Facing Challenges in The Twenty-First Century: What I Know
Facing Challenges in The Twenty-First Century: What I Know
What I Know
MULTIPLE CHOICE. Underline the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter
on a separate sheet of paper.
1. Many philosophers hold that there are three great original centers of philosophy
in the world. a. Greek, Russian, and Indian b. Greek, Indian, and German
c. Greek, German, and Chinese d. Greek, Indian, and Chinese
5. Filipinos believe that life may be sorrowful, but precisely because suffering is
ultimately salutary, there is _____ beyond suffering.
a. food b. money c. luck d. hope
6. What is in a Filipino that has an internal code and sanction that flows from within
itself? a. ethics b. logic c. luck d. hope
7. At present, almost all the major philosophical ideas originate from these thinkers.
a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
9. Following the teaching of Socrates, he advanced the idea of the soul and the
theory of virtue.
a. Plato b. Aristotle c. Anaximander d. Protagoras
10. “In a manner of speaking, nothing actually begins absolutely or ends absolutely.
A man may have been born at a precise time and may have died at a precise time,
but it cannot be said that his existence can be congealed at a specific time, and
when he dies, his life continues in another form.” Where would you attribute this
line of thinking? a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
11. The method for arriving at truth was to link knowing to doing, for example, to
know the good is to do the good.
a. Plato b. Aristotle c. Socrates d. Protagoras
13. The first philosophers were called ___ because the birthplace of philosophy was
in this coastal city, located across the Aegean Sea on the western shores of Ionia
in Asia Minor.
a. Milesians b. Myus c. Ephesians d. Colophons
14. For him, the human being’s function as a person is the proper functioning of
his/her soul. So, he sought to know the nature of the soul.
a. Plato b. Aristotle c. Anaximander d. Soctrates
15. They are perceived as transcending the limitations of the human intellect and
treading on a no-man's land where verification of one's premise is not possible.
Their thoughts do not follow a structured mode. By its very nature, it cannot but
be intuitive and mystic. a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
What I Need to Know
What’s In
From the time of the Greek triumvirate (Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle), there
was a reversal. The Western thinkers started to indulge in feverish philosophical
speculation, whereas the Asian thinkers began diminishing philosophical activity. In
our present century, almost all the major philosophical ideas emanate from Western
thinkers (Quito 1991).
Certainly, the culture of the “East” is very different from that of the “west”
(primarily Europe and North America), but that does not mean each culture is
incapable of understanding certain features of the other.
1. ________________________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________________________________
3. ________________________________________________________________
What’s New
There are three attitudinal imperatives that we must bear in mind if we are to
appreciate either the Oriental or Eastern thought vis-à-vis the Occidental or Western
mindset and to situate them in their proper perspective (Quito 1991):
• In contrast to the propensity of the West to think in a linear manner, that is, in
terms of beginning and ending in a straight line, Oriental thought runs in a
circular manner in which the end conjoins the beginning in a cyclic style. In a
manner of speaking, nothing actually begins absolutely or ends absolutely. A man
may have been born at a precise time and may have died at a precise time, but it
cannot be said that his existence can be congealed at a specific time, and when
he dies, his life continues in another form. This is indispensable to the
understanding of samsara or rebirth. There is a cycle of rebirths within the
various spheres of life, the vegetative, animal, and human. The world, in fact, did
not have an absolute beginning but was merely a continuation of an earlier world
in an earlier time. There is, therefore, a succession of worlds and a succession of
lives.
• The attitudinal imperative is the assumption that the East does not make a
rigorous distinction between religion and philosophy. In the East, Philosophy is
Religion and Religion is Philosophy. The Oriental does not cut off philosophy that
is thought, from religion that is life in action.
• The third attitudinal imperative is the acceptance of the validity of intuition and
mysticism, the readiness to revert to extra logical, if not illogical modes of
thinking. Orientals are perceived of transcending the limitations of the human
intellect and treading on a no-man's land where verification of one's premise is
not possible. Oriental thought does not follow structured mode. By its very
nature, it cannot but be intuitive and mystic.
The West has but to theorize and speculate; no application to life is necessary.
Such are the Platonic, Hegelian, Kantian, and Fichtean theories to which the Western
philosophers render lip service; their application to practice is still being contested
by other Western philosophers (Mitchell 2011).
If logic is no longer able to solve a life problem, Asian mind resorts to intuition.
From the very fact that it thinks in a cyclic all-at-once-ness, it must resort to means
other than the usual mental processes applicable to the piecemeal and fragmentary.
