Up@dawn 2.0 (blogger)

Delight Springs

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Questions FEB 20

#5 Devin W. #7 Carter W.

Leibniz- #5 Lilian M. #6 Hayden S. #7 Lorelei C.

Hume- #5 Valencia B. #6 Benji W

Rousseau- #6 Edwin Pena #7 Keyleigh A

FL 17-18 or HWT 18-19- #6 Aubrey J. 


LHP

1. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not?

2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither?

3. In what way did Berkeley claim to be more consistent than Locke? DId Berkeley have a point about that?

4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived?

5. What obvious difficulty does Berkeley's theory face? Is it possible to have ideas that are consistent (non-contradictory) but still about non-realities?

6. What English poet declared that "whatever is, is right," and what German philosopher (with his "Principle of Sufficient Reason") agreed with the poet? Does this imply that nothing is ever wrong or bad? Is it really possible or reasonable to believe this?

7. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)? 

8. What 1755 catastrophe deeply influenced Voltaire's philosophy? Do you have a philosophical perspective on natural catastrophes that makes rational and moral sense of them?

9. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with hin?

10. Did Hume think the human eye is so flawless in its patterned intricacy that, like Paley's watch, it constitutes powerful evidence of intelligent design? Why would an omnipotent designer design a flawed organ?

11. What was Hume's definition of "miracle"? Did he think we should usually believe others' reports of having witnessed a miracle? Where would you draw the line between events that are highly improbable and events that are impossible (according to known laws)?

12. Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in ____, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the _______. Are we all more free when we act not only for ourselves but for the good of the whole community (world, species)?


Weiner ch3

  1. What were Rousseau's "multitudes"? Most of all he was a ___.  Are you one?
  2. Rousseau's philosophy can be summed up in what four words? What does he claim is our "natural state"? (Note the contrast with Hobbes's "state of nature" that we previously discussed.) Do you agree more with him, with Hobbes, or with neither? Is it prudent to generalize about human nature?
  3. Who were some other peripatetics (walking philosophers) named by Weiner? This approach to thinking "gives the lie" to what myth? Do you know how Diogenes "solved" Zeno's paradoxes of motion? [See * below]
  4. How was Rousseau like Socrates? Are you, too?
  5. What is Rousseau's legacy to us? How does he contrast with Descartes? What did he foresee?


HWT

1. In what way was the idea of a separable soul a "corruption"? What French philosopher of the 17th century defended it? What Scottish skeptic of the 18th century disputed it?

2. What do Owen Flanagan's findings suggest, that contrasts with Aristotle's view of human nature?

3. If you ask an American and a Japanese about their occupation, how might they respond differently?


FL

1. What amazing theme park was erected in Brooklyn at the turn of the 20th century?

2. Who was Robert Love Taylor?

3. What was Birth of a Nation?

4. What did H.L. Mencken say about southerners?

5. What did The New Theology say about the supernatural?

6. How did Modernists reconcile science and religion?

7. What famous trial was held in Tennessee in 1925, and what did Clarence Darrow say about it, and what was its cultural impact?



 
==
Peripatetic philosophy:
The Gymnasiums of the Mind
...pondering the happy connection between philosophy and a good brisk walk.

If there is one idea intellectuals can agree upon it is that the act of ambulation – or as we say in the midwest, walking – often serves as a catalyst to creative contemplation and thought. It is a belief as old as the dust that powders the Acropolis, and no less fine. Followers of the Greek Aristotle were known as peripatetics because they passed their days strolling and mind-wrestling through the groves of the Academe. The Romans’ equally high opinion of walking was summed up pithily in the Latin proverb: “It is solved by walking.” [Solvitur ambulando, as Diogenes said to Zeno as he literally walked away in demonstrating motion and change]

Nearly every philosopher-poet worth his salt has voiced similar sentiments. Erasmus recommended a little walk before supper and “after supper do the same.” Thomas Hobbes had an inkwell built into his walking stick to more easily jot down his brainstorms during his rambles. Jean- Jacques Rousseau claimed he could only meditate when walking: “When I stop, I cease to think,” he said. “My mind only works with my legs.” Søren Kierkegaard believed he’d walked himself into his best thoughts. In his brief life Henry David Thoreau walked an estimated 250,000 miles, or ten times the circumference of earth. “I think that I cannot preserve my health and spirits,” wrote Thoreau, “unless I spend four hours a day at least – and it is commonly more than that – sauntering through the woods and over the hills and fields absolutely free from worldly engagements.” Thoreau’s landlord and mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson characterized walking as “gymnastics for the mind.”

