Up@dawn 2.0

Saturday, April 14, 2018

Quiz Apr 17

RUSSELL, AYER, Sartre, de beauvoir, Camus (LH)

Recommended: WATCH:Sartre (SoL); Camus (SoL); Sartre & Existential Choice; de Beauvoir on Feminine Beauty (HI)... See also: Camus & the Myth of Sisyphus (Hap), and the last several Russell posts in Phil of Happiness beginning here.

1. Reading whose autobiography led young Bertrand Russell to reject God? OR, What did he see as the logical problem with the First Cause Argument?
I for a long time accepted the argument of the First Cause, until one day at the age of eighteen I read _____'s Autobiography, and I there found this sentence: "My father taught me that the question 'Who made me?' cannot be answered, since it immediately suggests the further question `Who made god?'" That very simple sentence showed me, as I still think, the fallacy in the argument of the First Cause. If everything must have a cause, then God must have a cause. If there can be anything without a cause, it may just as well be the world as God, so that there cannot be any validity in that argument. It is exactly of the same nature as the Hindu's view, that the world rested upon an elephant and the elephant rested upon a tortoise; and when they said, "How about the tortoise?" the Indian said, "Suppose we change the subject." The argument is really no better than that. Why I Am Not a Christian


2. The idea of a barber who shaves all who don't shave themselves is a logical ______, a seeming contradiction that is both true and false. Another example of the same thing would be a statement like "This sentence is ___." 


3. A.J. Ayer's ______ Principle, stated in his 1936 book Language, Truth and Logic, was part of the movement known as _____ ______. 


4. Humans don't have an _____, said Jean Paul Sartre, and are in "bad faith" like the ____ who thinks of himself as completely defined by his work.

5. What was Sartre's frustrating advice to the student who didn't know whether to join the Resistance?


6. When Simone de Beauvoir said women are not born that way, she meant that they tend to accept what?

7. Which Greek myth did Albert Camus use to illustrate human absurdity, as he saw it?

FL  44-45
8. Disneyfication denotes what?

9. 1/3 of the people at theme parks are what?

10. How have we become mentally more like children?

11. A major argument of Andersen's book is that our dominant religion has become what?

12. Mark Zuckerberg became a billionaire at what age?

13. "Magical thinking" is the tendency to believe what?


BONUS+: Who had a Near Death Experience his youthful philosophy would have declared "nonsense"?

BONUS++: Name the faux English matrons who crossed the channel to ask Sartre about his views 
on freedom?

What did Sartre mean by "freedom"? Inquiring minds want to know how any of us can be really free, when we still have payments to make on the fridge. Well, that's the crux of Sartre's "Roads to Freedom." Isn't it, Mrs. P? -"We'll ask him."



"What was Jean-Paul like?"
-"He didn't join in the fun much. Just sat there thinking..."
  • “Man is defined as a human being and a woman as a female — whenever she behaves as a human being she is said to imitate the male.”
  • “Fathers never have exactly the daughters they want because they invent a notion a them that the daughters have to conform to.”
  • “Why one man rather than another? It was odd. You find yourself involved with a fellow for life just because he was the one that you met when you were nineteen.”
  • “Self-consciousness is not knowledge but a story one tells about oneself.”


Albert Camus gave us the Existential version of Sisyphus, and the “fundamental question of philosophy”:
“There is but one truly serious philosophical problem and that is suicide. Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the fundamental question of philosophy. All the rest — whether or not the world has three dimensions, whether the mind has nine or twelve categories — comes afterwards. These are games; one must first answer.”











thinkPhilosophy (@tPhilosophia)
Jean-Paul Sartre: more relevant now than ever | Books | The Guardian: theguardian.com/books/2014/oct…

DQ:

1. Have you ever read a book that changed your mind about something important to you? What would you say to Bertrand Russell and J.S. Mill about the First Cause Argument?

2. Are linguistic paradoxes a philosophical problem, or just an amusing quirk of language?

3. Can you give an example of an unverifiable statement that you consider meaningful?

4. What's your "essence" or specific human nature? Did you construct it, or were you born into it? Can your essence change?

5. What does it mean to say that women are made, not born? Do you have particular ideas about what it means to be a man or a woman? Where did those ideas come from? Are there any professions or occupations you think no women or men should enter?

6. Are there any Sisyphean aspects to your daily life? Do they make you unhappy? Do you imagine you'll someday escape them? How?






thinkPhilosophy (@tPhilosophia)
"Why Life Is Absurd" Essay that won an Immortality Project Award - NYTimes.com opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/01/11/why…

An old post-
Thursday, April 23, 2015
Oxbridge superstars Bertrand Russell (Cambridge) and A.J. Ayer (Oxford) are the classic 20th century British philosophers on tap in CoPhi today (Russell was actually born in the 1870s and made it to nearly the century mark). We'll squeeze in another Cambridge don, Frank Ramsey, if time allows.
That's a small philosophy pun, PB's Ramsey expert Hugh Mellor is also an expert on time. And it's in marginally bad taste too, given that poor Ramsey's un-Russellian time was tragically short: he lived only to age 26. But as Mellor says, he accomplished far more than most philosophers manage in that fraction of a lifetime, including the "redundancy" theory of truth that (ironically, paradoxically!) implies the gratuity of theories of truth without disavowing truth's centrality to philosophy.
Hugh Mellor on time (he says relax, it’s not tensed”).... Russell @dawn... Russell... Ayer... Logicomix]
So much has been said about Russell, and by him. The truth question was pretty cut-and-dried, he thought, like religion and the pragmatic approach in general. 
  • There isn’t a practical reason for believing what isn’t true. If it’s true you should believe it, if it isn’t you shouldn't… it’s dishonesty and intellectual treachery to hold a belief because you think it’s useful and not because you think it’s true.
  • The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser men so full of doubts.
  • And if there were a God, I think it very unlikely that He would have such an uneasy vanity as to be offended by those who doubt His existence.
  • Fear is the main source of superstition, and one of the main sources of cruelty. To conquer fear is the beginning of wisdom.
  • Do you think that, if you were granted omnipotence and omniscience and millions of years in which to perfect your world, you could produce nothing better than the Ku Klux Klan or the Fascists? [Why I Am Not a Christian... More Russell]
Clearly, "for Russell there was no chance of God stepping in to save humanity." The concept of an Afterlife is, to anticipate the over-zealotry of A.J. Ayer's indiscriminate philosophical wrecking ball, "nonsense." We must save ourselves. (As Carl Sagan would later say, there's no sign of help coming from anywhere "out there" to rescue us.)
Russell said family friend and "godfather" J.S. Mill provided a satisfactory answer to his own early childhood query, posed by so many of us: "What caused God?" If anything in the universe can exist without a cause, why can't the universe itself?
Having settled the question of God to his own satisfaction, he turned full attention to the philosophy of logic and mathematics, to paradox, to set theory, and other conceptual conundra. If something is false when it's true ("This sentence is false" etc.), then it's back to the drawing board for the logicians. It's not even a close shave. (Yes, that's another marginal philosophy pun- this time alluding to Russell's paradox of the barber who shaves only those who shave themselves.) As for the extent of my own interest in set theory and its ilk, I think young Ramsey said it best: "Suppose a contradiction were to be found in the axioms of set theory. Do you seriously believe that a bridge would fall down?" No I do not.
 "How can we talk meaningfully about non-existent things?" That's never really hung me up, nor anyone who appreciates good literature. Either young Russell was not a big reader of fiction, or maybe he thought he had to justify his reading. I'm glad he cared about "the present king of France," but I frankly could care less.
A.J. (“Freddie”) Ayer, with his Verification Principle, loved to detect and discredit nonsense. Good for him, we're choking on it. But he went too far. "Metaphysics" (not to mention "ethics" and "religion") may have been a dirty word, for him, but there's far more sense on earth (let alone in heaven, if a heaven there be) than was dreamt of in his Logical Positivism.
Ayer, by the way, apparently had a Near Death Experience of his own, in his old age. Interesting, in light of his youthful philosophy as exposited in Language, Truth, and Logic, "in every sense" (he admitted while still a relatively young man) "a young man's book, "according to which unverifiable statements are meaningless nonsense.
Old Ayer claimed his premature dalliance with death in no way impinged on his atheism. But an acquaintance reported that “He became so much nicer after he died… not nearly so boastful. He took an interest in other people.” But again, Freddie denied that the experience made him “religious.” [continues here]
  •  …a sentence is factually significant to any given person, if, and only if, he knows how to verify the proposition which it purports to express — that is, if he knows what observations would lead him, under certain conditions, to accept the proposition as being true, or reject it as being false.
  • “Stealing money is wrong” has no factual meaning — that is, expresses no proposition which can be either true or false. It is as if I had written “Stealing money!!
  • No moral system can rest solely on authority. [Or as Russell said: nothing externally imposed can be of any value.]
  • There is philosophy, which is about conceptual analysis — about the meaning of what we say — and there is all of this … all of life.
And with that last insight the former Wykeham Professor of Logic may at last have hit on a profound truth far beyond formal language and pedantic logic. Ayer's greatest moment, for my money:
One of the last of the many legendary contests won by the British philosopher A. J. Ayer was his encounter with Mike Tyson in 1987... Ayer -- small, frail, slight as a sparrow and then 77 years old -- was entertaining a group of models at a New York party when a girl ran in screaming that her friend was being assaulted in a bedroom. The parties involved turned out to be Tyson and Naomi Campbell. ''Do you know who [the bleep] I am?'' Tyson asked in disbelief when Ayer urged him to desist: ''I'm the heavyweight champion of the world.'' ''And I am the former Wykeham professor of logic,'' Ayer answered politely. ''We are both pre-eminent in our field. I suggest that we talk about this like rational men.'' nyt He might have been inviting another NDE, right then and there! [Ayer’s "Language, Truth & Logic." archive.org/details/Alfred…]
Every moment of life, especially during the Occupation, was an NDE for the French existentialists, Sartre (& Mary Warnock on Sartre), de Beauvoir, and Camus.
Jean-Paul Sartre, his companion Simone de Beauvoir, and their cohort Albert Camus were Resistance fighters as well as French intellectuals. "Paris needed a philosophy that would give to individuals a belief in themselves and their own powers," says Lady W., and that's what JPS and his cohort tried to give them. That’s important to remember, when considering the extremity of some of their statements. They were up against the wall, with Nazis in the parlor. And they’re on tap today in CoPhi.
  