One should not therefore be surprised at its propensity to mysticism, at its use of
super-consciousness, or of the existence of a third eye or a sixth sense. When the
situation demands, it reverses the logical patterns (Mitchell 2011).
1. List the positive and negative Filipino values. Defend your answer.
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2. What Filipino value puts one in touch with one's fellow beings and is
essentially interpersonal?
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3. Write your insights regarding the meaning of goodness. You can choose a
specific topic regarding "good" and "bad" (e.g., issues on poverty).
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What is it
Filipinos do have their own philosophy. This section draws out elements or
draw sketches of the general lines of Filipino philosophy. The three dimensions of
Filipino thought are: Loob, Filipino Philosophy of Time, and Bahala Na. These
attitudes and values constitute the hidden springs of the Filipino Mind.
In short, the Filipino as individual looks at himself as holistic from the interior
dimension under the principle of harmony. The Filipino looks at himself as a self, as
a total whole—as a "person," conscious of his freedom, proud of his human dignity,
and sensitive to the violation of these two (Mercado 2000).
Moreover, the Filipino proves that he believes in the gulong ng palad (literally,
"wheel of fortune") and hence, looks at life as a series of ups and downs (Timbreza
1992). This philosophy of life makes the Filipino an unmitigated optimist. When the
so-called wheel of life is on the downtrend, he looks to the future with hope because
life's wheel cannot stay down forever. When one weeps, one will surely smile. The
Filipino looks upon every event, fortunate or unfortunate, as fleeting or transitory.
3. Bahala Na
Bahala na, on the one hand, is seen as fatalistic; sort of leaving everything to
God or to chance—such is the uncertainty of life. On the other hand, fatalism is
universal. The will of God/Allah, tao to the Chinese, rta to the Indians and fate in
Buddhism—all signify, in one way or another, fatalism.
What’s More
2. If you are entertaining a tourist or balikbayan relative or friend, how will you
introduce the Philippines?
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Group Activity:
How important are "kagandahang loob" and "kabutihang loob" to being Pinoy?
If your class or batch will sponsor a fund-raising activity for Yolanda survivors, how
can you lend a hand? Conceptualize a fund-raising concert.
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What I Can Do
Draw a timeline. This exercise aims to examine the wackiest and worst
moments of your life in search of the meaning behind them. This can help you
identify more skillfully the kinds of activities, conditions, locations, and people
combinations where your purpose is well served and where it is abused. Consider
your childhood, formal education experiences, and other experiences. During these
times, you experienced very poor results and very strong dissatisfaction. If you learn
something new about your purpose, make a note of it.
What did you learn about your What did you learn about your
purpose? purpose?
1. 1.
2.
2.
3.
3.
Additional Activities
Assessment
MULTIPLE CHOICE. Underline the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter
on a separate sheet of paper.
3. They think in a linear manner, that is, in terms of beginning and ending in a
straight line. a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
4. It is the reason why Oriental or Eastern philosophy had little influence on the
Western thought. a. fashion b. culture c. history d. mores
5. Knowledge for him is the act of knowing the truth about the good life.
a. Plato b. Aristotle c. Socrates d. Protagoras
6. Their thought runs in a circular manner in which the end conjoins the beginning
in a cyclic style. a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
7. The birthplace of philosophy was in this coastal city, located across the Aegean
Sea on the western shores of Ionia in Asia Minor.
a. Miletus b. Myus c. Ephesus d. Colophon
8. They do not make a rigorous distinction between religion and philosophy. For
them, Philosophy is Religion and Religion is Philosophy. They do not cut off
philosophy that is thought, from religion that is life in action.
a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
9. It manifests itself in freedom. It puts one in touch with his fellow beings.
a. Loob b. gulong ng palad
c. Bahala na d. Hospitalidad
10. The human being’s highest nature is found in human mind’s ability to think.
Hence, thinking is the source of the human being’s highest joy.
a. Plato b. Aristotle c. Anaximander d. Soctrates
11. They acknowledge the legitimacy of intuition and mysticism, as well as the
willingness to think in non-logical, if not illogical, ways.
a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
12. By viewing life as a succession of ups and downs, one becomes an unrelenting
optimist. a. Loob b. Filipino Philosophy of Time
13. They ponder and hypothesize; no practical application is required. They pay lip
service; other Western thinkers are still debating their implementation in
practice.
a. Western thinkers b. Eastern thinkers
c. Northern thinkers d. Southern thinkers
Quito, Emerita. 1991. The Emerging philosophy of East and West. Manila. De
La Salle University Press.