In order that he might remain one of the fittest, Charles Darwin planted a 1.5 acre strip of land with hazel, birch, privet, and dogwood, and ordered a wide gravel path built around the edge. Called Sand-walk, this became Darwin’s ‘thinking path’ where he roamed every morning and afternoon with his white fox-terrier. Of Bertrand Russell, long-time friend Miles Malleson has written: “Every morning Bertie would go for an hour’s walk by himself, composing and thinking out his work for that day. He would then come back and write for the rest of the morning, smoothly, easily and without a single correction.”

None of these laggards, however, could touch Friedrich Nietzsche, who held that “all truly great thoughts are conceived by walking.” Rising at dawn, Nietzsche would stalk through the countryside till 11 a.m. Then, after a short break, he would set out on a two-hour hike through the forest to Lake Sils. After lunch he was off again, parasol in hand, returning home at four or five o’clock, to commence the day’s writing.

Not surprisingly, the romantic poets were walkers extraordinaire. William Wordsworth traipsed fourteen or so miles a day through the Lake District, while Coleridge and Shelley were almost equally energetic. According to biographer Leslie Stephen, “The (English) literary movement at the end of the 18th century was…due in great part, if not mainly, to the renewed practice of walking.”

Armed with such insights, one must wonder whether the recent decline in walking hasn’t led to a corresponding decline in thinking. Walking, as both a mode of transportation and a recreational activity, began to fall off noticeably with the rise of the automobile, and took a major nosedive in the 1950s. Fifty plus years of automobile-centric design has reduced the number of sidewalks and pedestrian-friendly spaces to a bare minimum (particularly in the American west). All of the benefits of walking: contemplation, social intercourse, exercise, have been willingly exchanged for the dubious advantages of speed and convenience, although the automobile alone cannot be blamed for the maddening acceleration of everyday life. The modern condition is one of hurry, a perpetual rush hour that leaves little time for meditation. No wonder then that in her history of walking, Rebecca Solnit mused that “modern life is moving faster than the speed of thought, or thoughtfulness,” which seems the antithesis of Wittgenstein’s observation that in the race of philosophy, the prize goes to the slowest.

If we were to compare the quantity and quality of thinkers of the early 20th century with those of today, one cannot help but notice the dearth of Einsteins, William Jameses, Eliots and Pounds, Freuds, Jungs, Keynes, Picassos, Stravinskys, Wittgensteins, Sartres, Deweys, Yeats and Joyces. But it would be foolish to suggest that we have no contemporaries equal to Freud, et al. That would be doing an injustice to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Edward O. Wilson, James D. Watson, and the recently departed Stephen J. Gould. But as to their walking habits, they varied. Gould, a soft, flabby man, made light of his lack of exercise. Edward O. Wilson writes that he “walks as much as (his) body allows,” and used to jog up until his forties. Watson, the discoverer of the DNA molecule, frequently haunts the grounds of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, particularly on weekends, and is said to be both a nature-lover and bird-watcher.

There seems no scientific basis to link the disparate acts of walking and thinking, though that didn’t stop Mark Twain from speculating that “walking is good to time the movement of the tongue by, and to keep the blood and the brain stirred up and active.” Others have concluded that walking’s two-point rhythm clears the mind for creative study and reflection....

