No class Tuesday April 5, read and post comments on John Kaag's Sick Souls (etc.) and Fantasyland (see post below).
Hope you can make it to see our faculty candidate Gregory Slack discussing "The Value of Philosophy," Tuesday afternoon, Peck Hall 318 at 3:30 PM. If you do, ask him for me what he thinks of Bertrand Russell's take on the value of philosophy. The philosophic mind, wrote Lord Russell in the concluding chapter of The Problems of Philosophy,
will view its purposes and desires as parts of the whole...Thus contemplation enlarges not only the objects of our thoughts, but also the objects of our actions and our affections: it makes us citizens of the universe, not only of one walled city at war with all the rest. In this citizenship of the universe consists man's true freedom, and his liberation from the thraldom of narrow hopes and fears.Thinking of oneself as a citizen of the universe, a true cosmopolitan, is (I've once again witnessed first-hand) one of the genuine consolations of philosophy -- particularly in times of personal loss and grief at the passing of a beloved fellow citizen. That value is priceless.
Thus, to sum up our discussion of the value of philosophy; Philosophy is to be studied, not for the sake of any definite answers to its questions, since no definite answers can, as a rule, be known to be true, but rather for the sake of the questions themselves; because these questions enlarge our conception of what is possible, enrich our intellectual imagination and diminish the dogmatic assurance which closes the mind against speculation; but above all because, through the greatness of the universe which philosophy contemplates, the mind also is rendered great, and becomes capable of that union with the universe which constitutes its highest good.
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