Philosophy <http://philstrs.blogspot.com/2009/01/philosophy.html>
*by Maria Odete Madeira*
**
*Philosophical arguments are not developed from answers but from questions.
One thing is the authors of philosophy and the thinking and models of these
authors, another thing is the philosophical thinking, itself.*
**
*To have philosophical thinking implies a very hard work and a development
of capabilities to be able to unfold monadologically a locality in a
non-locality, and for that it is necessary training, because it is not about
the thinking of each one, but about the capability that each one has to
access an eidos/logos, and to learn from that eidos/logos, to learn how to
question about the things.*
**
*Each answer brings already, in the mechanism of unfolding of that answer, a
new question. A philosopher is not whoever wants to be one, because it is
not about the thinking of each one, it is about a capability to ascend to a
non-local universal that is independent of each one, and in order to do that
it is not enough to want to do so, it is necessary to learn, and to learn,
and to learn, and… above all, it is necessary to learn how to question the
things, themselves. **It is not a matter of what we know, it is a matter of
what we know not.*
**
*It is not about making algorithmic reductions, or logical deductions, or to
affirm oneself as philosopher, it is not about dogmatic revelations.*
**
*As an exercise of questioning the things, one cannot be afraid or annoyed
with the questions, it is necessary some humility.*
**
*Unfortunately, the fast-food teaching and the pragmatic
application-oriented science, where it only matters the immediate answers
that solve immediate problems, algorithmized for an easier consumption, does
not allow nor favor an exercise of a fundamental thinking based on
questioning; questions, beyond a certain point, become a nuisance.*
**
*One cannot give, in philosophy, a ready to consume answer. To address,
philosophically, an issue is to address it with questions. A philosophical
discussion starts with questions and does not end, but go on, indefinitely
with more questions. Question to question, to question, to question,… (verb
and process).*
**
*Within such an exercise of questioning, one cannot abruptly end the debate
with a quick and superficial exit, and must follow the questions where they
lead.*
**
*The questions cannot be placed in the most general form and only skim very
lightly the real subject. In a philosophical debate all the cards have to be
laid out on the table, since the questions have to be about the things
themselves and not about the (often manipulated) shadows of the things.*
**
http://philstrs.blogspot.com/2009/01/philosophy.html

http://cmathphil.blogspot.com/2009/01/philosophy.html

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