  
Warnock seems to find some of Sartre's terms and concepts puzzling: existence precedes essence, "whatever that means!" But I always thought this was one of Sartre's clearer statements: "if God does not exist there is at least one being whose existence comes before its essence, a being which exists before it can be defined by any conception of it." And we are it.
  
What did Sartre mean by "freedom"? Inquiring minds want to know how any of us can be really free, when we still have payments to make on the fridge. Well, that's the crux of Sartre's "Roads to Freedom." Isn't it, Mrs. P? -"We'll ask him."
"What was Jean-Paul like?"
-"He didn't join in the fun much. Just sat there thinking..."
[Breaking: guess who's getting back together?!] Got back together...
 Some more extreme Gallic/Existential statements:
  • “So this is hell. I’d never have believed it. You remember all we were told about the torture-chambers, the fire and brimstone, the “burning marl.” Old wives’ tales!There’s no need for red-hot pokers. HELL IS–OTHER PEOPLE!”
  • “Man is condemned to be free; because once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does. “Life has no meaning a priori … It is up to you to give it a meaning, and value is nothing but the meaning that you choose.”
  • “Life has no meaning, the moment you lose the illusion of being eternal.”
  • “Words are loaded pistols.”
  • “Life begins on the other side of despair.”
  • “Nothingness lies coiled in the heart of being – like a worm.”
  • “There is no love apart from the deeds of love; no potentiality of love other than that which is manifested in loving; there is no genius other than that which is expressed in works of art.”
  • “An individual chooses and makes himself.”
  • “If I became a philosopher, if I have so keenly sought this fame for which I’m still waiting, it’s all been to seduce women basically.”
  • “It is disgusting — Why must we have bodies?”
  • “I carry the weight of the world by myself alone without help, engaged in a world for which I bear the whole responsibility without being able, whatever I do, to tear myself away from this responsibility for an instant.”
  • “Life is a useless passion.”
  • “There is only one day left, always starting over: It is given to us at dawn and taken away from us at dusk.”
And so it goes. Picture him dropping his verbal cluster-bombs in a dingy Parisian cafe, ringed by his own unfiltered smoke and an adoring cultish audience, all wondering if he and his confreres would live to fight another day. “Useless passion”? Generations of Sartre’s politically (if not metaphysically) free French successors might disagree. But removed from that context, I find these weaponish words hard to love. At least the guy who said hell is other people liked cats.
  • “One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.”
  • “She was ready to deny the existence of space and time rather than admit that love might not be eternal.”
  • “A man attaches himself to woman — not to enjoy her, but to enjoy himself. ”
  • “If you live long enough, you’ll see that every victory turns into a defeat.”
  • “I am incapable of conceiving infinity and yet I do not accept finity.”
  • “Few tasks are more like the torture of Sisyphus than housework, with its endless repetition: the clean becomes soiled, the soiled is made clean, over and over, day after day.”
  • “I am awfully greedy; I want everything from life. I want to be a woman and to be a man, to have many friends and to have loneliness, to work much and write good books, to travel and enjoy myself, to be selfish and to be unselfish… You see, it is difficult to get all which I want. And then when I do not succeed I get mad with anger.”
  • “Man is defined as a human being and a woman as a female — whenever she behaves as a human being she is said to imitate the male.”
  • “Fathers never have exactly the daughters they want because they invent a notion a them that the daughters have to conform to.”
  • “Why one man rather than another? It was odd. You find yourself involved with a fellow for life just because he was the one that you met when you were nineteen.”
  • “Self-consciousness is not knowledge but a story one tells about oneself.”
Some stories ring truer than others though, no? De Beauvoir rings truer than Sartre, most of the time, for me. And Albert Camus with his Sisyphean view of life offers the starkest challenge when he says the ultimate question in philosophy is that of suicide. “Should I kill myself, or have a cup of coffee?” More coffee! It makes me happy, and it’s the braver choice. But no room for cream, please.
Camus also said
 
  • “You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life.”
  • “There are causes worth dying for, but none worth killing for.”
  • “I do not believe in God and I am not an atheist.”
  • “Always go too far, because that’s where you’ll find the truth.”
  • “Real generosity toward the future lies in giving all to the present.”
Albert Camus gave us the Existential version of Sisyphus, and the “fundamental question of philosophy”:
“There is but one truly serious philosophical problem and that is suicide. Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the fundamental question of philosophy. All the rest — whether or not the world has three dimensions, whether the mind has nine or twelve categories — comes afterwards. These are games; one must first answer.”
OK, got it. My answer is yes, of course life is worth living. Living’s not always easy, but there’s usually something to show for your hard work. It can be a source of happiness. (And what does Sisyphus do after hours?)
The next question, having consented to live, is how. Politics is supposed to help with that. But in this perpetual season of political discontent, when the polls say all politicians and parties are uniformly scorned by the populace, there have been moments when many of us have wondered if it’s all worth it. Camus felt the same.
“Every time I hear a political speech or I read those of our leaders, I am horrified at having, for years, heard nothing which sounded human. It is always the same words telling the same lies. And the fact that men accept this, that the people’s anger has not destroyed these hollow clowns, strikes me as proof that men attribute no importance to the way they are governed; that they gamble – yes, gamble – with a whole part of their life and their so called ‘vital interests.”
Politics was supposed to be all about freeing the people to pursue happiness, Mr. Jefferson said. If it’s hard to imagine Sisyphus happy, it may be harder to expect that from our politics these days. But we must keep on pushing.
Sisyphus, for such a grim figure, has been a ripe source of amusement for a lot of us.









Suppose a contradiction were to be found in the axioms of set theory. Do you seriously believe that a bridge would fall down? 

The chief danger to our philosophy, apart from laziness and woolliness, is scholasticism, . . . which is treating what is vague as if it were precise....


Logic issues in tautologies, mathematics in identities, philosophy in definitions; all trivial, but all part of the vital work of clarifying and organising our thought.


Frank Ramsey (1903-1930)



~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

A sentence is factually significant to any given person, if, and only if, he knows how to verify the proposition which it purports to express — that is, if he knows what observations would lead him, under certain conditions, to accept the proposition as being true, or reject it as being false. 

Stealing money is wrong” has no factual meaning — that is, expresses no proposition which can be either true or false. It is as if I had written “Stealing money!! 



Theists of all kinds have very largely failed to make their concept of a deity intelligible; and to the extent that they have made it intelligible, they have given us no reason to think that anything answers to it.

The existence of a being having the attributes which define the god of any non-animistic religion cannot be demonstratively proved... [A]ll utterances about the nature of God are nonsensical.


[Much later in life, Ayer had a Near Death Experience and wrote about it in an essay he titled "What I Saw When I Was Dead"...]

My recent experiences have slightly weakened my conviction that my genuine death, which is due fairly soon, will be the end of me, though I continue to hope that it will be. They have not weakened my conviction that there is no God.

[A few days later he added:] What I should have said is that my experiences have weakened, not my belief that there is no life after death, but my inflexible attitude towards that belief."