To paraphrase Thomas Jefferson, walking remains for me the best “of all exercises.” Even so, I am full of excuses to stay put. My neighborhood has no sidewalks and it is downright dangerous to stroll the streets at night; if the threat does not come directly from thugs, then from drunken teens in speeding cars. There are certainly no Philosophers’ Walks in my hometown, as there are near the universities of Toronto, Heidelberg, and Kyoto. Nor are there any woods, forests, mountains or glens. “When we walk, we naturally go to the fields and the woods,” said Thoreau. “What would become of us, if we only walked in a garden or a mall?” I suppose I am what becomes of us, Henry.

At noon, if the weather cooperates, I may join a few other nameless office drudges on a stroll through the riverfront park. My noon walk is a brief burst of freedom in an otherwise long, dreary servitude. Though I try to reserve these solitary walks for philosophical ruminations, my subconscious doesn’t always cooperate. Often I find my thoughts to be pedestrian and worrisome in nature. I fret over money problems, or unfinished office work and my attempts to brush these thoughts away as unworthy are rarely successful. Then, again, in the evenings I sometimes take my two dachshunds for a stroll. For a dog, going for a walk is the ultimate feelgood experience. Mention the word ‘walkies’ to a wiener dog, and he is immediately transported into new dimensions of bliss. I couldn’t produce a similar reaction in my wife if I proposed that we take the Concorde to Paris for the weekend. Rather than suffer a walk, my son would prefer to have his teeth drilled.

In no way am I suggesting that all of society’s ills can be cured by a renaissance of walking. But maybe – just maybe – a renewed interest in walking may spur some fresh scientific discoveries, a unique literary movement, a new vein of philosophy. If nothing else it will certainly improve our health both physically and mentally. Of course that would mean getting out from behind the desk at noon and getting some fresh air. That would mean shutting down the television in the evenings and breathing in the Great Outdoors. And, ultimately, it would involve a change in thinking and a shift in behavior, as opposed to a change of channels and a shift into third.

© CHRISTOPHER ORLET 2004

Christopher Orlet is an essayist and book critic. His work appears often in The American Spectator, the London Guardian, and Salon.com. Visit his homepage at www.christopherorlet.net

https://philosophynow.org/issues/44/The_Gymnasiums_of_the_Mind

45 comments:

  1. 1. Poet, Alexander Pope, said "whatever is, is right". Leibniz agreed that there is a logical explanation for everything because of God. I do not entirely agree with this. I try to say that everything happens for a reason, even if I do not know what that reason is. They believed that literally everything is part of God's plan. This included all of the natural disasters we have. They also believe that the world we live in was the best possible world that God chose for us, despite all of the bad aspects.

    2. In 1755 Lisbon earthquake killed over twenty thousand people. Then a tsunami and fire followed. This made Voltaire question his belief in God. I do not understand why people die the way they typically do, like fires or shootings. There is always a slight possibility that someone lives and I try to hang on to that chance.

    3. Voltaire said to cultivate the garden meaning to do something useful for humanity. I agree with him. This can be a simple action like to help an elder, but Voltaire helped clear someones name. He defended Jean Calas because his son committed suicide but the judge said that Jean killed him. This was a big favor, and I think that everyone can do something, big or small, to help society.

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    1. Troy R #6
      I think holding out hope in events of tragedies is the best one can do (in case of being unable to physically or monetarily help). Don't lose hope and you will prevail. Feeling grief, sadness, and anger is normal human reactions, but doomscrolling/spiraling will just make things worse.

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  2. In Samuel Johnson kicking a stone example, Berkley stated there was "no real physical stone" causing the pain in the foot. He believed that "the stone is nothing more than the sensations it gives rise to." If what appears to be reality is not, then how would you explain death. If someone falls off a cliff and perishes, at what point does that become reality?

    4. To be (or exist) is to be perceived. I do not think human existence depends upon being perceived. There may be other things, such as the existence of ghosts, that may appear real simply based on perception

    8. A devastating earthquake hit Lisbon, killing 20,000 people.
    Often people use natural disasters and devastating events to prove that God either does not exist or He is not all-good and all-powerful. Because we live in a flawed and imperfect world (brought about by sin), I believe most of these events are products of that imperfection. So although there is a lot of bad, the beauty is that God brings good out of even some of the worse situations. Sometimes God does not intervene in hard moments because He knows the results of the event will direct our life in a way we may not have gone otherwise. I believe this is where faith and trust come in. You trust that God knows all situations through and through, and that He has a plan regardless of what we see, or lack thereof, in front of us.

