Introducing Philosophy: A Graphic Guide
By Dave Robinson and Judy Groves
()
About this ebook
What is the nature of reality?
What are human beings really like?
What is special about the human mind and consciousness?
Are we free to choose who we are and what we do?
Can we prove that God exists?
Can we be certain about anything at all?
What is truth?
Does language provide us with a true picture of the world?
How should we behave towards each other?
Do computers think?
Introducing Philosophy is a comprehensive graphic guide to the thinking of all the significant philosophers of the Western world from Heraclitus to Derrida. It examines and explains their key arguments and ideas without being obscure or solemn. Lively and accessible, it is the perfect introduction to philosophers and philosophical ideas for anyone coming to the subject for the first time.
Dave Robinson
I’m Dave, and I write. I’m also a father, a reader, gamer, a comic fan, and a hockey fan. Unfortunately, there is a problem with those terms; they don’t so much describe me as label me, and the map is not the territory. Calling me a father says nothing about my relationship with my daughter and how she thinks I’m silly. It ignores the essence of the relationship for convenience. It’s the same with my love of books, comics, role-playing games, and hockey; labels only say what, not how or why. They miss all the good parts. If you want more of a biography: I was born in the UK, grew up in Canada, and have spent time in the US. I’ve been freelancing for the last seven years. Before that, and in no particular order, I’ve managed a bookstore, worked in a pawnshop, been a telephone customer service rep, and even cleaned carpets for a living. As a freelancer, I’ve done everything from simple web content, to ghostwritten novels. I’ve even written a course on trading forex online. I’ve also edited everything from whitepapers to a science fiction anthology. Right now, I'm working on the next Doc Vandal adventure.
Read more from Dave Robinson
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Introducing Philosophy - Dave Robinson
QUESTIONS
Most people are usually too busy to go in for the sort of thinking usually called philosophical
. This is because they have to spend their time struggling for existence or because they rather enjoy living lives of undisturbed routine. But, on rare occasions, a few awkward and irritating individuals with time on their hands ask deceptively simple questions which never seem to have simple answers.
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF REALITY? WHAT ARE HUMAN BEINGS REALLY LIKE?
WHAT IS SPECIAL ABOUT HUMAN MINDS AND CONSCIOUSNESS?
CAN WE BE CERTAIN ABOUT ANYTHING AT ALL?
ARE THERE OBVIOUS DIFFERENCES BETWEEN VALID AND IMPROPER ARGUMENTS? WHAT IS TRUTH? WHAT IS MEANING?
HOW SHOULD WE BEHAVE TOWARDS EACH OTHER AND HOW SHOULD WE ORGANIZE SOCIETY? ARE GOVERNMENTS A GOOD IDEA?
ARE WE REALLY FREE TO CHOOSE WHO WE ARE AND WHAT WE DO? IS SCIENTIFIC KNOWLWDGE BETTER THAN OTHER KINDS OF KNOWLEDGE?
WHAT IS PHILOSOPHY?
Questions of philosophy might not appear to have much to do with everyday survival. But philosophers still look for convincing answers. Sometimes they get them, often they don’t.
BUT THE QUESTIONS, ONCE ASKED, SEEM NEVER TO GO AWAY. ORIGINALLY, PHILOSOPHERS
WERE JUST INDIVIDUALS WHO ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT EVERYTHING. NOWADAYS, PHILOSOPHY TENDS TO GET CLASSIFIED MORE RIGOROUSLY.
Some philosophers believe that philosophy must evolve out of argument and debate, others that it can only ever be produced from deductive reasoning.
SOME PHILOSOPHERS BELIEVE THAT PHILOSOPHY CAN MAKE REAL PROGRESS IN THE HUNT FOR KNOWLEDGE.
OTHERS SAY THAT IT IS THINKING ABOUT THINKING
AND DOES NO MORE THAN HELP TO CLARIFY IDEAS AND REMOVE MISUNDERSTANDINGS.
But all of them believe that philosophers are obliged to provide some kind of explanation, proof or evidence for their ideas. And this obligation marks the one obvious difference between philosophy and religion.
THEOCRACIES
The Ancient Egyptians were very good at maths and at building geometric tombs, but they’re not famous for philosophy. Their religious explanations of things are elaborate and colourful but unconvincing in philosophical terms. The Babylonians were likewise wonderful mathematicians and astronomers.
BUT THEY TOO APPEAR SATISFIED WITH MYTHICAL ANSWERS TO FUNDAMENTAL QUESTIONS.
Theocratic societies governed by priestly castes are usually static and monopolize thought. They insist on orthodox explanations and actively discourage independent and unconventional ideas. Today’s beliefs must always be like yesterday’s.