[His wife said] "Freddie became so much nicer after he died… not nearly so boastful. He took an interest in other people."




There is philosophy, which is about conceptual analysis — about the meaning of what we say — and there is all of this … all of life.


[Near death, explained]

Not long before his NDE, Ayer had an improbable run-in with prizefighter Mike TysonAyer -- small, frail, slight as a sparrow and then 77 years old -- was entertaining a group of models at a New York party when a girl ran in screaming that her friend was being assaulted in a bedroom. The parties involved turned out to be Tyson and Naomi Campbell.

''Do you know who [the bleep] I am?'' Tyson asked in disbelief when Ayer urged him to desist: ''I'm the heavyweight champion of the world.'' ''And I am the former Wykeham professor of logic,'' Ayer answered politely. ''We are both pre-eminent in our field. I suggest that we talk about this like rational men.''





"If God does not exist there is at least one being whose existence comes before its essence, a being which exists before it can be defined by any conception of it." 


So this is hell. I’d never have believed it. You remember all we were told about the torture-chambers, the fire and brimstone, the “burning marl.” Old wives’ tales!There’s no need for red-hot pokers. HELL IS–OTHER PEOPLE!




Man is condemned to be free; because once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does. “Life has no meaning a priori … It is up to you to give it a meaning, and value is nothing but the meaning that you choose.


Life has no meaning, the moment you lose the illusion of being eternal.


Words are loaded pistols.


Life begins on the other side of despair.


Nothingness lies coiled in the heart of being – like a worm.


There is no love apart from the deeds of love; no potentiality of love other than that which is manifested in loving; there is no genius other than that which is expressed in works of art.


An individual chooses and makes himself.


If I became a philosopher, if I have so keenly sought this fame for which I’m still waiting, it’s all been to seduce women basically.


It is disgusting — Why must we have bodies?


I carry the weight of the world by myself alone without help, engaged in a world for which I bear the whole responsibility without being able, whatever I do, to tear myself away from this responsibility for an instant.


Life is a useless passion.


There is only one day left, always starting over: It is given to us at dawn and taken away from us at dusk.

  •  
de Beauvoir:

Why one man rather than another? It was odd. You find yourself involved with a fellow for life just because he was the one that you met when you were nineteen.

One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.


Fathers never have exactly the daughters they want because they invent a notion a them that the daughters have to conform to.


Man is defined as a human being and a woman as a female — whenever she behaves as a human being she is said to imitate the male.


She was ready to deny the existence of space and time rather than admit that love might not be eternal.


A man attaches himself to woman — not to enjoy her, but to enjoy himself.


If you live long enough, you’ll see that every victory turns into a defeat.


I am incapable of conceiving infinity and yet I do not accept finity.



I am awfully greedy; I want everything from life. I want to be a woman and to be a man, to have many friends and to have loneliness, to work much and write good books, to travel and enjoy myself, to be selfish and to be unselfish… You see, it is difficult to get all which I want. And then when I do not succeed I get mad with anger.

Self-consciousness is not knowledge but a story one tells about oneself.


Few tasks are more like the torture of Sisyphus than housework, with its endless repetition: the clean becomes soiled, the soiled is made clean, over and over, day after day.


 Should I kill myself, or have a cup of coffee?

There is but one truly serious philosophical problem and that is suicide. Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the fundamental question of philosophy. All the rest — whether or not the world has three dimensions, whether the mind has nine or twelve categories — comes afterwards. These are games; one must first answer.


You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life.


There are causes worth dying for, but none worth killing for.

I do not believe in God and I am not an atheist. [Sounds like (Groucho) Marxism again...]


Always go too far, because that’s where you’ll find the truth.


Real generosity toward the future lies in giving all to the present.

77 comments:

  1. #12
    Do you think that Simone de Beauvoir was correct in the idea that men's idea of women is what defines a woman? Can this idea be broadened to mean that society helps to define us?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well of course we define the words we use ourselves. This includes women. We shouldn't forget that many women act in certain ways due to what other women think as well.

      Delete
  2. group: kali sunstrom, Justin, trent
    you can physicaly be born a women and have a sex change. women are made. you can be anything you want to be. you get to identify as either you want. you can wear a skirt don't mean your a women because men in scottland wear kilts.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. True enough. I suppose that was her argument boiled down.

      Delete
  3. (#8) DQ:5.
    I think this phrase means that women, as society may perceive them, are molded into the features/aspects that the environment believes them to embody as opposed to being labelled a woman due to a birth right or attribution to certain sexual characteristics. It isn't exactly clear to say where these ideas may have originated from; but, it's possible that religious and/or political views over time could have contributed towards these thought processes. As far as gender roles are concerned in the work force, I would say there really isn't any job that a man or woman should not enter into/crossover from; however, there are certain fields of work that are more suited for certain genders. Anyways, those are just my thoughts!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Exactly. I mean, when was the last time you saw a female garbageman? Or a male midwife?

      Delete
  4. Karol saleh
    Section 8
    Have you ever read a book that changed your mind about something important to you?
    The only book I still reading it is the holy bible. It changed my life and my mind for alot of things. For example, it changed my thinking and how to think better for my decisions and how to tell the truth no matter what happens. It also saved my life from the sins. And it always my answer key to all my situations.

    ReplyDelete
  5. (#8)
    4. What's your "essence" or specific human nature? Did you construct it, or were you born into it? Can your essence change?

    My human nature is to care about those around me and be aware of my surroundings and the feelings of others. I believe that I construct my own human nature, but I believe being "born into it" would mean your surroundings and your environment that you were raised in. I believe my parents have shaped my human nature, personality, and they constructed the way they believe I should act. It was my job to take the influences of my environment to construct my own "essence".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think that's exactly what the existentialists were going for.

      Delete
  6. Section 6

    Suggested Quiz Question:
    In Ayer's eyes did the phrase "God exists" pass his test?

    ReplyDelete
  7. (#6)

    Interesting interview with Bertrand Russell

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bZv3pSaLtY&ab_channel=ReasonPublic

    ReplyDelete
  8. Danielle Bonner Section 4
    1) What is the name of Simone de Beauvoir's book about women's rights?
    2) What is Ayer's theory of ethics called?
    3) What were the two questions Ayer's used to decide whether a sentence was meaningful or meaningless?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. #6
      1) the second sex
      2) emotivism
      3) a. is it true by definition b.is it empirically verifiable

      Delete
  9. Emily Blalock
    section 4
    quiz questions
    According to Sartre, what is "bad faith"?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Lucas Futrell (6)
    Quiz Questions:

    1) (T/F)Russell believed it was very important to be monogamous to ones spouse.
    2) What were the two questions Ayer used to tell if a sentence was pointless or not?
    3) Why was Sisyphus happy according to Camus?

    ReplyDelete
  11. Frank Dremel (section 6): Possibly a repost of a makeup essay from previously, but just making sure that I have it posted.
    2. Is it worth trying to grasp the ultimate reality of things, or do you agree with Douglas Adams? "The chances of finding out what's really going on in the universe are so remote, the only thing to do is hang the sense of it and keep yourself occupied." Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy


    If I were to have answered this when I first read Hitchhiker’s Guide, I would perhaps have said no. I would maybe have nobly replied something about the unexamined life, and followed with something poetic regarding looking for the meaning of life. But when I read this series by Douglas Adams, I was both struck by the truth in all he said, the questions Hitchhiker’s Guide brought to light, and the peculiar thought that of course, my life was different and none of these attitudes really reflected my own personal circumstances. When at the rather innocent age of 14 or 15, I first tore through each of the 6 books in the Hitchhiker series, I was fascinated by the deep questions – what is the answer, what is the question, the superiority of dolphins, and the depression of Marvin. At the same time, I thought with equally innocent arrogance that I would never experience the mindless autopilot existence of just keeping myself occupied. I thought I’d have plenty of time and energy to continuously ponder the deep, philosophical questions of our existence.
    Now, as a college student, there are more days than not where not only do I not examine the meaning of life, I don’t even try to comprehend the meaning of my day. Today, I am much less like Arthur Dent, or even poor Marvin, and more like Dory from Finiding Nemo --- Just keep swimming (keep yourself occupied). I occupy my day avoiding ultimate realities and instead occupy my every moment with the drudgery of everyday realities of rehearsal, music transcriptions and theory, deadlines, and somehow finding time to eat questionable food.
    In this Philosophy class, it has been the proverbial “breath of fresh air” to be able to examine some of the “ultimate reality of things”. Still I probably do agree with Adams that arriving at the definitive conclusion of our questioning is remote. The answer to The Question is more likely to be something inanely perplexing like 42, than it is to be something profoundly earth-shattering, as well, so if my time can be constructively spent keeping myself busy with fulfilling mundane commitments, I will keep plugging along. In fact, being able to plod along tilting at the windmills of everyday exasperations such as clean socks, essays, final exams, recitals and concerts, how to fit an endless list of Gen Ed classes into an impossible schedule, and where I left my glasses, is such an accomplishment that I posit the following: if I am still able, through this class or sitting around in the starlight with a group of great but equally struggling friends, to occasionally ponder “the great Question of Life, the Universe and everything?", I consider myself among the most fortunate. Perhaps Douglas Adams had it more right than most. For “any man who can hitch the length and breadth of the galaxy, rough it, slum it, struggle against terrible odds, win through, and still knows where his towel is, is clearly a man to be reckoned with.”