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    1. I don't think that existence is based on perception either. I find that kind of way of thinking to be really arrogant in a way, because it basically just means that the world revolves around you. Does a whole country filled with people you have never visited or never seen not exist simple because you haven't seen it? It's just a silly way to see the world.

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    2. I think rather than perception, existing depending on memory would make more sense. If no one is there to remember you, your entire life and story is as good as gone, like you never really existed in this world.

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    3. I love that you mention the aspect of death, because the book did not cover Berkeley's ideas about death and the perception of it. I think it is hard for him to justify the "idea of death," because it is such a real and finite thing. It is as though Berkeley would hear of a person dying and not believe it, because he was not there to see them die? So, it can't be true? It sounds a lot like a denial of common sense, even though he claims he was based in common sense...

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    4. Yess! I completely agree with you on your first point. If what appears to be reality is not, the how do you explain death? The fear of hurting yourself and loosing loved one shows that your mind perceives it as real even if you convince yourself the opposite.

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  3. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with him?

    Voltaire meant it as a metaphor for improving ones life and focusing on our own actions rather than the worlds. I believe this is a valid philosphy. We can never be sure of the world but we can always be sure of ourselves. We are ourselves and we decide who we are. We are responsible for cultivating our own lives.

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    1. I agree! We can always change what we want to be, but it becomes more complicated when trying to include the whole world into it.

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    2. I agree with you completely, but I also think there is an aspect of improving oneself and in turn benefiting others around you. When you are willing to help yourself and grow as a person inwardly, most of the time that translates to a growth in a society. I think of it as if everyone in a society focused on improving themselves, there would be no room for evil, lies, or deception. Or at least you would hope so.

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    3. I partially agree. However, If we can never be sure if the world around us I think it would make it very easy for someone to justify ignoring another person's suffering on the premise of cultivating their lives. While there is nothing wrong with that it doesn't necessitate you being a good person either.

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    4. I also agree that we are responsible with cultivating our own lives'. I also think Voltaire ment that we must water our garden before we attempt to water others.

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  4. 2. What do Owen Flanagan's findings suggest, that contrasts with Aristotle's view of human nature?

    He believes that humans are not rational creatures. Rather humans are emotionally driven and do not use logic first. We are driven by wants and are socially influenced by the world around them. Aristotle believed that humans achieve happiness through reason and the pursuit of wisdom.

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    1. I would like to believe that we humans are still rational and able to make choices based on logic without overly relying on emotion. It does play a little part in our decision making, but I would imagine that emotion is only a decision booster; we make the decision on reason and believe it by emotion.

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  5. What were Rousseau's "multitudes"? Most of all he was a ___. Are you one?

    Here he was referring to the masses who are easily swayed by social pressures rather than individual beliefs. These people were prone to be manipulated by those in positions of power. These multitudes would focus on short term pleasures rather than long term gain.

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    1. It's occasionally okay to focus on short term pleasures, as long as they are within reason. Thinking about the long term gain is only a culmination of shorter steps and goals.

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  6. 7. What famous trial was held in Tennessee in 1925, and what did Clarence Darrow say about it, and what was its cultural impact?

    The "Monkey Trial" - which was held in Dayton, Tennessee where John Scopes was sued for teaching Darwin's theory of evolution against Tennessee's "Butler Act", which prohibited public school teachers from denying the book of Genesis account of mankinds origin.


    This trial was also the first trial to be broadcasted live in the united states.

    Link to the bill: https://teva.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/scopes/id/166

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  7. 6. What English poet declared that "whatever is, is right," and what German philosopher (with his "Principle of Sufficient Reason") agreed with the poet? Does this imply that nothing is ever wrong or bad? Is it really possible or reasonable to believe this?

