SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Looking over the initial material on the definitions of
philosophy in
the course content section, which definition (Aristotle, Novalis,
Wittgenstein) would you say gives you the best feel for
philosophy? What
is it about the definition that interests you? do you find there to
be any problems with the definition? what other questions do
you have regarding the meaning of philosophy?
ARISTOTLE :
Definition 1: Philosophy begins with wonder. (Aristotle)
Our study of philosophy will begin with the ancient Greeks.
This is not because the Greeks were necessarily the first to
philosophize. They were the first to address philosophical
questions in a systematic manner. Also, the bodies of works
which survive from the Greeks is quite substantial so in
studying philosophy we have a lot to go on if we start with the
Greeks.
Philosophy is, in fact, a Greek word. Philo is one of the Greek
words for love: in this case the friendship type of love. (What
other words can you think of that have "philo" as a part?)
Sophia, has a few different uses in Greek. Capitalized it is the
name of a woman or a Goddess: wisdom. Philosophy, then,
etymologically, (that is from its roots) means love of wisdom.
But what exactly is wisdom? Is it merely knowledge?
Intelligence? If I know how to perform a given skill does this
necessarily imply that I also have wisdom or am wise?
The word "wise" is not in fact a Greek word. Remember for the
Greeks that's "Sophia". Wise is Indo-European and is related to
words like "vision", "video", "Veda" (the Indian Holy
scriptures). The root has something to do with seeing. Wisdom
then has to do with applying our knowledge in a meaningful and
practically beneficial way. Perhaps this is the reason why
philosophy is associated with the aged. Aristotle believes that
philosophy in fact is more suitably studied by the old rather
than the young who are inclined to be controlled by the
emotions. Do you think this is correct? Nevertheless, whether
Aristotle is correct or not, typically the elderly are more likely
to be wise as they have more experience of life: they have seen
more and hopefully know how to respond correctly to various
situations.
Philosophy is not merely confined to the old. Aristotle also says
that philosophy begins with wonder and that all people desire to
know. Children often are paradigm cases of wondering. Think
about how children (perhaps a young sibling or a son or
daughter, niece or nephew of your acquaintance) inquistively
ask their parents "why" certain things are the case? If the child
receives a satisfying answer, one that fits, she is satisfied. If not
there is dissatisfaction and frustration. Children assume that
their elders know more than they do and thus rely on them for
the answers. Though there is a familiar cliche that ignorance is
bliss, (perhaps what is meant by this is that ignorance of evil is
bliss), Aristotle sees ignorance as painful, a wonder that I
would rather fill with knowledge. After all what I don't know
could potentially be harmful to me. This wonder, then, this wide
open curiosity and astonishment about the complexity and
nature of the unknown world around us is, for Aristotle the
beginning of philosophy.
NOVALIS :
Definition Two: Novalis: Philosophy is homesickness
Novalis was chiefly a poet. He was German and there have been
plenty of good German philosophers so in the case of Novalis
its not surprising to have a little overlap. Homesickness (
heimweh
in German) would initially seem to be a strange definition for
philosophy. Is philosophy a home or a physical location? Isn't it
rather an academic discipline? Something you study in college
or something you discuss with friends at a cafe or after
watching French cinema?
Novalis seems to be on to something here though. Another word
for homesickness is, to go back to the Greeks again: nostalgia.
Nostos
(Greek for Home),
Algia
(pain) (for a challenge try to find other words in English that
have these roots in them).Nostalgia is often a sweet pain for
something vaguely familiar but now absent. We often speak of
being nostalgic for the past, our mother's cooking, friends, a
certain favorite place or song from our childhood.
Novalis, then is on to something powerful by his linking this
powerful and bitter sweet experience-- nostalgia-- with
something which initially seems quite abstract: philosophy. For
Novalis, philosophy is this longing for a home. Perhaps a home
that we've never had. It is a dissatisfaction which motivates us
to seek a foundation and place in the world where we belong.
WITTGENSTEIN :
hilosophy Defintion Three: Wittgenstein: Show the Fly the way
out of the bottle
Wittgenstein is one of the superstars of 20th Century
philosophy. Born to a tremendously wealth Austrian family he
decided to give his inheritance away. He wore a number of odd
hats throughout his life including a gardener at a monastary, an
elementary school teacher, an architect, an engineer student,
and a philosophy professor. As a philosopher he was quite
eccentric; for instance he held lectures in his rooms from a lawn
chair and often lapsed into long periods of silence while his
students patiently waited. An excellent and readable biography
is Ray Monk's
Duty of Genius
.
Wittgenstein is unique in the history of philosophy for having
two distinct philosophies an early and a late. After conducting
work during World War I as a prisoner of war in Italy which
was eventually published as his dissertation in philosophy:
Tractatus Logico Philosophicus
Wittgenstein later abandoned his early approach after being
confronted by an Italian friend's obscene gesture, going on to
develop another philosophical approach.
It is from this second period, the later Wittgenstein, that we
derive our definition of philosophy given here. Wittgenstein
believes that philosophy is to be seen as a "therapy", a means of
clearing up the confusions of our language. Our language
function as the fly bottle of the definition. Often philosophers,
Wittgenstein thought, try to push beyond the bounds of sense
and as a result push up against the invisible walls of the bottle.
Therapeutic philosophy can give "philosophy peace". And
allows us to stop philosophizing when appropriate and accept
the language that we have which is perfectly serviceable.
Wittgenstein's image here is stunning. We all can picture such a
case even if we haven't actually seen such a case. A similar case
of course is the moth that flies into the flame and destroys
itself. Wittgenstein points out here again that philosophy has a
practical purpose to illumine and liberate from the invisible
barriers which we may not be aware of but nevertheless hamper
and constrain us.