    ReplyDelete
  12. Section 4, J. Skylar Dean

    Bonus question: 1. How did Satre and Beauvoir describe their relationship?
    2. Ayer attended meetings with a group of scientists and philosophers called what?
    3. When John Stuart Mill died, how old (roughly) was Bertrand Russell?
    4. Lord John Russell, Betrand Russell's grandfather, had been what?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Section 4, Akmal Ishmetov
      Answers for bonus questions:
      1)Essential
      2)Vienna Circle
      3)he was a toddler
      4)Prime Minister

      Delete
  13. Frank Dremel (section 6)
    4. What's your "essence" or specific human nature? Did you construct it, or were you born into it? Can your essence change?
    My essence is an occasionally frustrated, befuddles college student/musician. I believe my essence changes daily. I was born for the life I live because the choices I make are intrinsic to my nature. I live for my music, which I believe I was born into, shaped both by my family, genetics, and divine intervention. My quest for fulfilling my musical goals led me here, where I toil as a student. Days filled with exams and quizzes and essays, dramas with friends, all-nighter studying sessions, and various other bits of a student’s life have changed some of my essence. Parts of my character, like seeping depression or caring deeply for friends or working toward an objective, are solidified and enhanced and even exaggerated right now. I believe everyone’s essence does the same, constantly shaped, like an island by a volcano.


    6. Are there any Sisyphean aspects to your daily life? Do they make you unhappy? Do you imagine you'll someday escape them? How?
    Isn’t college life all about Sisyphean reality? We strive, we think we know what our professors want, what our friends want, what our parents want, even what we want. So we try. But then we find we have either been going down a wrong road, or the right road the wrong way, or the rules change, or we aren’t even going anywhere. We have an essay for one professor while yet another wanted us to read a book during that time, while another wonders why we didn’t practice more during our “time off”. Then we find we haven’t even registered for the next semester because there aren’t enough hours in the day. And tomorrow it starts all over again. Does this make me unhappy? Sometimes. But it’s part of a process. The alternatives don’t seem very happy – either life at home or no life at all. In the end, things will have a payoff, a day when one can rest for about 47 minutes before starting all over again with a new set of jobs. We escape one set, to move onto another. The way you “escape” them is to trick them. Be satisfied with the little things you do accomplish. Tiny, infinitesimal moments of victory are enough carrot to spur one to keep rolling that rock --- Or Rockin’ and rollin’.

    DQ Sartre said, All that I know about my life, it seems, I have learned in books. Is that a good or bad approach to the “self-examined” life?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 6. On the bright side, we also make progress day by day, which is worlds away from Sisyphus.

      Delete
  14. Amy Young (4)
    Have you ever read a book that changed your mind about something important to you? What would you say to Bertrand Russell and J.S. Mill about the First Cause Argument?

    There are many books of poetry that have changed my way of thinking about many important things.

    QQ: what were some of Russell's most famous quotes?

    QQ: what other examples could you give for a paradox?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Stephen Martin (4)

      1. Russell Quotes:
      'The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time.'

      'Do not fear to be eccentric in opinion, for every opinion now accepted was once eccentric.'

      'The point of philosophy is to start with something so simple as not to seem worth stating, and to end with something so paradoxical that no one will believe it.'

      2. Examples of Paradox:

      'Imagination does not breed insanity. Exactly what does breed insanity is reason.'
      G. K. Chesterton

      'The paradox of courage is that a man must be a little careless of his life even in order to keep it.'
      G. K. Chesterton

      'The Cross cannot be defeated for it is defeat.'
      G. K. Chesterton

      Delete
  15. Sterling Smith (#6)10:24 AM CDT

    Quiz Question: How old was Bertrand Russell when he passed away?

    ReplyDelete
  16. Sterling Smith (#6)10:25 AM CDT

    DQ: Do you have an admiration for logic like Russell? Why or why not?

    ReplyDelete
  17. sect 6
    1.What did Bertrand Russel help found, and what did it oppose?
    2.Who often joined Sarte,who he met in college?
    3.Who was probably the best-known philosopher of the twentieth century?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 1)Campaign for nuclear disarmament; all weapon of mass distruction
      2)BEAUVOIR
      3)Sartre

      Delete
  18. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Sean Byars Section 6
    QQ: What was Russell's Book published in 1929?

    ReplyDelete
  20. Sean Byars Section 6
    DQ#3: Although I can't verify it I believe that there is a God and He watches over us.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Nick Corley: Section 6
    Discussion Question response

    The are many Sisyphean aspects to my daily life, such as my interest in learning. I believe this is so, because there is no limit to the amount of knowledge I can retain. Although I can lose information I have learned, there is no filter to stop what I can replace it with. Another aspect of my life that i believe has no end, is my interest in the arts.There is no end to creating art, it is similar to that of emotions. Whatever I am feeling that day or thinking about is expressed by my subconscious through art. These aspects of my life will constantly change, however they are never ending. There is no completion for these tasks, although smaller parks may be completed, the whole will continue on for my life time. As long as I am still conscious, i will still think in this same way about these tasks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A much happier take on the Greek damnation. I suppose at least we all have something to do, even if it were only rolling around boulders all day.

      Delete
  22. Nick Corley: Section 6
    Provoking Thoughts

    I also find Bertrand Russell's idea of God interesting. He states that God would not express vanity towards those who did not believe in his existence, and I am inclined to agree with him. If there was an omnipotent and omnipresent being that created us all, why would he care whether or not we believed in him? It seems selfish of the Human Race to expect so much from this being, for he gave them everything. If he were to exist, he would not mind to much what we did. I sometimes imagine what it would be like to be in God's position, although this is impossible. Nevertheless in my mind, I would not obsess over a simple creation of mine. I would hardly focus on the speck of dust amongst millions, it seems to simple of a motive for such an all powerful being.

    ReplyDelete
  23. 6 Brock Francis
    4. What's your "essence" or specific human nature? Did you construct it, or were you born into it? Can your essence change?

    I do not believe I contracted my human nature. I believe it is molded by things like personal influences and chemical makeup. It is molded by things we find pleasant or unpleasant. My personal essence is being religious with a thirst for knowledge.

    ReplyDelete
  24. 6 Brock Francis
    6. Are there any Sisyphean aspects to your daily life? Do they make you unhappy? Do you imagine you'll someday escape them? How?

    A couple aspects of my daily life that can never be completed are looking for knowledge and improving my physical condition. These two things make me very happy. If I am fortunate I will never escape these not completable tasks.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Stephen Martin (4)

    2. Are linguistic paradoxes a philosophical problem, or just an amusing quirk of language?

    Neither. The world is more complex than a series of facts. Paradoxs, which make sense with abstract thought but less so when broken down into individualistic facts, are a linguists ways of exploring the beauty of ideas. It's more than just a quirk, it's Art. As Alan Moore said, 'artists use lies to tell the truth' (Disclaimer - this quote is from V for Vendetta, though I've found roots of it dating back to Picasso and still possibly earlier.)