    It was Alexander Pope, the English Poet and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was the German Philosopher. It depends on the situation, I do believe the everything happens for a reason, but I also believe that there are things that are just unknown. This implies that everything that happens is right which I disagree. I do believe that some people believe this, but me personally I don't find it reasonable.

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    1. I agree with you. Whatever happens happens, but just because it happens doesn't make it good. "Bad" things naturally happen all the time, as well as unnaturally. I find it a very unreasonable belief just because that would mean there is no point to things like morals or ethics.

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    2. The same thought came to mind when I read this. I think everything happens for a reason but not everything that happens is right.

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  8. Berkeley was an idealist and an immaterialist because he believed that only ideas exist and found no value in matter objects. I wish I could say I was an immaterialist, but I very much like having things in that I am a collector of stuff like dvds, vinyl records, and other stuff like that. Perhaps I put too much value into physical objects but I don't see the harm in it, it makes me happy for what it is.

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  9. 7. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)?
    Voltaire
    8. What 1755 catastrophe deeply influenced Voltaire's philosophy? Do you have a philosophical perspective on natural catastrophes that makes rational and moral sense of them?
    The catastrophe was the Lisbon earthquake. My perspective of natural catastrophes is that they're unfortunate. People die for no reason all because they were at the wrong place at the wrong time during a catastrophe that happens very often in populated places and happen to be dangerous in the right condtions.
    9. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with him?
    What he meant was that instead of asking unusual philosophical questions all day, we should be working and contributing to society and its members. In a way he is correct because although we are seeing some of the more popular philosophical questions, there would still be a lot of pointless ones that many people debated on instead of working to get food for their family or helping people in yard work.




    12. Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in ____, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the _______. Are we all more free when we act not only for ourselves but for the good of the whole community (world, species)?
    Rousseau believes that we are in chains but that can be solved through the General Will. I believe in some situations that I can think of, that we are more free if we focus on our community. For example, let's say that you're adult that wants lower taxes but everyone else around you wants a better education, then the General Will has that chosen over your needs, but it actually helps you in the long run because you can have children who excel at learning due to this change and have more freedom to choose a career and can talk care of you when you decide to retire and get to do whatever you want (being free). People often don't see how a policy or plan can help improve more lives because of selfishness and that often can prevent them from benefitting them in the long run.

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  10. George Berkeley's theory was that perceived objects are only ideas and do not exist outside the minds that perceive them. In simple terms, once the mind separates from an object or is done observing it, it will cease to exist anymore or become irrelevant. Samuel Jackson refuted this theory because he noted that material things do exist and aren't just composed of ideas. He used the example that he could feel that stone hard against his toe when he kicked it. This view was not successful, because Berkeley's was viewed as smarter than he was previously thought. For Berkeley, that did not prove an existence of a stone, but that it is nothing more than sensations that it gives rise or feelings to.

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  11. 4.) Berkeley's Latin slogan was "Esse est percipi" and that meant that "to be (or exist) is to be perceived". Since we live in a world where we are constant being judged for everything due to the age of social media, I do believe part of our existence rests on being perceived by others.

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    1. It does hold a new meaning nowadays, like you said. Do you think that the social media revolution causes this kind of need to be perceived? Or, is it an innate behavior, rather than learned, and it is just amplified through connection across the internet?

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  12. 6.) The English poet was named Alexander Pope and the German poet who agreed with the poet that "whatever is, is right" was Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. This phrase does not mean that nothing is ever wrong, it just means that everything in this world happens for a reason so we shouldn't question it. It was definitely possible to believe this theory because we can't control what happens so sometimes, we just have to except what happens in everyday life.

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  13. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither?

    He was an idealist in that he believed that everything that exists is ideas, and an immaterialist because he believed physical objects don't exist. I wouldn't consider myself to be either of these things. I do believe things are real, and I think there's more to reality than just ideas. Hearing all these philosophers say they think nothing is real makes me wonder how much mercury they were drinking or something, because I just think it's stupid.

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  14. 4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived?

