from deliberate reflection • Realize the value of doing philosophy in obtaining a broad perspective on life • Do a philosophical reflection on a concrete situation Key Questions
• What is the importance of Philosophy?
• How does philosophy work in our daily life?
Meaning of Philosophy • “Philosophy” came from two Greek words: Philo which means “to love” Sophia which means “wisdom” • Philosophy originally meant “love of wisdom.” • Philosophy is also defined as the science that by natural light of reason studies the first causes or highest principles of all things. Science It is an organized body of knowledge. It is systematic. It follows certain steps or employs certain procedures. Meaning of Philosophy Natural Light of Reason It uses a philosopher’s natural capacity to think or human reason or the so-called unaided reason. Study of All Things It makes philosophy distinct from other sciences because it is not one dimensional or partial. A philosopher does not limit himself to a particular object of inquiry. Philosophy is multidimensional or holistic. Meaning of Philosophy First Cause or Highest Principle Principle of Identity – whatever is; whatever is not is not. Everything is its own being, and not being is not being. Principle of Non-Contradiction – it is impossible for a thing to be and not to be at the same time. Principle of Excluded Middle – a thing is either is or is not; between being and not-being, there is no middle ground possible. Principle of Sufficient Reason – nothing exists without sufficient reason for its being and existence. Meaning of Philosophy • Early Greek philosophers studied aspects of the natural and human world that later became separate sciences—astronomy, physics, psychology, and sociology. • Basic problems like the nature of the universe, the standard of justice, the validity of knowledge, the correct application of reason, and the criteria of beauty have been the domain of philosophy from its beginnings to the present. • These basic problems are the subject matter of the branches of philosophy. Branches of Philosophy Metaphysics • It is an extension of a fundamental and necessary drive in every human being to know what is real. • A metaphysician’s task is to explain that part of our experience which we call unreal in terms of what we call real. • We try to make things comprehensible by simplifying or reducing the mass of things we call appearance to a relatively fewer number of things we call reality. • Thales He claims that everything we experience is water (“reality”) and everything else is “appearance.” Branches of Philosophy We try to explain everything else (appearance) in terms of water (reality). • Idealist and Materialist Their theories are based on unobservable entities: mind and matter. They explain the observable in terms of the unobservable. • Plato Nothing we experience in the physical world with our five senses is real. Reality is unchanging, eternal, immaterial, and can be detected only by the intellect. Plato calls these realities as ideas of forms. Branches of Philosophy Ethics • It explores the nature of moral virtue and evaluates human actions. • It is a study of the nature of moral judgments. • Philosophical ethics attempts to provide an account of our fundamental ethical ideas. • It insists that obedience to moral law be given a rational foundation. • Socrates To be happy is to live a virtuous life. Virtue is an awakening of the seeds of good deeds that lay dormant in the mind and heart of a person which can be achieved through self-knowledge. Branches of Philosophy True knowledge = Wisdom = Virtue Courage as virtue is also knowledge. • William Edward Burghardt Du Bois(1868-1963) An African-American who wanted equal rights for the blacks. His philosophy uses the same process as Hegel’s dialectic (Thesis > Antithesis > Synthesis). Branches of Philosophy Epistemology • It deals with nature, sources, limitations, and validity of knowledge. • It explains: (1) how we know what we claim to know; (2) how we can find out what we wish to know; and (3) how we can differentiate truth from falsehood. • It addresses varied problems: the reliability, extent, and kinds of knowledge; truth; language; and science and scientific knowledge. Branches of Philosophy • Sources of knowledge Induction gives importance to particular things seen, heard, and touched forms general ideas through the examination of particular facts Empiricist – advocates of induction method Empiricism is the view that knowledge can be attained only through sense experience. Deduction gives importance to general law from which particular facts are understood or judged Branches of Philosophy Rationalist – advocates of deduction method For a rationalist, real knowledge is based on the logic, the laws, and the methods that reason develops. Pragmatism – the meaning and truth of an idea are tested by its practical consequences. Branches of Philosophy Logic • Reasoning is the concern of the logician. • It comes from the Greek word logike, coined by Zeno, the Stoic (c.340–265BC), which means a treatise on matters pertaining to the human thought. • It does not provide us knowledge of the world directly and does not contribute directly to the content of our thoughts. • It is not interested in what we know regarding certain subjects but in the truth or the validity of our arguments regarding such objects. Branches of Philosophy • Aristotle First philosopher to devise a logical method Truth means the agreement of knowledge with reality. Logical reasoning makes us certain that our conclusions are true. • Zeno of Citium One of the successors of Aristotle and founder of Stoicism • Other influential authors of logic Cicero, Porphyry, and Boethius Philoponus and Al-Farabi, Avicenna, and Averroes Branches of Philosophy Aesthetics • It is the science of the beautiful in its various manifestations – including the sublime, comic, tragic, pathetic, and ugly. • It is important because of the following: It vitalizes our knowledge. It makes our knowledge of the world alive and useful. It helps us to live more deeply and richly. A work of art helps us to rise from purely physical existence into the realm of intellect and the spirit. It brings us in touch with our culture. The answers of great minds in the past to the great problems of human life are part of our culture. Branches of Philosophy • Hans-Georg Gadamer A German philosopher who argues that our tastes and judgments regarding beauty work in connection with one’s own personal experience and culture. Our culture consists of the values and beliefs of our time and our society. Activities 1. Share your concepts about the importance of philosophy. Give examples of these in politics, sports, law, and daily life. 2. How do you define “happiness”? Do you support the view of Socrates: “To become happy, a person must live a virtuous life”? Explain 3. Share in class your views about what is “right” or “wrong.” Share your own experience in class.