Thursday, October 22, 2009

Notes on Dreadful Freedom

(Originally Written October 22, 2009 in The Journal)

OK Ashley, you've heard my sob stories about loneliness and depression and this new unrequited love. You've heard of the destruction of my body, the breaking of my heart and the crushing of my soul. But now let's witness my glory - my mind. How about some philosophy.

Dreadful Freedom
Marjorie Grene

Chapter 1 - Why existentialism

Existentialists insist on their essential optimism that man makes himself.

Existentialism in a sense is a reaction against the speculative idealism of Hegel.

Existentialism comes from Kierkegaard's phrase "existential dialectic".

In existentialism, existence is prior to essence. This means that the consciousness of one's own soul comes before anything else becomes clear.

Existentialism revolts against system building and focuses on more pressing human concerns.

The relation of cause to effect is measured by the efficacy of an act.

The relation of cause and effect is indistinguishable from means and end.

Sartre and Dewey (pragmatists) criticize philosophies of the past for stabilizing the norms that kept ruling parties in power.

Pragmatism and existentialism are similar in aim at first glance.

Sartre resets values from past to future. The past value is an emphasis on the bourgeois privilege whereas if values are set with the future in mind it leads to revolution.

Pragmatism fails though because fact cannot produce value. Science cannot distinguish between good and evil.

Value for Sartre lies between the way things are and the way things ought to be. The success of man (and failure) lies between the thing as it is and the thing as it should be.

The perception between the way things are and the way they should be is the fundamental insight of existential philosophy.

Values are created solely by the acts of man. What they take as good or bad, beautiful or ugly in their quest to give meaning to a meaningless world.

Positivistic ethics aims at being descriptive not normative.

As in Kantian ethics, existentialists claim there is no good or evil apart from will and there is no will without freedom.

Existentialism does not derive values from mere facts.

Some existentialists demand a return to faith in the Christian God as a necessary way out of our present moral chaos (Marcel & Kierkegaard).

Atheistic existentialists however claim that the return to the Christian God is removing the freedom of man and basing values once again on facts, though these facts are not sense-data but cosmic in origin.

Chapter 2: Soren Kierkegaard: The self against the system

The aim of Kierkegaard, his one problem was: to find out where the misunderstanding lies between speculation and Christianity.

Kierkegaard believed that the misunderstanding had its roots in the nature of personal existence.

Kierkegaard's work has a slight anti-scientific tone but it is really a revolt against Hegelian speculation.

Camus had a very strong anti-scientific tone.

Kierkegaard worries that by focusing on physiology and explaining the whole man in its scope will cause man to lose sight of the important field of ethics.

Kierkegaard argues that the system in never capable of explaining existence until it is complete and thus becoming timeless. Existence as it is happening is never complete and thus, the system is incapable of explaining existence.

Kierkegaard criticizes the systematizers by claiming that they build a palace to live next door in the barn.

The system builders acquire far flung knowledge and ignore the simple understanding of one's self, which is the only important understand.

The system, in its grandeur is deceiving. It uses wordy logical fallacies to appear logical.

Kierkegaard does not propound an orthodox form of Christianity. He denies any "objective truth of Christianity", instead stating the whole problem for every serious Christian is their own path to faith.

Kierkegaard focuses on the inwardness of the subjective journey of the one real entity (the individual) to the infinite being, known by faith.

Kierkegaard turns from the impersonal and trivial truths (though consistent) to the passionate truth realized only subjectively and meaningful. This truth is meaningful because it is contradictory.

By embracing total subjectivity, Kierkegaard renounced all abstraction and left only contradiction and paradox. Since abstraction is gone one cannot transfer through words one's experience to another. paradox is the only way and this is indirect communication.

Philosophy for Kierkegaard, like Kant is focused on the question, what is man? It deals with human problems, not the essence of cosmic reality.

Kierkegaard relies heavily on Plato, not Neo-Platonism, but the Dialogues themselves.

Kierkegaard states we live, or ought to live, in the awareness that here and now may be our last moment.

Existentialism focuses on the contingency of life.

Existentialism pays close attention to the meaninglessness that continually underlies the significance in human life.

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