    Esse est percipi- to exist is to be perceived- was his Latin slogan. I think this sounds like a fun little phrase, but I don't agree, and I don't think existence depends upon being perceived. Most people don't perceive the cells that make up our very being, yet that doesn't mean these cells aren't real. If there is a little bug in a distant forest and no one or no thing has ever seen the bug before, that doesn't make the bug any less of a real bug. It's foolish to think that one's state of being is dependent on other people.

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  15. What English poet declared that "whatever is, is right," and what German philosopher (with his "Principle of Sufficient Reason") agreed with the poet? Does this imply that nothing is ever wrong or bad? Is it really possible or reasonable to believe this?

    It was Alexander Pope who said this, and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was the one who agreed with him. And yes, it does sound to me without context that this would imply that nothing is ever wrong or bad. In my opinion, it would not be reasonable to believe in this because there is a such thing as objective morality. Murder is wrong. Stealing is wrong. Abuse is wrong. However, when you look at this quote in the way in which he meant it, it actually does make a lot more sense and aligns more closely with my way of thinking. What he meant by this is that everything, even if it may seem bad, ultimately works as a part of God's will, which I agree with. I had gone through some truly terrible things growing up and in my adolescence, and they felt awful at the time, but now I can see that I wouldn't be where I am today without these events occurring in my life. As bad as things may seem in the moment, it will all come to fruition and work for the glory of God. Am I saying that all these things are necessarily good? No, not at all. These things might still be wrong or bad, but that doesn't null the fact that they will contribute to something greater than we can ever imagine.

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  16. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)?

    Voltaire did this in his work "Candide". I understand his perspective from an objective point of view, however I disagree with his perception. In this story, the philosophy teacher Pangloss took it to the extreme and did not display proper values of empathy that should accompany this "everything is right" philosophy. While yes, I do say that most things work towards the greater good, I also hold that things like rape, slavery, war, etc. are objectively bad. These two beliefs are not mutually exclusive, and I think that to imply so is wrong and a misunderstanding of the concept of everything being right for God's plan.

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  17. Voltaire's words, "I hate what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it" are words I think we all as a society need to remember. At university, at home, in politics, whatever the world you are living in right now, life has become polarizing. The two opposing ideals in the world has turned into hatred on both sides. I think we all need to remember this quote and live by it! You will never in your life agree with everyone, but you should always stop, listen, and allow others to speak. We used to be a world where differing ideas were more or less accepted, but now it is shunned and a disgrace not to agree. I think Voltaire was on to something here, and I think we should all apply this to our lives...

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    1. Troy R #6
      For the most part, I agree with Volitare's quote. Everyone should be allowed to voice their opinions on anything, yes, but sometimes things that others spew can be pure hatred, and that shouldn't go without consequences.

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  18. When Voltaire wrote about "cultivating our garden" in Candide, he meant that rather than speculating about grand philosophical ideas or waiting for an ideal world, we should focus on practical, tangible efforts to improve our own lives and surroundings. He was rejecting overly optimistic or fatalistic views, emphasizing personal responsibility and productive action. Do you agree with his perspective, or do you think larger philosophical debates have value?

    Hume did not believe that the human eye was flawless or that its complexity necessarily pointed to an intelligent designer. He argued against Paley's watchmaker analogy, suggesting that nature’s apparent design could emerge from gradual processes, much like evolution would later explain. If an omnipotent designer existed, Hume questioned why so many aspects of nature, including the eye, had flaws—like blind spots and susceptibility to disease. Do you think flaws in nature are evidence against intelligent design, or could they serve another purpose?

    Hume defined a miracle as "a violation of the laws of nature"—an event so extraordinary that it contradicts everything we know about how the world works. He argued that we should almost never believe reports of miracles because human testimony is often unreliable due to exaggeration, deception, or wishful thinking.

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  19. When reading about how John Locke viewed the world in the chapter about Berkeley, I was surprised by his assertion that all objects are colorless and that the color of an object is a result of our perception. This is a rough approximation of the modern scientific explanation for the color of objects. Locke's hypothesis that the microscopic texture of the object affected our perception of the color isn't too far off either, considering the material's reaction with light determines the color we perceive. I wonder if that was something he cooked up on his own or if his beliefs were shaped by the scientific understanding at the time.