    ReplyDelete
  26. 8 AQQ 4-18
    1.What were Bertrand Russels main interests?
    2.When did he die?
    3.How old was he?
    4.What view got Russel into trouble?
    5.What book did he publish in 1929?
    6.What did he question in the book?
    7.Did he think you had to be faithful to your partner?
    8.How long did he spen in Brixton Prison?
    9.What was he in there for?
    10.What does CND stand for?
    11.What is CND?
    12.Did Russel thing God would ever step in for humanity?
    13.Why did he think people were drawn to religion?
    14.Did Russel believe in God?
    15.What religion did he think was different than all the rest?
    16.What religions did he think has a lot to answer for?
    17.What did Russel think these religions were often the cause of?
    18.Was he ok with us fighting in WW2?
    19.What was Russel's official title?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. #10 AQA 11/27
      1.) sex, religion, and math
      2.) 1970
      3.) 97
      4.) his views on sex
      5.) "Marriage and Morals"
      6.) Christian views about the importance of being faithful to your partner
      7.) No
      8.) 6 months
      9.) speaking out against WWI in 1916
      10.) Campaign fro Nuclear Disarmament
      11.) an international movement opposed to all weapons of mass destruction
      12.) No
      13.) they were afraid of dying
      14.) No
      15.) Buddhism
      16.) Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Hinduism
      17.) war, individual suffering and hatred
      18.) Yes
      19.) the 3rd Earl Russell

      Delete
  27. Section 8
    1. I have read a book that changed my mind significantly about life and my own personal perspective of it. Keep an eye out for my final report! (The Secret)
    In response to Mill & Russel about the First Cause Argument, I would ask if something needed a cause in order to happen. I tend to think that some things, especially the unexplained or unverifiable just happen, and not because of a specific cause or intention.
    2. I think they are an amusing quirk of language. I don't think much thought was given to the philosophical implications or issues that could arise way back in the genesis of languages.
    3. Most People Are Just As Happy As They Choose To Be
    4. I am not sure what I would call my specific essence, but I like to think that some of it I was born into and some of it I constructed myself. It's a nice thought to consider yourself a curator of yourself, you can pick and choose the collection that is the composition of you!
    5. I do have particular ideas about what it means to be a man or woman, in that, on a societal level, they should be considered the same. I am a feminist, and I don't think there is any profession that should be disallowed to a certain gender.
    6. Yes. They can make me very unhappy, but I try to let them go and focus on the positive. I feel that with enough work and focus on that goal, someday I will escape them.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Section 8-DQ
    1. I have read a book that caused me to change my mindset about something
    My response to Bertrand Russel and J.S. Mill is that sometimes things just happened and you cannot always figure the cause of things
    2. amusing quirk of language
    3. that we exist
    4. I think you were born into it and some of your essence you constructed from situations and society preference
    5. There are differences between men and women which distinguish them but they are both humans, so men and women should not be incapable of things because of their gender.
    6. Yes, from school/learning because it is a never ending cycle. Sometimes it does make me unhappy but I realized it is life and as long as I am alive I will never escape it

    ReplyDelete
  29. 1. Yes I have read a book that changed my mindset of certain situations.
    Sometimes things happen and there is not a understandable cause for it
    2. amusing quirk of language
    3. that we exist
    4. I think some essence you are born with and some you construct from society influences and situations
    5. Men and women can be distinguished from what society viewpoints but they are both human beings and should not be incapable of anything due to gender
    6. Yes, I experience in school/learning because it is a never ending cycle. Sometimes I get annoyed from it because I realize it will never end but it is life and as long as I am alive I will have to deal with it

    ReplyDelete
  30. Section 8:
    1. What were Bertrand Russell's main interests as a teenager?
    2. In what year did Russell publish Marriage and Morals?
    3. Who studied the structure of reasoning?
    4. Russell devised the Theory of what?
    5. How is Metaphysics described?
    6. What questions can you ask of any sentence?
    7. Empirically verifiable statements can give us what?
    8. What was Ayer's theory of ethics?
    9. How did Sartre and de Beauvoir describe their relationship?
    10. When was The Second Sex published?
    11. What long and difficult book did Sartre write?
    12. How do humans differ from penknives?
    13. What can we not do if Sartre is right?

    ReplyDelete
  31. DQs- Section 8 (Part 1)

    1.) I have not read a singular book that has changed my mind about something that I believe; however, I have read many books that have together changed what I believed. I would say to Russell and Mill that the First Cause Argument is a lot of hogwash. Even from an evolutionary standpoint, nothing has what we like to deem a "purpose" or "intelligent design". Not everything is meant to have a purpose, but it exists anyway.

    2.) I think that paradoxes are a philosophical problem as well as a linguistic quirk. To be able to understand philosophy or reason, one needs to be able to communicate what they mean. If they cannot do so even with truths that can be both true and false, then, that person has failed to get across their meaning.

    3.) "Everything will be okay." The previous sentence is an unverifiable sentence that I deem to be true to me. I do not know if this will come to pass, but I believe it because it keeps me going.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Section 10 Discussion Questions
    1. Yes, I have read a book that changed my mind about something. I would tel Russel and Mill that I don't necessarily agree with them, there doesn't have to be a single definite cause for everything that happens in the world.

    2. I think they're just an amusing quirk of language.

    3. Everyone has a specific purpose in life.

    4. I think your essence is a little bit of both. You're born with some of it, but I think you also grow into it a little bit and develop more as you grow and experience new things.

    5. I think you develop into the woman that you want to be.

    6. I feel that by going to school/work every day it kind of feels like a never-ending cycle, it doesn't necessarily make me unhappy because it will help me get to where I want to be in the long run, it's working towards the bigger picture so I know one day yes I will escape it.

    ReplyDelete
  33. 2. I would not consider linguistic paradoxes a philosophical problem. Languages will never fully mimic how we think, or our thought processes.

    4. I believe that your essence can change, all people are works in progress in my opinion.

    5. I believe that there are several differences between men and women, both psychologically and physically. In the end I believe men and women can do all jobs, but some may be more tailored towards a specific gender.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Quiz Answers

    1. Mills Autobiography

    2. Contradiction

    3. Verification Principle, Logical positivism

    Additional Questions

    4. Bertrand main interest as a teenager were?

    5. He died at what age?

    6. In 1929 he published what?

    7. By birth he was a English _______

    8. Who was Russel's non-regligious 'godfather'

    9. As a philosopher his real love was ______

    10. 1936 Alfred Ayer published what?

    11. " All dolphins eat fish" is an example of what? What is he testing?

    12. Where did Sartre do most of his writings?

    13. Who accompanied him most of the time, also a philosopher.

    14. What was the name of Simone de Beauvoir book?

    15. Freedom is hard to handle and many of us _______

    16. What is existentialism? How was is used it The Second Sex?

    ReplyDelete
  35. Clayton Thomas (10)9:10 PM CDT

    4/18 - DQ's
    1. Well, when I read "Why Does the World Exist" it gave me a new perception of life which I would say is pretty important to me. I would say they had a solid argument until they tried to disprove the big bang theory with "nothing comes from nothing" because the big bang did start with something, a Singularity, which began expanding into the universe as we know it. So it does not necessarily follow that there would have to be a God that started. Neither have 100% concrete proof, just theories and believers, but either way there is more to there argument which needs to be considered.

    2. I would say it is both, but the one I find perplexing is the philosophical problem because its unfathomable that something can be true and false at the same time like, "This sentence is false."

    3. "They are never alone who are accompanied by noble thought."

    4. Your "essence" is what image of yourself you leave behind for others to ponder. I would say both, some things you can't change about yourself but how you present yourself is constructed through life experiences. Your essence can change, but its hard to get people to change their original essence of you; for example, when you hit puberty and grow up but your parents always say "You'll always be my little baby".

    5. I guess that it's this idea that a little girl is born, but a women is made through the experience of life. I feel like to be a man or woman, you simply need to be a person who respects others and have the ability to live. This came from my own personal experiences in life and this is the philosophy I developed for myself, respect and live your life. I feel people should do whatever they love because if they love it they'll put in the necessary work to be successful in that field.

    6. The Sisyphean aspect of my life is my current job. And I wouldn't say it makes me unhappy because I enjoy the people that I work with, but I just feel that my purpose is much more than where I'm at and I just want to move on to bigger and better things. Hopefully, I will escape it, after I can get a job in my field of study.

    ReplyDelete
  36. #9
    Are there any Sisyphean aspects to your daily life? Do they make you unhappy? Do you imagine you'll someday escape them? How?

    I think there are many, many Sisyphean aspects in my life every single day. I believe a lot of them are all mental, traits of the way I think about things, that I was raised to know. I do believe that some of them make me unhappy, it is not something that is thought about every single day, but when I notice it happening it is always something I want to work towards. One of them being negative thinking, it is something that I believe I do a lot of. You can work towards it and try to think more positively but overall negative thinking will always be something humans do, it is human nature. Although it is not so much the “worst thing in the entire world” because with negative comes positive. Look at that, positive thinking right there. I believe there can also be a lot of “goals” I set for myself that I will never actually be able to achieve, we all must have one of those. Some of these I believe are things that can be forgotten about. We all set new goals every day, whether it be getting out of bed or whatever else. They can be replaced by new goals based on new ways of life. For the negative thoughts, we can work towards being positive and then possibly at some point in our lives it will not be a concern anymore. I am not sure if you can “escape” these things, but I do believe you can forget about them and move on.

    ReplyDelete
  37. #10 Post for November 27, 2017

    DQ1: I've read a few books that have changed my mind over the years. I'd challenge the logical fallacy that a dismissal of natural law is the same as a self-contained solution. A divine First Cause explains that deviation from the norm, while a natural first cause must explain why the rules changed. As the Big Bang theory has revealed, science probably cannot explain the existence of the universe, and certainly not within the context of that universe, which astronomy has recognized did not always exist, and before it there was nothing: no matter, no time, no light, no anything. Science may or may not ever peer back to "before" the Big Bang, but at the moment any non-divine First Cause is at a disadvantage against a divine First Cause.