More Related Content

PPTX
Doing philosophy
DOC
What is philosophy1
PPTX
Introduction to Philosophy - Definition & Nature.pptx
ODP
Philosophy humor
PPTX
Philosophy meaning nature scope - Copy.pptx
PPTX
Intro to Philosophy - Lessons 1 & 2.pptx
PDF
Philosophy01
Doing philosophy
What is philosophy1
Introduction to Philosophy - Definition & Nature.pptx
Philosophy humor
Philosophy meaning nature scope - Copy.pptx
Intro to Philosophy - Lessons 1 & 2.pptx
Philosophy01

Similar to Looking over the initial material on the definitions of philosophy i.docx (20)

PPTX
LESSON 2 (Doing Philosophy) INTRODUCTION TO PHILO (1).pptx
PPTX
DOING PHILOSOPHY.pptxjosdncsnisnfijnfsdfn
DOCX
Introduction to philosophy
PPTX
IPHPU1 (Doing Philosophy).pptx
PPTX
Chapter 1 philosophy
PPTX
Introduction to Philosophy L1.pptxWhy Study the Human Person in the Environme...
DOCX
Radius ImagesPhotolibrary1Introducing Philosophy•Phi.docx
PPT
Philosophy of Education
PPTX
Module 1-Doing Philosophy.pptx
PDF
module1-doingphilosophy-220903133213-aa926d38.pdf
PPTX
Lesson 2-Doing Philosophy.pptx
PPTX
Module 1 Philo.pptx
PPT
Introduction to philosophy
PPTX
Lecture 1 2nd sem PHILOSOPHY
PPTX
IPHP-Lesson-1.pptxIPHP-Lesson-1.pptxIPHP-Lesson-1.pptx
DOCX
What is PhilosophyIntroductionDefinition of Philosophy.docx
PPT
Philosophy of the human person
PPTX
GE 9 PRESENTATION.pptx
PPTX
UNDERSTANDING PHILOSOPHY: Introduction to Philosophy
LESSON 2 (Doing Philosophy) INTRODUCTION TO PHILO (1).pptx
DOING PHILOSOPHY.pptxjosdncsnisnfijnfsdfn
Introduction to philosophy
IPHPU1 (Doing Philosophy).pptx
Chapter 1 philosophy
Introduction to Philosophy L1.pptxWhy Study the Human Person in the Environme...
Radius ImagesPhotolibrary1Introducing Philosophy•Phi.docx
Philosophy of Education
Module 1-Doing Philosophy.pptx
module1-doingphilosophy-220903133213-aa926d38.pdf
Lesson 2-Doing Philosophy.pptx
Module 1 Philo.pptx
Introduction to philosophy
Lecture 1 2nd sem PHILOSOPHY
IPHP-Lesson-1.pptxIPHP-Lesson-1.pptxIPHP-Lesson-1.pptx
What is PhilosophyIntroductionDefinition of Philosophy.docx
Philosophy of the human person
GE 9 PRESENTATION.pptx
UNDERSTANDING PHILOSOPHY: Introduction to Philosophy
Ad

More from jeremylockett77 (20)

