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"French philosophy?"

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Blogger Tom Hickey said...

Interesting post. As a former philosophy prof that did grad work at a school emphasizing the historical approach, it appears to me that most philosophical options were already at least inchoate in the Greeks, whose range of thinking was broad. Nevertheless, we associate Greek philosophy rightly with Plato and Aristotle, since their subsequent influence was a determining factor in the development not only of Western philosophy but also Western civilization through its adoption by influential Christian theologians like Augustine and Aquinas.

Similarly, most societies and cultures have had a broad approach to philosophy, but the culture itself is characterized by the most influential thinkers. As a consequence other thinkers are marginalized and considered "lesser," even though they may have been highly original and even profound. But they were out of synch with the times.

British thought is considered to be chiefly realistic (Locke) and empirical (Hume), although it also contains some of the great idealists, Berkeley, Bradely and McTaggart, for instance, who go mostly unnoticed other than by specialists.

French philosophy is dominated by Descartes, hence, is considered primarily rationalistic, even though Compte spawned positivism, which caught on elsewhere.

Again, America philosophy is characterized as pragmatic owing to the predominant influence of James and Dewey, even though it produced influential idealists like Emerson and Royce, and process thinkers like like Hartshorn and Weiss. But what characterizes American thought is its focus on experience, which is a chief feature of the culture.

So I would say that philosophy is both influenced by and influences society. Most societies produce a wide range of thinking, but certain focuses characterize the culture, at least over extended periods, with philosophy feeding culture and culture feeding back on philosophy.

One could say with Hegel, that ideas are implicit until they are made explicit through action. Many ideas remain implicit and only the one that percolate to the top become explicit. Do ideas come from the blue or do they arise from the culture? Probably some of both. Human beings cannot stand outside the process to see since we are social animals as well as rational ones.

I experienced this first hand, for example. I wrote a dissertation on a hot topic, so to speak, not only because I was interested in it but also because it was to the fore in the academic universe of discourse and my advisor was, I thought, the best one to work with. But in the end, I chose to specialize in a marginal area in which I was particularly interested.

There are a good many of us out on the periphery. While we think of ourselves as American philosophers, too, we don't expect any recognition anytime soon, since we are working too far removed from the prevailing universe of discourse that underlies cultural conventions and social institutions.

That is a choice whose origin is difficult to grasp. I call it "interest." One is impelled to act on one's dominant interest. The East would explain this as the result of latent impressions of past lifetimes, of which most of us are not aware. In the West, it is called "fate."

October 9, 2010 at 7:57 PM

Anonymous Siyuan Song said...

Personally I feel that different perspectives of philosophy matter a lot when we look through different logic in different cultural philosophies. It seems that when perspectives change, the whole foundation of philosophy changes. Philosophies across countries might be similar to building styles across countries. Each style is valid, but different.

October 9, 2010 at 9:48 PM

Blogger Doctor J said...

Would like to see you weigh in here: <a href="http://readmorewritemorethinkmorebemore.blogspot.com/2010/10/what-is-philosophy.html>What is Philosophy?</a>

October 12, 2010 at 1:05 PM

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