    DQ2: Both! That a thing can be both true and untrue at the same time is, fundamentally, a challenge to how we look at the world. Relativism is one - rather inadequate and uninspired, I might add - attempt to cope with this situation, but intellectual cultures will continue to create more (as Islam has done with their belief that the divine can contradict itself).

    DQ3: "I think..." - have you ever noticed that, in many cases, the person saying this clearly didn't?

    DQ4: Our "essence" is to strive for our pre-fallen nature, and to reach for God. We are born to it, and each of us possesses those characteristics in common, no matter how we express them. Each person is also imbued with charisms - gifts, talents, abilities - and is shaped by experience, education, and belief. Ultimately, who we are is a consequence of the interplay of these, and other, factors. We are not merely what we think and feel, but also what we do and endure; we are a product of active and passive processes and forces.

    DQ5: "Woman" implies a social interaction. Males and females are born; men and women are made - by their families, their societies, their cultures, and themselves. I think there are professions where men and women are not interchangeable, and very few cases where the gender segregation must exist: women cannot serve as imams with groups including men, though some Islamic traditions allow them to serve as imams with all-female congregations, for instance.

    DQ6: No, there are no Sisyphean aspects to my daily life. I usually have a purpose for the things I do, and they are rarely repetitive. I work in a dynamic field and I live my life with a constructive imbalance that produces a rewarding experience that brings me ever closer to God and ever more aware of my own faults and flaws.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Anonymous10:03 AM CST

    1. An unverifiable statement that I continuously go to is "it will be what it will be" and relying on fate to decide things for me, even if I think it won't be the way I want it to be.
    2. I like to think we are born into human nature and develop based on the world and society around us.
    3. I think that women are often degraded simply because they are women, however, I think there are certain situations where women should be happy that there are certain jobs they are not allowed to enter. i.e. that draft.
    4. The "unconscious" is continually scientifically supported for many reasons, mostly because Freud spent so much time doing research on how the mind and body develop.
    5. People innovate science everyday, there will never be a day in this current lifetime that science will not exist. The truth can always be scientifically swayed one way or another.
    6. A lot of times, Fiction stories often convey the truth just from a different perspective and to keep many things up to interpretation, I would not specify it being a lie.

    ReplyDelete
  39. #6
    Essay Links:

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/21254/
    The Practice Of Slowing Down

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/90212/
    Getting Lost

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/98400/
    Treating Everyone As Family

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/48029/
    Learning Where Home Is

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/15374/
    Family Farmers

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/9916/
    The Real Dirt

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/105936/
    The Lessons of Columbus Park

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/31809/
    Community Is Powerful

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/54117/
    Cowboys and Shakespeare: An Adventure

    https://thisibelieve.org/essay/12405/
    I Believe In Maps

    ReplyDelete
  40. 1) Yes, I would say I agree with the First Cause agreement to an extent. Yes I believe everything has a cause, butI also believe that things happen randomly because the world is chaotic through nature. Then again, everything must have a cause.
    2) Amusing quirk of language.
    3) Don't sleep too much because one day you may never wake up again.
    4) I'm not quite sure, in all honesty. Nature vs. nurture is a tough debate, I believe it's both. My human nature is less feminine than it is masculine, meaning I can't cook and clean but I enjoy a good obstacle course. I believe my essence can change because anything and anyone can change at any time.
    5) It means that women are born as human beings but as they grow older they are constructed into a stereotypical woman rather than a human being. It means absolutely nothing to be either, there is very small difference between a man and woman. Both have emotions but are human beings. No, all men and women should be 100% equal.
    6) School is kind of a sisyphean aspect of my life. I could learn the same stuff by myself in my room, however, I enjoy being around others and learning with others. I will hopefully escape school someday and never come back. Probably not though.

    ReplyDelete
  41. Nava Sepehri
    Weekly Essay
    Legal Prostitution

    In this weekly essay I would like to discuss the issues with legalizing prostitution. According to a book titled “Paid For: My Journey Through Prostitution” published by Rachel Moran in 2013, Rachel says “There are people who will argue that in countries where prostitution has become legal, we have seen the eradication of pimps. This is not so. What we have seen is the transformation of the role of pimping into one co-ordinated by the local government. The government are pimps in these countries.” In the same book, Rachel says “In the case of Australia, the legislation of prostitution in [the city of] Victoria caused such an escalation in the number of brothels that it quickly outstripped the system’s ability to regulate them, and these brothels became a hotbed of organized crime, trafficking, corruption, and coercion.” According to my research the same thing happened in Amsterdam, the demand grew so large that brothels couldn’t keep up therefore illegal sex workers, including minorities, were brought by pimps because of the high demand. Legal prostitution actually rose sex trafficking rather that emitting it in Amsterdam. Just in case you still don’t believe me, according to the “American Journal of Epidemiology,” Volume 159, Issue 8, published in April 15, 2004, legalizing prostitution statistics show that even in the places where prostitution is legal, illegal prostitution still exists and is often more lucrative than legal paid-sex businesses. Only 19 legal brothels exist in Nevada; though, in major cities outside of Nevada, the illegal paid-sex-industry brings in as much as $290 Million dollars annually. Many people also think that legal prostitution deems to be nicer towards prostitutes. This is not at all true. According to a report by Melissa Farley published in 2004, titled “Prostitution & Trafficking in Nevada: Making the Connections,” Melissa said "Eighty-one percent of the Nevada women told us that they wanted to escape prostitution, regardless of its legal status, one of the women said “It’s all the same emotionally, no matter where we work.”

    ReplyDelete
  42. 1) What war did Russell go to prison for protesting?
    2) What was the overview of CND, or Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament?
    3) What were Russell's three main interests as a teenager?
    4) Why did Russell oppose religion?
    5) Which theory seemed to promise a way of explaining the structure of all our reasoning?
    What movement did Russell start in philosophy?
    6) What two questions does Ayer ask as a way to tell the meaningful from meaningless sentences?
    7) Why did Ayer argue that the statement "god exists" is meaningless?
    8) What famous book did Simone de Beavoir write?
    9) What three questions did people ask after world war two?
    10) Which book had the central theme of freedom?
    11) Where did Simone and Jean-Paul live?
    12) What two options did Sartre's student have?
    13) How did Sartre describe a waiter?
    14) Which political field did Sartre pursue later on in his life?
    15) Who was the best philosopher of the 20th century?
    16) Who was the most important of the last century?

    ReplyDelete
  43. DQ1: I've read many books that have changed my personal views on society and other people like 1984, and several books autobiographies I have read in high school Spanish class. However, the most important ones are the ones received as gifts from people that have specific messages meant for me.

    DQ2: I think paradoxes can be more than just accidents caused by quirky language but it depends on how much depth that the reader puts into the words.

    DQ3: I'm going to be a kid when I grow up.

    DQ4: Specific human nature usually involves an urge to fit in and a healthy fear of strangers. There are many other constructs that humans don't realize they are learning. We are taught these things to survive, but can be reconditioned.

    DQ5: Women only seem inferior when they are taught to be. They are not born with the social constructs that society enforces. To be a man or a woman is just to biologically be one or the other. There aren't really any other qualifications or behaviors you are required to have in order to call yourself one or the other. Men and women can work anywhere they want.

    DQ6: It seems that life is laid out like a journey or race of some sort, except there is no end. You do homework to take a quiz to take a test to take the ACT to finish high school to go to college to get a job to get a career to retire and then its about over and there is still more to go and that's why people tell us to "start early and do well." The system that we are made to go into crushes our creativity and praises innovations of the past while discouraging those of the future. It's not sad though because life is less of a rat race and more of a song or dance that we are supposed to enjoy for as long as possible. It's important to be responsible but it's not the part that is truly the most important.

    ReplyDelete
  44. #6
    Discussion Question Answers:

    1. Are linguistic paradoxes a philosophical problem, or just an amusing quirk of language?
    - I believe that they are philosophical, but I do not think they are a problem. They can be amusing, but they can also be taken on a serious note.

    2. Can you give an example of an unverifiable statement that you consider meaningful?
    - There are many statements that are said that are not objective, but rather subjective, and that is what makes them unverifiable. This could easily mean something like "Christianity is the right religion." This statement is very subjective, and yet could be meaningful to millions.

    ReplyDelete
  45. #10- alt. quiz questions

    1. What was another main interest of Russell?
    2. Russell felt that language was far less _______ than logic.
    3. What is a puzzle for logicians?
    4. Russell started what is sometimes called the _______ ______.
    5. What two questions did Ayer ask to tell apart meaningful and meaningless sentences?
    6. ______ ______ statements can give us genuine knowledge.
    7. Aside from metaphysics, what other two topics did Ayer target?
    8. What was Ayer's near death experience?