DOCX
M3 ch12 discussionConnecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Heal.docx
DOCX
Loudres eats powdered doughnuts for breakfast  and chocolate that sh.docx
DOCX
Lostinnocenceyoucouldexploreachildsoldierwhohasbeen.docx
DOCX
Lori Goler is the head of People at Facebook. Janelle Gal.docx
DOCX
Looking for someone to take these two documents- annotated bibliogra.docx
DOCX
Lorryn Tardy – critique to my persuasive essayFor this assignm.docx
DOCX
M450 Mission Command SystemGeneral forum instructions Answ.docx
DOCX
Lymphedema following breast cancer The importance of surgic.docx
DOCX
Love Beyond Wallshttpswww.lovebeyondwalls.orgProvid.docx
DOCX
Longevity PresentationThe purpose of this assignment is to exami.docx
DOCX
Look again at the CDCs Web page about ADHD.In 150-200 w.docx
DOCX
M8-22 ANALYTICS o TEAMS • ORGANIZATIONS • SKILLS .fÿy.docx
DOCX
Lombosoro theory.In week 4, you learned about the importance.docx
DOCX
Lucky Iron FishBy Ashley SnookPro.docx
DOCX
Lucky Iron FishBy Ashley SnookMGMT 350Spring 2018ht.docx
DOCX
look for a article that talks about some type of police activity a.docx
DOCX
Look at the Code of Ethics for at least two professional agencies,  .docx
DOCX
Locate an example for 5 of the 12 following types of communica.docx
DOCX
Locate and read the other teams’ group project reports (located .docx
DOCX
Locate an article that covered the 2016 presidential election. L.docx
M3 ch12 discussionConnecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Heal.docx
Loudres eats powdered doughnuts for breakfast  and chocolate that sh.docx
Lostinnocenceyoucouldexploreachildsoldierwhohasbeen.docx
Lori Goler is the head of People at Facebook. Janelle Gal.docx
Looking for someone to take these two documents- annotated bibliogra.docx
Lorryn Tardy – critique to my persuasive essayFor this assignm.docx
M450 Mission Command SystemGeneral forum instructions Answ.docx
Lymphedema following breast cancer The importance of surgic.docx
Love Beyond Wallshttpswww.lovebeyondwalls.orgProvid.docx
Longevity PresentationThe purpose of this assignment is to exami.docx
Look again at the CDCs Web page about ADHD.In 150-200 w.docx
M8-22 ANALYTICS o TEAMS • ORGANIZATIONS • SKILLS .fÿy.docx
Lombosoro theory.In week 4, you learned about the importance.docx
Lucky Iron FishBy Ashley SnookPro.docx
Lucky Iron FishBy Ashley SnookMGMT 350Spring 2018ht.docx
look for a article that talks about some type of police activity a.docx
Look at the Code of Ethics for at least two professional agencies,  .docx
Locate an example for 5 of the 12 following types of communica.docx
Locate and read the other teams’ group project reports (located .docx
Locate an article that covered the 2016 presidential election. L.docx
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
PPH.pptx obstetrics and gynecology in nursing
PDF
FourierSeries-QuestionsWithAnswers(Part-A).pdf
PPTX
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
PPTX
1st Inaugural Professorial Lecture held on 19th February 2020 (Governance and...
PDF
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PDF
ANTIBIOTICS.pptx.pdf………………… xxxxxxxxxxxxx
PDF
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
PPTX
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
PPTX
PPT- ENG7_QUARTER1_LESSON1_WEEK1. IMAGERY -DESCRIPTIONS pptx.pptx
PDF
Physiotherapy_for_Respiratory_and_Cardiac_Problems WEBBER.pdf
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PPTX
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
PPTX
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
PPTX
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
PDF
102 student loan defaulters named and shamed – Is someone you know on the list?
PDF
grade 11-chemistry_fetena_net_5883.pdf teacher guide for all student
PDF
Saundersa Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination.pdf
PPH.pptx obstetrics and gynecology in nursing
FourierSeries-QuestionsWithAnswers(Part-A).pdf
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
1st Inaugural Professorial Lecture held on 19th February 2020 (Governance and...
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
master seminar digital applications in india
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
ANTIBIOTICS.pptx.pdf………………… xxxxxxxxxxxxx
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
PPT- ENG7_QUARTER1_LESSON1_WEEK1. IMAGERY -DESCRIPTIONS pptx.pptx
Physiotherapy_for_Respiratory_and_Cardiac_Problems WEBBER.pdf
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
102 student loan defaulters named and shamed – Is someone you know on the list?
grade 11-chemistry_fetena_net_5883.pdf teacher guide for all student
Saundersa Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination.pdf

