addresses the proper form of
government to ensure that citizens will be virtuous, and therefore
complete. Both books deal with the essential role of justice in
civic life.
Nicolas of
Cusa rekindled Platonic thought in the early 15th century. He
promoted democracy in Medieval Europe, both in his writings and in
his organization of the Council of Florence. Unlike Aristotle and
the Hobbesian tradition to follow, Cusa saw human beings as equal
and divine (that is, made in God's image), so democracy would be
the only just form of government. Cusa's views are credited by some
as sparking the Italian Renaissance, which gave rise to the notion
of "Nation-States".
Later,
Niccolò
Machiavelli rejected the views of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas
as unrealistic. The ideal sovereign is not the embodiment of the
moral virtues; rather the sovereign does whatever is successful and
necessary, rather than what is morally praiseworthy.
Thomas
Hobbes also contested many elements of Aristotle's views. For
Hobbes, human nature is essentially anti-social: people are
essentially egoistic, and this egoism makes life difficult in the
natural state of things. Moreover, Hobbes argued, though people may
have natural inequalities, these are trivial, since no particular
talents or virtues that people may have will make them safe from
harm inflicted by others. For these reasons, Hobbes concluded that
the state arises from a common agreement to raise the community out
of the
state of
nature. This can only be done by the establishment of a
sovereign,
in which (or whom) is vested complete control over the community,
and which is able to inspire awe and terror in its subjects.
Many in the Enlightenment were unsatisfied with
existing doctrines in political philosophy, which seemed to
marginalize or neglect the possibility of a
democratic state.
David
Hume was among the first philosophers to question the existence
of God, circa 1700.
Jean-Jacques
Rousseau was among those who attempted to overturn these
doctrines: he responded to Hobbes by claiming that a human is by
nature a kind of "
noble
savage", and that society and social contracts corrupt this
nature. Another critic was John Locke. In
Second Treatise on Government he agreed with Hobbes that the
nation-state was an efficient tool for raising humanity out of a
deplorable state, but he argued that the sovereign might become an
abominable institution compared to the relatively benign
unmodulated state of nature.
Following the doctrine of the
fact-value
distinction, due in part to the influence of
David Hume and
his student
Adam Smith,
appeals to human nature for political justification were weakened.
Nevertheless, many political philosophers, especially
moral
realists, still make use of some essential human nature as a
basis for their arguments.
Consequentialism, deontology, and the aretaic turn
One
debate that has commanded the attention of ethicists in the modern
era has been between
consequentialism
(actions are to be morally evaluated solely by their consequences)
and
deontology
(actions are to be morally evaluated solely by consideration of
agents' duties, the rights of those whom the action concerns, or
both).
Jeremy
Bentham and
John
Stuart Mill are famous for propagating
utilitarianism, which is
the idea that the fundamental moral rule is to strive toward the
"greatest happiness for the greatest number". However, in promoting
this idea they also necessarily promoted the broader doctrine of
consequentialism.
Adopting a position opposed to consequentialism,
Immanuel
Kant argued that moral principles were simply products of
reason. Kant believed that the incorporation of consequences into
moral deliberation was a deep mistake, since it would deny the
necessity of practical maxims in governing the working of the will.
According to Kant, reason requires that we conform our actions to
the
categorical
imperative, which is an absolute duty. An important
20th-century deontologist,
W.D. Ross, has
argued for weaker forms of duties called
prima
facie duties.
More recent works have emphasized the role of
character in ethics, a movement known as the
aretaic turn
(that is, the turn towards virtues). One strain of this movement
followed the work of
Bernard
Williams. Williams noted that rigid forms of both
consequentialism and deontology demanded that people behave
impartially. This, Williams argued, requires that people abandon
their personal projects, and hence their personal
integrity, in order to be
considered moral.
G.E.M.
Anscombe, in an influential paper, "Modern Moral Philosophy"
(1958), revived
virtue
ethics as an alternative to what was seen as the entrenched
positions of Kantianism and consequentialism. Aretaic perspectives
have been inspired in part by research of ancient conceptions of
virtue. For example,
Aristotle's
ethics demands that people follow the Aristotelian mean, or
balance between two vices; and
Confucian ethics
argues that virtue consists largely in striving for harmony with
other people. Virtue ethics in general has since gained many
adherents, and has been defended by such philosophers as
Philippa
Foot,
Alasdair
MacIntyre, and
Rosalind
Hursthouse.
Applied philosophy
The thoughts a society thinks have
profound repercussions on what it does. The applied study of
philosophy yields applications such as those in
ethics –
applied
ethics in particular – and
political
philosophy. The political and economic philosophies of
Confucius,
Sun Zi,
Ibn
Khaldun,
Ibn Rushd,
Ibn
Taimiyyah,
Niccolò
Machiavelli,
Gottfried
Leibniz,
John Locke,
Jean-Jacques
Rousseau,
Karl Marx,
John
Stuart Mill,
Mahatma
Gandhi,
Martin
Luther King Jr. and others – all of these have been
used to shape and justify governments and their actions.
