Philosophy Can Change Your Life
Philosophy Can Change Your Life
by: Dr. Andrew Jeffrey
The word 'philosophy' comes from two Greek words,philo,
meaning love, and sophia, meaning wisdom or knowledge. A
"philosopher" in Ancient Greece was literally a "lover of
knowledge." Originally, all theoretical studies, from rhetoric to
marine biology, were considered to fall under the scope of philosophy.
For example, one ancient philosopher, Aristotle, wrote on both of those two
subjects, as well as logic, ethics, politics, physics, metaphysics, psychology,
theatre, and zoology. It is likely he wrote on mathematics as well, but
many of his works are lost to us. If you go far enough into the
intellectual history of any theoretical subject you find philosophy and
philosophers at its roots.
It was believed by nearly all philosophers in antiquity that
a correct description of the self and the world would carry with it an implicit
prescription concerning the way one should live one's life, thus, before the
Dark Ages settled over Europe, a philosophy was not a subject one took as an
elective while preparing for employment, it was a way of life. Ancient
philosophers did not have transitory pupils so much as permanent
disciples. After philosophy began to recover in the High Middle Ages, it
was firmly subordinated as a subject-matter, first, as a handmaiden to
theology, and later, in the Modern Period, as an auxiliary to the
sciences. As various disciplines developed their own discursive
vocabularies and autonomous decision-procedures, they have branched off from
philosophy, and the formal "jurisdiction" of philosophy has
shrunk.
Today, academic philosophers sometimes present their
discipline as a kind of intellectual accounting: a place wherein one discovers
the intellectual "price-tags" of ideas counted in the cost of other
ideas one ought to buy into or forgo to avoid logical inconsistency and the
cognitive dissonance that attends inconsistency. I don't want to belittle
this notion--I have, until recently, presented philosophy this way myself--but
consistency is not enough. Yes, inconsistency almost certainly guarantees
that something is wrong in one's beliefs, but consistency by itself guarantees
neither truth nor happiness. (Ralph Waldo Emerson once stated that
"a foolish consistency was the hobgoblin of little minds." What
he meant was that you can be consistent and be consistently wrong.)
Consistency is not even a guarantee of mental health. Paranoiacs in an
asylum might well have some of the most consistent belief-sets
imaginable!
As I see it, philosophy occupies a middle ground between
religion and poetry, on the one side, and the empirical sciences on the
other. Like religion and poetry, and unlike the empirical sciences,
philosophy, at its core, always deals with questions of meaning, value,
purpose, and priorities. Modern scientific methodology precludes such
questions as "teleological," focusing instead on the improvement of
causal descriptions of reality by asking only the sorts of questions that can
be answered by testing hypotheses. But more like empirical science, and
less like religion and poetry, philosophy attempts to approach questions of
value and purpose with a method based ostensibly on impartial
criteria of reasoning, rather than upon appeals to authority, the passions, or
beauty. (Appeals to "faith" are essentially requests (or
demands) for trust, which cannot really be called a "method" in the
same sense. Although appeals to logical or empirical evidence may be offered as
reasons for trust, one has to always ask, "But what evidence would it take
to make you change your mind?" If the answer is, "Nothing!"
then the putative evidence is offered in "bad faith" (no pun
intended), and the appearance of method is only superficial.)
Since philosophy is supposed to deal with questions of
priorities, whatever discoveries its methods may uncover should be expected to
have at least a potential to alter our lives. Philosophy in recent
decades has failed to capture people's imaginations, has seemed utterly
abstruse and impractical, largely because we academics have lacked the courage
to face and test ourselves, and thus lack the courage to promise enough for our
discipline. I include myself in this failing: I am "the worse of
sinners" in this regard.
Well, I'm promising now: if done right, philosophy can
change your life, your whole outlook, your priorities.
Dr. Jeffrey teaches philosophy in Washington state and this
article is based on a lecture he's written for his Philosophy of Human
Rights course.
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