THE GREEKS
The Ancient Greeks invented philosophy, but no-one really knows why. The Greeks were a great trading nation who dominated much of the eastern Mediterranean and borrowed myths and mysticism as well as architecture and mathematics from their neighbours. But some worrisome Greek philosopher-scientists thought there just had to be some kind of underlying order or logic for the way things are. They were not willing to accept religious explanations – for Instance, thinkers like Xenophanes (c. 560–478 B.C.).
IT IS NAIVE TO WORSHIP THE GODS BECAUSE THEY ALL BEHAVE IRRATIONALLY AND IMMORALLY. IF HORSES HAD HANDS AND COULD DRAW, THEY WOULD DRAW PICTURES OF GODS LIKE HORSES.
So the first Greek philosophers looked for answers which we would now call scientific
rather than religious
.
THE MILESIANS’ BIG QUESTION
The first real philosophers were some eccentric Greeks who lived in Miletus, a colony on what is now the Turkish coast, in the 6th century B.C. They asked The One Big Question – what is reality made of? Actually, it’s a very strange question to ask. Most people would say that the world is made up of lots of different things, because it looks that way. But these Milesians didn’t accept that what you see is necessarily the same as what is true.
EVERYTHING IS MADE OF WATER. IT IS MADE OF AIR. THERE IS A SORT OF FUNDAMENTAL STUFF
FROM WHICH EVERYTHING IS CREATED AND TO WHICH IT MUST EVENTUALLY RETURN.
Anaximander also thought that the earth was like a large stone column. Not much is known about any of these strange early philosopher-scientists, except that their science was almost wholly cerebral and not experimental. But they would never accept answers which relied merely on supernatural explanations.
PYTHAGORAS AND MATHEMATICS
Pythagoras (571–496 B.C.) asked the same One Big Question, but emerged with a very different answer. He thought that the answer was mathematics. He lived on the island of Samos, before he emigrated with his disciples to Croton in southern Italy. He was a vegetarian who believed in reincarnation and declared that eating beans was sinful. He and his disciples worshipped numbers and thought that the world was made of them, a truth most obviously revealed by ratios, squares and right-angled triangles. Pythagoras’ big breakthrough was to recognize that mathematical truths had to be proved rather than just accepted. His number mysticism looks to us very odd. He declared that Justice
was the number 4, because it was a square number. He was finally shocked by his discovery of irrational
numbers like Pi and √2.
THE RATIO OF THE CIRCUMFERENCE OF A CIRCLE TO ITS DIAMETER IS – APPROXIMATELY 3,141 … APPROXIMATELY? THIS SUGGESTS THAT THE WORLD ISN’T AT ALL MATHMEMATICALLY NEAT AND PERFECT.
HERACLITUS AND THE WORLD IN FLUX
Heraclitus, who lived circa 500 B.C., would have been more tolerant of an irrational universe. His nickname was The Rudder
because he maintained that everything in the world is always changing and in a constant state of conflict. He illustrated this by a famous saying.
YOU CAN NEVER STEP INTO THE SAME RIVER TWICE.
Cratylus (c. 400 B.C.), his student, went further.
YOU CAN’T STEP INTO THE SAME RIVER EVEN ONCE.
But Heraclitus is often misunderstood: his view of the universe is really one of underlying unity and consistency. The knowledge that we get from our senses, and foolishly believe in, is inevitably observer-relative
.
A mountain goes both up or down depending on where you are standing at the time. But that’s what mountains do.
THE PATH UP AND THE PATH DOWN IS ONE AND THE SAME.
If a river didn’t change all the time, it wouldn’t be a river. But nevertheless, we still know that’s what it is. So Heraclitus may have been suggesting that true knowledge comes from thinking with the mind, not from looking at things. His emphasis on accelerated change may also be why his contribution to the One Big Question was that the world was ultimately made of fire – something that is always changing and yet still uniquely itself.
PARMENIDES
Parmenides of Elea (515–450 B.C.) in southern Italy wrote a long poem about the power of logic and knowledge. He agreed with Heraclitus that empirical knowledge was unreliably subjective. This meant that human beings had only reason to rely on if they wanted to discover any permanent truths about the world.
FOR IT IS THE SAME THING TO THINK AND TO BE.
By employing strict logical argument he produced an interesting idea about Time: all that actually exists is the immediate present. Talk about the past and the future is just talk – neither has any real existence. Parmenides is still rather admired by philosophers because he was always prepared to accept any conclusions produced by rigorous deductive argument, however odd they might seem.