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  20. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not? He kicked a stone out in the middle of the street and said he could feel the stone against his feet when he kicked it. He did not succeed because Berkley's rebuttal to the was Feeling the hardness of a stone against your foot wouldn’t prove the existence of material objects, only the existence of the idea of a hard stone.



    What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither? He was an idealist because he believed all things are made up of ideas and he was a immaterialist because he denied material things. I definitely wouldn't consider myself a immaterialist because I believe that there is such thing as physical objects. I could possibly consider myself a idealists at times but I think for the most part I believe things are deeper than just ideas.

    In what way did Berkeley claim to be more consistent than Locke? DId Berkeley have a point about that? He claimed to be more consistent than Locke because he believed we experienced the world directly, however the world is made up of ideas.

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  21. Did Johnson successfully refute Berkely's theory?

    Johnson did not succeed in philosophically refuting Berkeley’s idealism. His response was more of a dismissive rejection rather than an argument engaging with Berkeley’s reasoning. A true refutation would require addressing Berkeley's claim that all experiences of the external world are mediated through perception and that no mind-independent matter exists.

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  22. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with him?
    Voltaire’s phrase "we must cultivate our garden", which appears at the end of Candide, serves as a metaphor for focusing on practical, productive work rather than engaging in endless philosophical speculation. Throughout the novel, Candide and his companions suffer from war, natural disasters, and philosophical dogma (especially Leibnizian optimism, represented by Pangloss), only to realize that grand theories about the world do little to improve their lives. By the end, Candide rejects idle speculation and concludes that the best course of action is to work diligently on what is within his control—his own “garden.”

    This idea can be interpreted as advocating for a pragmatic, self-sufficient, and action-oriented approach to life. Rather than getting lost in abstract debates about whether this is the “best of all possible worlds,” Voltaire suggests that individuals should focus on tangible improvements in their own lives and communities.

    Whether or not one agrees with Voltaire depends on perspective. On one hand, his view is compelling because it encourages personal responsibility, hard work, and engagement with reality. It aligns with the idea that real change comes from effort rather than mere discussion. On the other hand, some might argue that philosophy, debate, and abstract thinking are also valuable, as they help shape societies and ideas in ways that direct action alone might not.

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  23. Something that struck me about Voltaire was that it wasn't enough to simply refute Leibniz's concept of optimism with logical argument alone. He felt compelled to draft these arguments into a narrative and publish an entire book that mocked Leibniz's professed views. This seems important to note.

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  24. I thought Hume's ideas about intelligent design were poignant. Especially his insistence that we can't know the qualities of a designer or architect with the data available to us. This is something I had never considered. If Hume wasn't agnostic or atheistic, perhaps he believed in a version of God similar to Spinoza's.

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  25. Troy R #6
    6. How did Modernists reconcile science and religion?
    Religion texts that have existed for long periods of time likely won't have the "answers" for more contemporary issues. So then, Modernists reexamines those text and use them in more figuratively, and applies those words in a new contexts.

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  26. 1. Samuel refuted Berkley with the idea of kicking a stone and how the pain would prove its existence. Berkley however, still denied that by saying that the pain is just a perception too.

    2. Berkley was an idealist and immaterialist because he believed that objects only existed in the mind. I wouldn't say I'm either of these.

    3. Berkley claimed to be more consistent than Locke because Locke had a limit to what things were just a perception in the mind while Berkley was more consistent in the sense that everything was just a perception. In a way he does have a point, but the physical aspects of something can have impacts on other things which makes it so that its not just a perception.