In the field of
philosophy
of education, progressive education as championed by
John Dewey has
had a profound impact on educational practices in the
United
States in the 20th century. Descendants of this movement
include the current efforts in philosophy for children.
Carl
von Clausewitz's political
philosophy
of war has had a profound effect on
statecraft,
international
politics, and
military
strategy in the 20th century, especially in the years around
World
War II. Logic has become crucially important in
mathematics,
linguistics,
psychology,
computer
science, and
computer
engineering.
Other important applications can be found in
epistemology, which
aid in understanding the requisites for knowledge, sound evidence,
and justified belief (important in
law,
economics,
decision
theory, and a number of other disciplines). The
philosophy
of science discusses the underpinnings of the
scientific
method and has affected the nature of scientific investigation
and argumentation. This has profound impacts. For example, the
strictly empirical approach of Skinner's behaviourism affected for
decades the approach of the American psychological establishment.
Deep
ecology and
animal
rights examine the moral situation of humans as occupants of a
world that has non-human occupants to consider also.
Aesthetics can
help to interpret discussions of
music,
literature, the
plastic
arts, and the whole artistic dimension of life. In general, the
various philosophies strive to provide practical activities with a
deeper understanding of the theoretical or conceptual underpinnings
of their fields.
Often philosophy is seen as an investigation into
an area not sufficiently well understood to be its own branch of
knowledge. What were once philosophical pursuits have evolved into
the modern day fields such as
psychology,
sociology,
linguistics, and
economics, for example. But as
such areas of intellectual endeavour proliferate and expand, so
will the broader philosophical questions that they generate.
The
New York Times reported an increase in philosophy majors at
United
States universities in 2008.
References
Further reading
Introductions
- Appiah,
Kwame Anthony. Thinking it Through – An Introduction
to Contemporary Philosophy, 2003, ISBN 0-19-513458-3
- Blumenau, Ralph. Philosophy and Living. ISBN 0-907845-33-9
- Craig, Edward. Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction. ISBN
0-19-285421-6
- Curley, Edwin, A Spinoza Reader, Princeton, 1994, ISBN
0-691-00067-0
- Durant, Will, Story of Philosophy: The Lives and Opinions of
the World's Greatest Philosophers, Pocket, 1991, ISBN 0671739166,
ISBN 978-0671739164
- Harrison-Barbet, Anthony, Mastering Philosophy. ISBN
0-333-69343-4
- Higgins, Kathleen M. and Solomon, Robert C. A Short History of
Philosophy. ISBN 0-19-510196-0
- Russell, Bertrand. The Problems of
Philosophy. ISBN 0-19-511552-X
- Sinclair, Alistair J. What is Philosophy? An Introduction. ISBN
0-19-0376594-3 ISBN-13: 978-1903765944
- Sober, E. (2001). Core Questions in Philosophy: A Text with
Readings. Upper Saddle River, Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-189869-8
- Solomon, Robert C. Big Questions: A Short Introduction to
Philosophy. ISBN 0-534-16708-X
- Warburton, Nigel. Philosophy: The Basics. ISBN
0-415-14694-1
Topical introductions
- Copleston, Frederick. Philosophy in Russia: From Herzen to
Lenin and Berdyaev. ISBN 0-268-01569-4
- Critchley, Simon. Continental Philosophy: A Very Short
Introduction. ISBN 0-19-285359-7
- Hamilton, Sue. Indian Philosophy: a Very Short Introduction.
ISBN 0-19-285374-0
- Harwood, Sterling, ed., Business as Ethical and Business as
Usual (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co., 2000);
www.sterlingharwood.com
- Imbo, Samuel Oluoch. An Introduction to African Philosophy.
ISBN 0-8476-8841-0
- Knight, Kelvin. Aristotelian Philosophy: Ethics and Politics
from Aristotle to MacIntyre. ISBN 0-7456-1977-0
- Kupperman, Joel J. Classic Asian Philosophy: A Guide to the
Essential Texts. ISBN 0-19-513335-8
- Leaman, Oliver. A Brief Introduction to Islamic Philosophy.
ISBN 0-7456-1960-6
- Lee, Joe and Powell, Jim. Eastern Philosophy For Beginners.
ISBN 0-86316-282-7
- Nagel, Thomas. What Does It All Mean? A Very Short Introduction
to Philosophy. ISBN 0-19-505292-7
- Scruton, Roger. A Short History of Modern Philosophy. ISBN
0-415-26763-3
- Smart, Ninian. World Philosophies. ISBN 0-415-22852-2
- Tarnas, Richard. The Passion of the Western Mind: Understanding
the Ideas That Have Shaped Our World View. ISBN
0-345-36809-6
Anthologies
- Classics of Philosophy (Vols. 1 & 2, 2nd edition) by Louis
P. Pojman
- Classics of Philosophy: The 20th Century (Vol. 3) by Louis P.
