| dylanfw showed you a flaw in your facts. Sartre and Camus were in fact philosophers by any reasonable definition of the word. Or rather, dylanfw claimed a flaw in your "facts". But your claim - that they were not philosophers - was just a claim, with no supporting reason given. It can be dismissed just as easily (and with more justice). And, dylanfw said "... with no supporting argument". He/she can'd dismiss your logic because there is no logic - just some dogmatic claims, with no support whatsoever. > Arguably, with Hegel, at least in the west, the term philosophy lost any meaning and became mere abstract speculations, similar to theology. With Hegel, philosophy became irrational. For a good explanation, see "Escape From Reason" by Francis Schaeffer. > Fortunately, there is Eastern philosophy too. You think that Eastern philosophy isn't abstract speculation, similar to theology? Why? |
This is contradiction.
> Eastern philosophy isn't abstract speculation, similar to theology? Why?
Due to its goal and its method. The goal was to find the ultimate reality, as they call it. The method was of removing nonsense, not pilling up more abstract concepts. A recursive process of reaching the ultimate base case, if you wish.
The culmination is, arguably, the Upanishads and to some extent Advaita Vedanta and the Buddhist philosophy of mind. For its time it was remarkable achievements and for the most parts in its fundamental principles it still does not have a contradiction with the principles confirmed by the findings of the classic sciences.