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  27. 2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither?
    Berkley was an idealist and immaterialist because he thought that, rather than being made of tangible materials, everything we perceive is actually just ideas. Like Jackson, I also quickly dismissed Berkley’s theory. However, as I read on it became more apparent that Berkley’s ideas were harder to disprove. It seems like common knowledge to be certain of the continuous existence of things. But, repeatingly questioning all avenues of existence definitely has the ability to present some doubt. Its scary to wonder if everything we perceive is not actually real. I think this may be especially threatening because who we are is shaped by the things we experience and, so, making those immaterial takes away from our formative experiences and who we are, leaving us to question who/what is real and who/what is truly significant. I think that I would be neither an idealist or immaterialist, as the existence of physical things seems too fundamental to me to refute.

    4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived?

    Berkley’s Latin slogan was “ease west percipient” (to be (or exist) is to be perceived. I don’t think that existence depends upon being perceived. It is hard to image that, even for people with impaired senses or perception, things do not truly exist. I believe that the personal value of something’s existence depends on how we perceive it. However, as stated before, the existence of physical things seems too fundamental to me to refute.

    7. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)?
    Voltaire
    François-Marie Arouet, better known as Voltaire, was the French champion of free speech known for his satirical novel/play Candide, which ridiculed the theories of German philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Leibniz believed that all suffering and evil eventually contributed to the overall perfection and good in the world. However, Voltaire’s Candide criticized this view, displaying how Leibniz’s optimism was hard to accept as a blanket for all of the worst evils and suffering that exist.

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  28. Berkeley was both an idealist and an immaterialist because of this view that solely our minds create the reality we perceive. Though it may seem palpable to us, the only thing we recognize as the objects and materials we interact with is the signals our senses perceive through which our brains paint our reality.

    We can never know if what we perceive really exists in the objective sense.

    In science, not being able to trust your instruments to give you accurate measurements is instrument fallibility. Quantum physics has the heisenberg uncertainty principle that relates to measuring a particles position and its momentum. The more you know about one, the less you know about the other. And light demonstrated both wave and particle like properties depending on its method of observation. These dilemmas exist at all levels in nature.

    Berkeley's saying was "esse est percipi" or "to [exist] is to be perceived" This is another way of saying "if a tree falls in the forest and there is no one to hear it does it make a sound?" Berkeley would have said not only does it not make a sound, but the tree doesn't even exist. The whole forest doesn't exist is there is no one to observe it.

    Is our universe a simulation? Does the simulated reality render and derender around us? Does it do this to save RAM?

    There are things in our universe we do not have the power to observe therefore will we ever know if they exist? No one has ever seen the surface of the sun up close and likely we never will. We do not have the technology to build instruments to go there and collect data. Does the surface of the sun exist? The reactions that take place upon it combine with the elements on Earth allowed life to exist, yet we can only make estimations about it from afar.

    There is a black hole an unfathomable distance from where we stand, an object so massive that it collapse under its own gravity. An object so dense that its crushing gravitational force instantly changes the property of matter that comprises it. Even light cannot escape its gravitational pull past its event horizon. We can never truly observe it with out human senses, but does it exist? Maybe we aren't meant to understand some things.

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  29. Section 007

    How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not?
    He refuted Berkely’s theory by kicking a stone in the street. His reasoning is that material things do exist, and he felt the stone when he kicked it. He failed because Berkely stated the feeling of the stone doesn’t prove the existence of the material object but the idea of a hard stone
    2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither?
    He was an idealist because he believed that all that exists are ideas and he was an immaterialist because he denied that material things exist. I lean more towards idealist
    3. In what way did Berkeley claim to be more consistent than Locke? Did Berkeley have a point about that?
    He believed that he was more consistent than Locke because he thought that people perceive the world directly. He also believed that the world only believed in people’s minds and that it’s based off people’s perception of events.
    4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived?
    “Esse est percipi” to be (or exist) is to be perceived. I think existence doesn’t soley depend on being perceived but I think it’s a large part of existence in general.
    5. What obvious difficulty does Berkeley's theory face? Is it possible to have ideas that are consistent (non-contradictory) but still about non-realities?
    There leaves the interpretation of a mistake to be perceived by others instead of giving a set example or definition. If everything is just an idea, nothing is material objects, how can you tell the difference between what is real and what is not

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