Pojman
- The English Philosophers from Bacon to Mill by Edwin Arthur
- European Philosophers from Descartes to Nietzsche by Monroe
Beardsley
- Contemporary Analytic Philosophy: Core Readings by James
Baillie
- Existentialism: Basic Writings (Second Edition) by Charles
Guignon, Derk Pereboom
- The Phenomenology Reader by Dermot Moran, Timothy Mooney
- Medieval Islamic Philosophical Writings edited by Muhammad Ali
Khalidi
- A Source Book in Indian Philosophy by Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan,
Charles A. Moore
- A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy by Wing-tsit
Chan
- Kim, J. and Ernest Sosa, Ed. (1999). Metaphysics: An Anthology.
Blackwell Philosophy Anthologies. Oxford, Blackwell Publishers Ltd.
- The Oxford Handbook of Free Will (2004) edited by Robert Kane
- Husserl, Edmund and Welton, Donn, The Essential Husserl: Basic
Writings in Transcendental Phenomenology, Indiana University Press,
1999, ISBN 0-253-21273-1
Reference works
- The Oxford Companion to Philosophy edited by Ted Honderich
- The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy by Robert Audi
- The Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy (10 vols.) edited by
Edward Craig, Luciano
Floridi (available online by subscription); or
- The Concise Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy edited by
Edward Craig (an abridgement)
- Encyclopedia of Philosophy (8 vols.) edited by Paul Edwards; in
1996, a ninth supplemental volume appeared which updated the
classic 1967 encyclopedia.
- Routledge History of Philosophy (10 vols.) edited by John
Marenbon
- History of Philosophy (9 vols.) by Frederick
Copleston
- A History of Western Philosophy (5 vols.) by W. T. Jones
- Encyclopaedia of Indian Philosophies (8 vols.), edited by Karl
H. Potter et al. (first 6 volumes out of print)
- Indian Philosophy (2 vols.) by Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
- A History of Indian Philosophy (5 vols.) by Surendranath
Dasgupta
- History of Chinese Philosophy (2 vols.) by Fung Yu-lan, Derk
Bodde
- Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy edited by Antonio S. Cua
- Encyclopedia of Eastern Philosophy and Religion by Ingrid
Fischer-Schreiber, Franz-Karl Ehrhard, Kurt Friedrichs
- Companion Encyclopedia of Asian Philosophy by Brian Carr,
Indira Mahalingam
- A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy: Sanskrit Terms
Defined in English by John A. Grimes
- History of Islamic Philosophy edited by Seyyed Hossein Nasr,
Oliver Leaman
- History of Jewish Philosophy edited by Daniel H. Frank, Oliver
Leaman
- A History of Russian Philosophy: From the Tenth to the
Twentieth Centuries by Valerii Aleksandrovich Kuvakin
- Ayer, A. J. et al., Ed. (1994) A Dictionary of Philosophical
Quotations. Blackwell Reference Oxford. Oxford, Basil Blackwell
Ltd.
- Blackburn, S., Ed. (1996)The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy.
Oxford, Oxford University Press.
- Mauter, T., Ed. The Penguin Dictionary of Philosophy. London,
Penguin Books.
- Runes, D., Ed. (1942). The Dictionary of Philosophy.
New York, The Philosophical Library, Inc.
- Angeles, P. A., Ed. (1992). The Harper Collins Dictionary of
Philosophy. New York, Harper Perennial.
- Bunnin, N. et al., Ed. (1996) The Blackwell Companion to
Philosophy. Blackwell Companions to Philosophy. Oxford, Blackwell
Publishers Ltd.
- Popkin, R. H. (1999). The Columbia History of Western
Philosophy. New York, Columbia University Press.
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philosophers in Albanian: Filozofia
philosophers in Sicilian: Filusufìa
philosophers in Simple English: Philosophy
philosophers in Slovak: Filozofia
philosophers in Slovenian: Filozofija
philosophers in Serbian: Филозофија
philosophers in Serbo-Croatian: Filozofija
philosophers in Sundanese: Filsafat
philosophers in Finnish: Filosofia
philosophers in Swedish: Filosofi
philosophers in Tagalog: Pilosopiya
philosophers in Tamil: மெய்யியல்
philosophers in Kabyle: Tafelsuft
philosophers in Tatar: Fälsäfä
philosophers in Thai: ปรัชญา
philosophers in Vietnamese: Triết học
philosophers in Tajik: Фалсафа
philosophers in Tok Pisin: Pilosopi
philosophers in Cherokee: ᎤᏬᎳᏨᎯ
philosophers in Turkish: Felsefe
philosophers in Ukrainian: Філософія
philosophers in Urdu: فلسفہ
philosophers in Venetian: Fiłoxofìa
philosophers in Volapük: Filosop
philosophers in Võro: Filosoofia
philosophers in Walloon: Filozofeye
philosophers in Wolof: Xeltu
philosophers in Yiddish: פילאזאפיע
philosophers in Contenese: 哲學
philosophers in Dimli: Filozofi
philosophers in Zeeuws: Filosofie
philosophers in Samogitian: Fėluosuopėjė
philosophers in Chinese: 哲学