BELOW_IS_LESS_INTERESTING
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William James' Pragmatism consists of eight lectures that explore the current state of philosophy, the meaning of pragmatism, the problem of metaphysics, the one and the many, pragmatism and common sense, the view of truth, humanism, and its relationship to religion. Pragmatism is proposed as a mediator between positivism and rationalism; truth is the good of beliefs and resolves conflicts between truths. Pragmatism considers metaphysics issues such as matter, God, design, and free will, and what the alternatives in each issue promise. Explains that philosophy seeks wholeness, that the world is one in many ways, the growth of knowledge, and the common sense concepts discovered by our prehistoric ancestors. It explains that truth grows in agreement with reality, meaning verifiability, the ability to make us successful through experience. It explains the three realities that the new truth must take into account, that an absolutely independent reality is hard to find, and that the human contribution is omnipresent and builds on what is given. Finally, we will explain absolute usefulness, the two perspectives of world salvation, that pragmatism is ameliorationist, and that we can create our reality.
Pragmatism serves as a mediator between fact and religion, rationalism and positivism, but it is not clear about the process of mediation or how to integrate solutions. Also, pragmatism's view of truth implies the ability of truth to make us successful through experience, but does this not deny the universality of truth? Does the notion that truth grows mean that truth changes over time? The relationship between pragmatism and humanism also needs to be considered. The relationship between pragmatism and religion also needs to be considered. Pragmatism is ameliorationist and claims that we can create reality, but does this mean transferring the role of God to humans? How does this reconcile with a religious perspective?
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Nishio's fragment relates to Lectures II and III of Pragmatism. Lecture II discusses pragmatism's methodology and theory of truth, while Lecture III discusses pragmatic considerations of metaphysical problems. These fragments are relevant to my research notes and help to deepen my understanding of pragmatism.
TITLES: PRAGMATISM, Blurred Maru, Hatena2009-06-02, PAST re, Hatena2013-02-03 generated: 2023-08-18 02:55
🤖PRAGMATISM
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William James' "Pragmatism" consists of eight lectures: the current dilemma of philosophy, the meaning of pragmatism, the problem of metaphysics, the one and the many, pragmatism and common sense, pragmatism's view of truth, pragmatism and humanism, and pragmatism and religion.
Lecture I points out that all people have a philosophy, that temperament influences philosophy, that positivism lacks religion, and rationalism lacks facts. Pragmatism is proposed as a system to mediate these.
Lecture II explains the history and characteristics of pragmatism as a methodology, contrasts pragmatism with rationalism and intellectualism, and pragmatism as a theory of truth. Truth is the good of beliefs, and pragmatism resolves conflicts between truths.
Lecture III examines pragmatic metaphysics issues such as matter, materialism, God, design, and free will. What the alternatives in each problem promise is important.
Lecture IV examines the pragmatics of concepts such as philosophy's search for wholeness as well as unity, the world being one in many ways, one origin, one purpose, one narrative, and one perceiver.
Lecture V explains the growth of knowledge, the concept of common sense as discovered by our prehistoric ancestors, and the comparison of scientific and philosophical critical stages with common sense.
Lecture VI explains that truth means congruence with reality, which means verifiability, the ability to make us successful through experience, and that truth grows.
Lecture VII explains the concept of truth, the three realities that the new truth must take into account, the difficulty of finding an absolutely independent reality, and the omnipresence of human contribution and the construction of the given.
Lecture VIII explains absolute usefulness, the two perspectives of world salvation, pragmatism being ameliorationism, that we can create reality, why something must exist, the assumption of choice before creation, healthy and morbid answers, types of religion of kindness and severity.
Pragmatism serves as a mediator between fact and religion, rationalism and positivism. But how does this mediation process take place? And how does the solution offered by pragmatism integrate these opposing viewpoints?
Pragmatism's view of truth states that truth implies the ability to make us successful through experience. But doesn't this definition deny the universality of truth? And does the notion that truth grows mean that truth changes over time?
We need to think deeply about the relationship between pragmatism and humanism. Pragmatism asserts that human contributions are omnipresent and construct what is given, but how does this relate to the humanist perspective?
The relationship between pragmatism and religion must also be considered. Pragmatism is ameliorationist and asserts that we can create reality. But does this mean transferring the role of God to human beings? And how does this harmonize with a religious perspective?
BELOW_IS_LESS_INTERESTING
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The fragments of Nisio's research notes are mainly about programming and privacy protection, and we could not find any direct relevance. However, it is possible to consider these issues from a pragmatist perspective. For example, the programming issue is related to pragmatism's view of truth, the ability of truth to make us successful through experience. And the issue of privacy protection relates to pragmatism's role in mediating between fact and religion, rationalism and positivism.
titles: PRAGMATISM, Hatena2009-07-15, Hatena2009-08-25, Hatena2008-07-25, From Regroup to Movidea, Neochi generated: 2023-08-18 02:51
🤖PRAGMATISM
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/5116/5116-h/5116-h.htm Lecture I. — The Present Dilemma in Philosophy Lecture II. — What Pragmatism Means Lecture III. — Some Metaphysical Problems Pragmatically Considered Lecture IV. — The One and the Many Lecture V. — Pragmatism and Common Sense Lecture VI. — Pragmatism's Conception of Truth Lecture VII. — Pragmatism and Humanism Lecture VIII. — Pragmatism and Religion
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