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Monday, October 17, 2022

Questions Oct 18

Wittgenstein, Arendt, Popper & Kuhn, Foot & Thomson-LH 34-37, FL 27-28, WGU Introduction-p.35... 

1. What was the main message of Wittgenstein's Tractatus?

2. What did the later Wittgenstein (of Philosophical Investigations) mean by "language games," what did he think was the way to solve philosophical problems, and what kind of language did he think we can't have?

3. Who was Adolf Eichmann, and what did Arendt learn about him at his trial?

4. What was Arendt's descriptive phrase for what she saw as Eichmann's ordinariness?


5. Both Popper and Kuhn changed the way people understood science. What did Popper say about the method for checking a hypothesis and what name did Kuhn give to major breaks in the history of science? 

6. What is the Law of Double Effect? Many people who disagree with its principle--and with Thomson's violinist thought experiment--think that whatever our intentions we shouldn't play who?

WGU
1. Being grown-up is widely considered to be what? Do you agree?

2. Is Leibniz's optimism more likely to appeal to a small child? Why? 3

3. What was Kant's definition of Enlightenment? 5

4. What do Susan Neiman's children say she can't understand? Do you agree? 9

5. Why is judgement important? Is this a surprising thing to hear from a Kantian? 11

6. Being a grown-up comes to what? 12

7. What did Paul Goodman say about growing up? Are his observations are still relevant? 19

8. Why (in Neiman's opinion) should you not think this is the best time of your life, if you're a young college student? 20

9. What did Samoan children have that ours lack? 27 Can we fix that?

10. What is philosophy's greatest task? 31

Discussion Questions:

  • Was Wittgenstein's main message in the Tractatus correct? 203
  • What are some of the "language games" you play? (What are some different things you use language for?) 204
  • Can there be a "private language"? 206
  • "Eichmann wasn't responsible..." 208 Agree?
  • Are unthinking people as dangerous as evil sadists? 211
  • Is "the banality of evil" an apt phrase for our time? 212
  • Was Popper right about falsifiability? 218
  • Was Kuhn right about paradigms? 220
  • How would you respond it you woke up with a violinist plugged into your kidneys? Is this a good analogy for unwanted or unintended pregnancy? 226
FL
  • Pro wrestling is obviously staged. Why is it so popular?
  • What do Burning Man attendees and other adults who like to play dress-up tell us about the state of adulthood in contemporary America? 245
  • What do you think of Fantasy sports? 248
  • Was Michael Jackson a tragic figure? 250
  • Is pornography "normal"? 251


3 comments:

  1. HWT

    4. Hannah Arendt described Eichmann's ordinariness as the "banality of evil"

    WGU

    1. Growing up is widely considered to be a matter of abandoning your hopes and dreams, accepting the limits of the reality you are in/given, and stepping down to a life that is less adventurous, significant, and worthwhile than what you had assumed it would be when you begun it. I agree somewhat; when I was younger I had all these amazing dreams and aspirations, and as I grew I realized that they seem impossible or unlikely to happen in reality.

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  2. 1. What was the main message of Wittgenstein's Tractatus?
    To tell us that the greatest questions surrounding religion and ethics are beyond our understanding. And, that if we can't speak meaningfully about them we should not speak about them at all. He spoke about "Bewitchment by language." Wittgenstein believed that language leads philosophers to confusion.
    3. Who was Adolf Eichmann, and what did Arendt learn about him at his trial?
    Adolf Eichmann was a Nazi administrator in charge of transporting Jews from Europe to death camps in Poland. Arendt learned that he was an unthinking man; the system of racism in germany made it easy for him to convince himself that what he was doing was good. By failing to question his own actions, he became a monster. But, Arendt said that he weren't a special evil kind at all, "the same evil as a bureaucrat, of an office manager, rather than a devil." Brainless, so he was victim to the regime. This taught Arendt about the totalitarian state and its effects on those who didn't resist it's thought patterns.
    5. Both Popper and Kuhn changed the way people understood science. What did Popper say about the method for checking a hypothesis and what name did Kuhn give to major breaks in the history of science?
    Popper believed that all science does not rely on induction, and is up to falsification and revision. Proving hypotheses should be its survival against attempts to falsify it. Kuhn called a major break in science, or when a way of understanding is flipped a Paradigm Shift.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kayla Pulling #7
    WGU
    1. being a grown up means you are trustworthy and mature. I agree with this statement because if you are both of these things, you are an actual adult rather than your age being the main reason you are a "grown up"
    3. "man's release from his self- imposed
    tutelage."
    10. clear formulation of ideas and problems

    ReplyDelete