    ReplyDelete
  46. #10

    DQ 1- I think the First Cause Argument is an interesting argument; I think everything has a cause, we just don't always know what that cause is. But how you justify or answer the cause of God is something puzzling and hard to think about, if he is the greatest being then what or who gave him his cause?

    DQ 2- I think linguistic paradoxes could be a philosophical problem if you really wanted it to be, but I don't think they need to be. I think that by making it a philosophical problem you would be putting way too much thought into something that is just a part of our language.

    DQ 4- I think our human nature is something we are born into; humans have evolved over time to have specific traits that help us survive (these traits are our nature) and we automatically have some of those. I think some of them could probably be taught, too.

    DQ 5- I don't think their are any occupations no woman or man should enter, I think people should do what would make them happy and what they would enjoy. I think my ideas on men and women and the relationship we have to our society come mostly from my Women's Studies class and my mom, the ideas on how to be a man probably come from the men around me like my dad and grandfather. I agree with Beauvoir, women accept an idea of themselves that men have constructed because if you look at it, men held the power in our society for a very long time and are the biggest influencers in the media (which is how everyone accesses information now.) It hasn't been that long ago when women started challenging these ideas men gave to them.

    DQ 6- As a girl I feel like I need to wear makeup everyday and that gets old and tiring very fast.

    ReplyDelete
  47. #10 alternative DQ
    1. Do you thinks something existing without a cause is justifiable?
    2. How would that justification follow logically?
    3. If God is an uncaused caused, does that mean uncaused causes are a typical occurrences.
    4. If that is true what are some common uncaused causes?
    5. Is a belief in God a non-falsifiable hypothesis?
    6. Why are some non falsifiable hypotheses so difficult for people to overcome?
    7. Do you believe the idea that woman should have a defined role in society is ok?
    8. If so why?
    9. Where do gender roles come from men or women?
    10. If you say men, then how do you account for the social roles imposed upon men?
    11. If you say women, how do you account for the imposition of social norms woman impose on women?
    12. Have you met anyone who thought that there were jobs only men or women could hold?
    13. How can unverifiable statements be considered meaningful?
    14. If yes why?
    15. If no what does that say about your view of imagination?
    16. Do you like repetition?
    17. If so can you consider it a Sisyphean rock?
    18. Why are some monotonous things acceptable to you while others seem to annoy you?
    19. Are men made and not born?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Raine McKee12:06 PM CST

      #6
      9. Gender roles come from both men and women. Almost everyone has been influenced by gender roles - especially as kids- and it comes from the strong stereotypes of BOTH genders.
      12. Yes, I met a girl who wanted to join the military, but not in combat because it was her core belief that women should not be allowed to participate in military combat missions.

      Delete
  48. DQs - #6

    1. No. I agree with them about that.
    The first cause argument in favor of religion says that an uncaused cause is impossible: therefore god. But it's certainly not impossible if god himself is uncaused. The argument just doesn't work.

    2. Paradoxes are purely a mental construct. They result from overconstraining a system of equations. For instance x+y=0 and x-y=0 has a solution, but by adding another constraint: x-2y=1, the true statements collectively become false. Paradoxes themselves are meaningless.

    3. Wizard is the best class in dungeons and dragons.

    4. The "essence" of a person is essentially the collection of all their mannerisma, actions, and beliefs. It is what defines them. If the existentialist philosophers are correct, we construct our own reality and can change ourselves at any time if we really want to.

    5. She meant that the gender roles of women are distinct from the woman herself, as she is a free agent who can chose to ignore them. The gender roles are really just statements made in generality. On the whole they're true observations. Some people don't like them, but that doesn't make them bad. There aren't any professions that no man or woman should enter. Again, these are generalized observations. For instance, most women would not want to be construction workers, nor would most men want to do daycare.

    6. I often have to eat, drink, breathe, and sleep. This can be very annoying at times. I hope to someday escape them, but that's not likely to happen outside of death.

    ReplyDelete
  49. #6 Alternate quiz questions
    1) What did Russell question in his book Marriage and Morals?
    2)What did Russell spend six months in prison for?
    3) What do logicians study?
    4) There is no way to escape the weight of ______ that comes with being human.
    5) What is "Bad Faith"?
    6) What is Sisyphus' punishment for tricking the gods
    7) what idea did the name Existentialism come from?
    8) Who would many Philosophers say the most important thinker of the last century was?

    ReplyDelete
  50. Anonymous3:35 AM CST

    China hartman
    DQ 11/28/2017
    1. I am not a very big reader but I really enjoyed "This I believe". It's a confusing argument
    4. I think my essence is one that I have have constructed. Years of watching and observing have shaped it.
    5. I think growing up and having the responsibilities women grow to have make a woman an woman. No particular Idea I guess growing up and however one defines growing up. No
    6.Paying bill, those are never ending. They dont make me unhappy but I don't like paying them. When I die lol.

    ReplyDelete
  51. Discussion Question Answers #6
    1. I feel like almost every book I read changes my mind about some preexisting idea/belief I held before reading it.
    2. I think each paradox is different, some have a deeper meaning and some just really don't. I don't think you could really say that all linguistic paradoxes are a philosophical problem or just a language quirk.
    3. Gratitude and happiness are the keys to a happy life.
    4. I honestly don't know, I think I'm still finding mine.
    5. I think it means that women shape themselves and each other into who we become. I think there are definitely ideas, both positive and negative, that I have about what it means to be a man or a women, but either way they definitely don't apply to everyone. For example, I like to think that women are strong, independent people who can do whatever they want and don't need the help of men, but not all women are like that. Some women don't feel strong and independent and need the constant validation of a man, and that's fine. I don't think there are any jobs or anything that either a man or a woman couldn't do, but there may be instances where one fits better than the other.

    https://philosophynow.org/issues/69/Becoming_A_Woman_Simone_de_Beauvoir_on_Female_Embodiment
    ^ here is a good analysis/explanation of the quote
    6. I think my Sisyphean thing in life is honestly happiness and positivity. I'm honestly naturally a pretty grumpy/realist kind of person, but I've been trying really hard to be happier, more grateful, and more positive. Every time I feel like I'm getting better something sets me back and I'm right where I started. I think I'll eventually escape it, maybe I'll just outgrow my grumpiness or maybe something will just click inside me one day and it'll be easier or maybe I'll just keep trying and it'll finally happen.

    ReplyDelete
  52. Hayley Gray10:31 AM CST

    #6 DQ and AQQ
    DQ:
    3. There will be life after death.
    4. My essence is to be caring and kind although I can have a temper. I think genetics made me this way but I can try to change my temper by taking calming medications.
    5. I think it means that women are molded to be what man wants them to be. I think there might be occupations better suited for certain people but gender does not define whether you should or should not do a certain job.
    6. One might feel going to school is Sisyphean. School does not make me unhappy, just exhausted. I will eventually graduate, even if it does not feel like I ever will.
    AQQ:
    1. What was the movement called in which philosophers began to think very hard about language and its underlying logical form?
    2. What kind of statements can give us genuine knowledge?
    3. Who wrote the book Being and Nothingness?
    4. In what book did Simone de Beauvoir claim that women are not born women?
    5. Who was probably the best-known philosopher of the twentieth century?
    6. Existentialism became a what?
    7. Who wrote a book that declared that most of the history of philosophy was filled with gibberish?

    ReplyDelete
  53. DQ #6
    1- yes, I don't agree with him because the God is not cuased by anything.
    2- yes they are a problem, they are meaningless.
    3- there are so many meanings of life such as, love and gratitude.
    4- the essence of the human nature are the things that define the person such as personality and thoughts.
    5- Women can be as equal as men and they are able of making their future better and work as men.
    6- Of course, yes they make me unhappy and I dont think it will come a day when I I will escape from them.

    ReplyDelete
  54. Raine McKee12:01 PM CST

    #6
    1. Have you ever read a book that changed your mind about something important to you? What would you say to Bertrand Russell and J.S. Mill about the First Cause Argument?
    One time I tried to read Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis in hopes that it would sway me from agnostic into faith...but it did not.

