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by feoren
608 days ago
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The vast majority of philosophical arguments are actually arguments about definitions of words. You can't actually be "wrong" in philosophy -- they never prove ideas wrong and reject them (if they did, we'd just call it "science"), so it's just an ever-accumulating body of "he said, she said". If you ask a philosophical question, that's the answer you get: "well, Aristotle said this, and Kant said that, and Descartes said this, and Searle said that." "... so, what's the answer?" "I just told you." So if you want to actually argue about something, you argue about definitions. |
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For example, it feels like we have free will to many people, but the meaning is hard to pin down, and there are all sorts of arguments for and against that experience of being able to freely choose. And what that implies for things like punishment and responsibility. It's not simply an argument over words, it's an argument over something important to the human experience.