How do I wax philisophic?
from cheese_greater@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.ca on 01 Nov 14:20
https://lemmy.world/post/21516225

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NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world on 01 Nov 14:22 next collapse

Circular motions

Kintarian@lemmy.world on 01 Nov 14:30 next collapse

Ponder some existential conundrum such as which came first, the chicken or the egg?

cheese_greater@lemmy.world on 01 Nov 14:36 collapse

Are koans similar to this also?

Kintarian@lemmy.world on 01 Nov 15:11 collapse

Sort of. They are used to question logic, question reality, train the mind in order to reach enlightenment.

Western philosophy is very different from Eastern philosophy.

Kintarian@lemmy.world on 01 Nov 14:32 next collapse

To be real, a lot of philosophical thought begins with a question. What is my purpose in the world, what is mankind’s purpose in the universe, how large is the universe, are we living in a simulation. Then you start exploring those thoughts and expressing what you found in the thoughts that you experienced.

howrar@lemmy.ca on 02 Nov 08:03 collapse

Basically just the results of letting your mind wander.

southsamurai@sh.itjust.works on 01 Nov 15:19 collapse

To wax philosophic requires that one first wax on and wax off inside the self. This means that philosophy at its core is the journey of the self, both in relation to perceived reality, and in perceived self. Like the karate kid, it takes practice to build up good kata, which builds muscle, and muscle memory.

In terms of the love of thought, and the practice of thinking, when one explores how to think, you develop mental muscles. When you do that practice, you develop the ability to apply the tools of thought without thinking! It becomes automatic to question the self and the world.

That question quest gives one perspectives. Those perspectives may or may not be concrete, or even useful in and of themselves. They do, however, tend to allow you to explore a concept aloud (or in writing) in a dynamic way, without the need to stop and ponder.

Koan are a kata for the mind. As are thought experiments, meditation, reading, writing, and even casual conversation.

It requires thinking and metathinking, though. You have to seek understanding of your own thoughts as much as any concepts you might wax on

cheese_greater@lemmy.world on 01 Nov 15:38 next collapse

Is there like a workbook for “beginner thinkers” haha?

southsamurai@sh.itjust.works on 02 Nov 02:55 collapse

Plenty, actually. Any intro to philosophy text will cover the basics. This is the first one that came up via ddg search. and it covers the essential stuff. Add in some critical thinking, and you’re good to go

AndrewZabar@lemmy.world on 03 Nov 15:52 collapse

Dude this is epic lol. Sadly many people won’t get the references :-)