    2. Are linguistic paradoxes a philosophical problem, or just an amusing quirk of language?
    I think you could make a case for it to be a philosophical problem, but that would do more harm than good. I think it would cause unnecessary worry and in a world where there are much bigger problems, I would prefer to just think of it as a meaningless quirk.
    3. Can you give an example of an unverifiable statement that you consider meaningful?
    You have to walk before you can crawl.
    4. What's your "essence" or specific human nature? Did you construct it, or were you born into it? Can your essence change?
    My essence is very bro-like. I like being a bro, which means being very laidback and calm and overall being chill. I think I was born a naturally laid back/in the middle on mst issues, but because I recognized those quaities in myself sometimes i strive to be calm or neutral even when i am not.
    5. What does it mean to say that women are made, not born? Do you have particular ideas about what it means to be a man or a woman? Where did those ideas come from? Are there any professions or occupations you think no women or men should enter?
    I think the statement means women have to sculpt themselves to fit a certain role (not all women and he same can be said for men). Sure, everyone will be naturally more suited for jobs than others based on physical and mental strengths, but overall I think everyone should be allowed the opportunity to try for the job they want.
    6. Are there any Sisyphean aspects to your daily life? Do they make you unhappy? Do you imagine you'll someday escape them? How?
    I feel like 90% of my life will just be doing everyday tasks - showering cooking, cleaning up my messes, doing laundry, brushing my teeth - all these things are deemed necessities and yet none of them are things I want to be the consistent parts of my life. However, sometimes there is safety in routine, so I guess I don't really mind.

    ReplyDelete
  55. #6
    1. How old was Bertland Russell when he died?
    2. What book did he write that challenged christian views on relationships?
    3. What was Russell's official title in his family?
    4. What university did Russell lecture at?
    5. What book did Ayer publish in 1936?
    6. What two questions does Ayer ask to determine if something is meaningful?
    7. What other fields besides metaphysics did Ayers attack?
    8. What was Ayer's near death experience?
    9. What does "The Two Wise Men" stand for?
    10. What two books did Satre & de Beauvoir write?
    11. Was Satre & de Beauvoir's relationship exclusive?
    12. What was Sartre's view on God?

    ReplyDelete
  56. Fonshae Knight1:21 PM CST

    Section#6- DQ:#5

    What does it mean to say that women are made, not born? Do you have particular ideas about what it means to be a man or a woman? Where did those ideas come from? Are there any professions or occupations you think no women or men should enter?
    I think this statement is saying that women sculpt themselves into who they want to be throughout their lives. We are not born with everything we need to succeed in life as a woman, so we figure those things out as life goes on. Girls grow up to be a woman depending on how they carry themselves. speak to others, etc. Sure I have certain roles that I believe a man and a woman should fulfill but really all that does not matter if both the man and woman can be great at all things society see's as a "man thing" or "girls thing". I feel like men and women are equal and we all can do the same things if we put our minds to it. Some people might have different mental strengths but that's alright. there's no such thing as job only for women or a job only for men because we all are equal. Gender does not define whether you should or should not do a certain job.

    ReplyDelete
  57. #10

    DQ1- I have not read a book that has downright changed my mind about something but Have read a book that influenced me in changing perspectives. When I read Go Set a Watchman, my Junior year of high school it led to many discussions with my father. Through those discussions I realized that I disagreed with my father's views on several topics. That also led me to developing my own political stance separate to that of my dad.

    DQ4- My essence was always being a gymnast. That was who I was. My entire life revolved around it. I definitely created that essence. No one in my family had done it before and the only person in my family who was slightly athletic was my dad. I think it can change but not much. It is still in a way who I am. I am a coach now and it will forever influence my life.

    ReplyDelete
  58. #8
    Alternate Quiz Questions: LH 31-33
    1. What were Bertrand Russel’s main interests as a teenager?
    2. What book did he Bertrand Russel publish in 1929?
    3. “For Russell there was
    of God stepping in to save humanity.”
    4. What did Russel sound like on recordings?
    5. Who was Bertrand’s non-religious ‘godfather’?
    6. What was Russel’s childhood like?
    7. What was Russel’s real love as a philosopher?
    8. What did Russel think of Meinong’s way of thinking about logic?

    ReplyDelete
  59. #8
    Alternate Quiz Questions: FL 44-45
    1. What characters to most Americans want to play?
    2. How are the houses that Americans built described?
    3. What did Jim Siegel want to do after he retired?
    4. What word did Julie keep using in their conversation?

    ReplyDelete
  60. DQ

    1. I don't believe I have read a book that changed my mind completely on something important to me, but when I read The Perks of Being a Wafllower, it changed my mind on things that were already important to me.
    2. I think there are just an amusing quirk.
    3. "We accept the love we think we deserve." This is unverifiable, but it still means a lot to me.
    4. My "essence" is not to be sweet, but to be kind. I was not always this way, but life events shaped me into it.
    5. This means that being a woman is so much more than being born female. It is an experience we all feel. I believe society has ideas as a whole about men and women, but it depends based on the subculture. I believe men should not have jobs regarding women's reproductive health.
    6. There are sisyphean tasks to everyone's every day lives. One of the best examples of this would be laundry. One is never done doing laundry unless they never wash their clothes or never wear clothes. Another example is sweeping the floor. These things don't particularly bother me because I know that we can never stop them, so we might as well find joy in them.

    ReplyDelete
  61. #3

    1. Yes, the book Monkey Wrench Gang changed my mind about littering on public roads. I'd say I disagree

    2. I think they can be either. It isn't usually wise to throw a whole of anything into a single category.

    3. "If I try to revive my teammate the other squad will be there waiting to kill me, even if he doesn't die right away" - my roommate about fortnite

    4. My essence has been crafted by the choices I make and the people I surround myself with.

    5.to say women are made not born is the idea that the stereotypical "woman" and the role that she plays in society was created by that society, not herself. I personally believe that over the course of history that has been proven true.

    6.i would say there are multiple sisyphean aspects to my daily life, although I could always choose not to try to accomplish most of those things

    My question

    7. Do you feel like your life/surroundings have been "disneyfied"?

    To a certain extent, yes. Nashville has certainly disneyfied but I would argue that murfreesboro has such a diversity of culture that it can't be disneyfied

    ReplyDelete
  62. #8
    Alternate Quiz Questions:
    LH
    1. Who's main interests as a teenager were sex, religion and mathematics?
    2. What book did Russell write that questioned Christian views on being faithful to one's partner?
    3. Who was Russell's non-religious 'godfather?'
    4. What is Russell's Paradox?
    5. What principle did A.J. Ayers invent?
    6. What was that principle used for?
    7. What concept used to define study of something beyond our senses did Ayers dislike?
    8. What book was Ayers most famous for?
    9. What does 'igtheism' mean, and why is Ayers one of them?
    10. Who is the most famous existentialist philosopher?
    11. What long-term companion of Sartre wrote and early book on feminism?
    12. What was Sartre's book with a theme of freedom?
    FL
    13. What term is used to show how urban American cities are becoming like them parks?
    14. How does Andersen say Disney makes one go along with something false despite knowing that it's untrue?
    15. Does Andersen think that American adults have come to think more like children?

    ReplyDelete
  63. Jasper Von Buseck12:51 PM CDT

    #8
    April 17 DQ’s:

    1. Have you ever read a book that changed your mind about something important to you? What would you say to Bertrand Russell and J.S. Mill about the First Cause Argument?
    - I haven’t read a book that changed my mind about something. But if I read that argument as a Christian, I wouldn’t know how to react. I’d probably end up asking questions such as, “What if God didn’t need to be fully formed to create Himself?”

    2. Are linguistic paradoxes a philosophical problem, or just an amusing quirk of language?
    - I think they’re a philosophical problem. I believe these paradoxes are like little exercises to philosophy, in the same way a piano player practices scales. However, to the rest of us, these exercises may seem like a quirk of language.

    3. Can you give an example of an unverifiable statement that you consider meaningful?
    - God bless you.

    4. What's your "essence" or specific human nature? Did you construct it, or were you born into it? Can your essence change?
    - I think our essence always changes. I definitely didn’t construct mine, at least not intentionally. I certainly believe that our upbringing and environment plays a large role in one’s essence, but I also believe a small portion is also determined by birth.

    5. What does it mean to say that women are made, not born? Do you have particular ideas about what it means to be a man or a woman? Where did those ideas come from? Are there any professions or occupations you think no women or men should enter?
    - I actually don’t know the answer to the first question, much less the second or the third. Perhaps it means you can be a female at a young age, but over time you grow up to be a woman. I think that would be an enlightened way to look at it. I think these ideas are frequently asked questions that have existed since ancient history, and can be answered in various ways depending on context. As for professions or occupations, I don’t believe people should be excluded from a job based on gender, but only by reasonable ability to perform really well.

    6. Are there any Sisyphean aspects to your daily life? Do they make you unhappy? Do you imagine you'll someday escape them? How?
    - I really don’t, actually. But if I did I’d be incredibly frustrated and probably angry very often.

    ReplyDelete
  64. GK Quiz on Weights and measures for those who are preparing for NTS, PPSC, CSS, FPSC, PMS, OTS, PTS or any other exam.

    ReplyDelete

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