Looking over the initial material on the definitions of philosophy i.docx

  • 1. Looking over the initial material on the definitions of philosophy in the course content section, which definition (Aristotle, Novalis, Wittgenstein) would you say gives you the best feel for philosophy? What is it about the definition that interests you? do you find there to be any problems with the definition? what other questions do you have regarding the meaning of philosophy? ARISTOTLE : Definition 1: Philosophy begins with wonder. (Aristotle) Our study of philosophy will begin with the ancient Greeks. This is not because the Greeks were necessarily the first to philosophize. They were the first to address philosophical questions in a systematic manner. Also, the bodies of works which survive from the Greeks is quite substantial so in studying philosophy we have a lot to go on if we start with the Greeks. Philosophy is, in fact, a Greek word. Philo is one of the Greek words for love: in this case the friendship type of love. (What other words can you think of that have "philo" as a part?) Sophia, has a few different uses in Greek. Capitalized it is the name of a woman or a Goddess: wisdom. Philosophy, then, etymologically, (that is from its roots) means love of wisdom. But what exactly is wisdom? Is it merely knowledge? Intelligence? If I know how to perform a given skill does this necessarily imply that I also have wisdom or am wise?
  • 2. The word "wise" is not in fact a Greek word. Remember for the Greeks that's "Sophia". Wise is Indo-European and is related to words like "vision", "video", "Veda" (the Indian Holy scriptures). The root has something to do with seeing. Wisdom then has to do with applying our knowledge in a meaningful and practically beneficial way. Perhaps this is the reason why philosophy is associated with the aged. Aristotle believes that philosophy in fact is more suitably studied by the old rather than the young who are inclined to be controlled by the emotions. Do you think this is correct? Nevertheless, whether Aristotle is correct or not, typically the elderly are more likely to be wise as they have more experience of life: they have seen more and hopefully know how to respond correctly to various situations. Philosophy is not merely confined to the old. Aristotle also says that philosophy begins with wonder and that all people desire to know. Children often are paradigm cases of wondering. Think about how children (perhaps a young sibling or a son or daughter, niece or nephew of your acquaintance) inquistively ask their parents "why" certain things are the case? If the child receives a satisfying answer, one that fits, she is satisfied. If not there is dissatisfaction and frustration. Children assume that their elders know more than they do and thus rely on them for the answers. Though there is a familiar cliche that ignorance is bliss, (perhaps what is meant by this is that ignorance of evil is bliss), Aristotle sees ignorance as painful, a wonder that I would rather fill with knowledge. After all what I don't know could potentially be harmful to me. This wonder, then, this wide open curiosity and astonishment about the complexity and nature of the unknown world around us is, for Aristotle the beginning of philosophy. NOVALIS :
  • 3. Definition Two: Novalis: Philosophy is homesickness Novalis was chiefly a poet. He was German and there have been plenty of good German philosophers so in the case of Novalis its not surprising to have a little overlap. Homesickness ( heimweh in German) would initially seem to be a strange definition for philosophy. Is philosophy a home or a physical location? Isn't it rather an academic discipline? Something you study in college or something you discuss with friends at a cafe or after watching French cinema? Novalis seems to be on to something here though. Another word for homesickness is, to go back to the Greeks again: nostalgia. Nostos (Greek for Home), Algia (pain) (for a challenge try to find other words in English that have these roots in them).Nostalgia is often a sweet pain for something vaguely familiar but now absent. We often speak of being nostalgic for the past, our mother's cooking, friends, a certain favorite place or song from our childhood. Novalis, then is on to something powerful by his linking this powerful and bitter sweet experience-- nostalgia-- with something which initially seems quite abstract: philosophy. For Novalis, philosophy is this longing for a home. Perhaps a home that we've never had. It is a dissatisfaction which motivates us to seek a foundation and place in the world where we belong. WITTGENSTEIN : hilosophy Defintion Three: Wittgenstein: Show the Fly the way
  • 4. out of the bottle Wittgenstein is one of the superstars of 20th Century philosophy. Born to a tremendously wealth Austrian family he decided to give his inheritance away. He wore a number of odd hats throughout his life including a gardener at a monastary, an elementary school teacher, an architect, an engineer student, and a philosophy professor. As a philosopher he was quite eccentric; for instance he held lectures in his rooms from a lawn chair and often lapsed into long periods of silence while his students patiently waited. An excellent and readable biography is Ray Monk's Duty of Genius . Wittgenstein is unique in the history of philosophy for having two distinct philosophies an early and a late. After conducting work during World War I as a prisoner of war in Italy which was eventually published as his dissertation in philosophy: Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Wittgenstein later abandoned his early approach after being confronted by an Italian friend's obscene gesture, going on to develop another philosophical approach. It is from this second period, the later Wittgenstein, that we derive our definition of philosophy given here. Wittgenstein believes that philosophy is to be seen as a "therapy", a means of clearing up the confusions of our language. Our language function as the fly bottle of the definition. Often philosophers, Wittgenstein thought, try to push beyond the bounds of sense and as a result push up against the invisible walls of the bottle. Therapeutic philosophy can give "philosophy peace". And allows us to stop philosophizing when appropriate and accept the language that we have which is perfectly serviceable. Wittgenstein's image here is stunning. We all can picture such a
  • 5. case even if we haven't actually seen such a case. A similar case of course is the moth that flies into the flame and destroys itself. Wittgenstein points out here again that philosophy has a practical purpose to illumine and liberate from the invisible barriers which we may not be aware of but nevertheless hamper and constrain us.