This document discusses philosophy and logic. It begins by defining philosophy as the love of wisdom and explains that it involves questioning, critical discussion, and rational argument about fundamental problems concerning knowledge, existence, values, reason, mind and language. It then lists some classical philosophical questions and discusses human nature and the first philosophers in ancient Greece and China. The rest of the document outlines various philosophical methods like debate and dialogue, and discusses fundamental questions in areas like metaphysics, epistemology, morality, politics, religion, and logic.
This document discusses philosophy and logic. It begins by defining philosophy as the love of wisdom and explains that it involves questioning, critical discussion, and rational argument about fundamental problems concerning knowledge, existence, values, reason, mind and language. It then lists some classical philosophical questions and discusses human nature and the first philosophers in ancient Greece and China. The rest of the document outlines various philosophical methods like debate and dialogue, and discusses fundamental questions in areas like metaphysics, epistemology, morality, politics, religion, and logic.
This document discusses philosophy and logic. It begins by defining philosophy as the love of wisdom and explains that it involves questioning, critical discussion, and rational argument about fundamental problems concerning knowledge, existence, values, reason, mind and language. It then lists some classical philosophical questions and discusses human nature and the first philosophers in ancient Greece and China. The rest of the document outlines various philosophical methods like debate and dialogue, and discusses fundamental questions in areas like metaphysics, epistemology, morality, politics, religion, and logic.
This document discusses philosophy and logic. It begins by defining philosophy as the love of wisdom and explains that it involves questioning, critical discussion, and rational argument about fundamental problems concerning knowledge, existence, values, reason, mind and language. It then lists some classical philosophical questions and discusses human nature and the first philosophers in ancient Greece and China. The rest of the document outlines various philosophical methods like debate and dialogue, and discusses fundamental questions in areas like metaphysics, epistemology, morality, politics, religion, and logic.
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Philosophy and Logic
Atty. Reyaine A. Mendoza
What is Philosophy?
Philosophy comes from a Greek word which means “love of wisdom”
• It is the study of the general and fundamental problems concerning knowledge, existence, values, reason, mind and language • The term was coined by PYTHAGORAS • Philosophical Methods includes: QUESTIONING, CRITICAL DISCUSSION, and RATIONAL ARGUMENT What is Philosophy?
Philosophy comes from a Greek word which means “love of wisdom”
• It is the study of the general and fundamental problems concerning knowledge, existence, values, reason, mind and language • The term was coined by PYTHAGORAS
• Is what man does when he is not busy dealing with everyday
business and get a chance to wonder simply about LIFE and the UNIVERSE he lives in Classical Philosophical Questions: 1. Is it possible to know anything? 2. What is real and not real? 3. What is the best way to live? 4. Is it better to be just or unjust? 5. Do humans have free will? Human Nature • Inquisitive in nature: we wonder about the world around us • Equipped with very powerful intellectual capability which helps us reason and wonder about the things around us.
WHENEVER WE REASON, WE ARE THINKING PHILOSOPHICALLY
The First Philosophers • Ancient Greece and China thinkers who were not satisfied with established explanations provided by religion and custom and they looked for answers which had rational justifications - Established schools to teach not just the conclusions but how they were arrived at. Debate and Dialogue • Socrates - encouraged students to disagree and criticize ideas as a means of refining them and coming up with new and different ideas - established debate and discussion, of questioning the assumptions of other people to gain a deeper understanding and elicit fundamental truths • Plato - a student of Socrates - writings are in the form of dialogues with Socrates as the main character • Aristotle - student of Plato - he has opposite views on fundamental questions with that of Plato School of Athens • Masterpiece painting by a Renaissance painter Raphael
• One of the rooms in the Vatican
• Represents “Philosophy”
• Phrases: "Seek Knowledge of Causes,"
"Divine Inspiration," "Knowledge of Things Divine", "To Each What Is Due.“
• Accordingly, the figures on the walls
below exemplify Philosophy, Poetry (including Music), Theology, and Law
• Central figures where Plato and
Aristotle Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions 1. Existence and Knowledge - 2,500 years ago, Ancient Greeks wondered about the world around them: SUN, MOON, PLANET AND STARS Natural phenomenon: WEATHER, EARTHQUAKES, and ECLIPSES
The First Questions:
a. What is the universe made of? b. What is the nature of whatever it is that exists?
METAPHYSICS – a branch of Philosophy that concerns with the ESSENCE OF A THING
- This includes questions of being, becoming, existence, and reality. - The word "metaphysics" comes from the Greek words that literally mean "beyond nature". - "Nature" in this sense refers to the nature of a thing, such as its cause and purpose. Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions Ontology – a branch of metaphysics deals with the nature of human existence and what it means to be a conscious being
• How do we perceive the world around us?
• Do things exist independently of our perception? • What is the relationship between our mind and body, and is there such a thing as an immortal soul? Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions Epistemology – a branch of metaphysics deals with the study of nature and limits of knowledge
• How we acquire knowledge?
• How we come to know what we know? Is some (or even all) knowledge innate, or do we learn everything from experience? • Can we know something from reasoning alone? Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions 2. Logic and language - Reasoning relies on establishing the truth of statements, which can then be used to build up a train of thought leading to a conclusion. - the idea of constructing a rational argument distinguished philosophy from the superstitious and religious explanations that had existed before the first philosophers. - These thinkers had to devise a way of ensuring their ideas had validity. Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions Logic - a technique of reasoning that was refined over time - basic structure of logic is that it is composed of premises that would lead to conclusions - systematic study of the form of valid inference VOLTAIRE
Superstition sets the whole world in flames ;
philosophy quenches them Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions 3. Morality and Politics • Philosophers search for questions such as: - What is justice? - What is beauty? - What is means to lead a good life? - What is justice and happiness? Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions Ethics or Moral Philosophy - branch of Philosophy that is concerned on how we should behave
Aesthetics – a branch of ethics that is concerned with the
question of what is beauty?
Political Philosophy – questions on what kind of society we
would like to live in, how it should be governed, and the rights and responsibilities of its citizens (Plato’s Republic to Karl Marx’s Communist Manifesto) Debate Topics: Fundamental Questions 4. Religion • Philosophy also examines Religion itself, asking questions such as: - Does God exist? - Do we have an immortal soul? Death of Siddhartha Empedocles proposes Traditional date of Gautama, the his theory of the four birth of Kong Fuzi Thales of Miletus, Buddha, Classical elements; (Confucius), whose the first known Greek founder of the he is the last Greek philosophy is philosopher, seeks religion and philosopher to record centered rational answers philosophy of his ideas in verse. on respect and to questions about Buddhism. tradition. the world we live in.
624-546 BC 551 BC 480 BC c. 460 BC
569 BCE 508 BCE 469 BCE 404 BCE
The powerful Greek Birth of Socrates, whose Defeat in the
Birth of Pythagoras, methods of questioning Peloponnesian city-state of Athens the Greek thinker who in Athens formed the War leads to the adopts a democratic combined philosophy basis for much of later decline of Athens’ constitution. and mathematics. Western philosophy. political power. Ptolemy, a Roman Galen of Pergamum Zeno of Citium citizen of Egypt, produces formulates his stoic proposes the idea extraordinary Plato founds his philosophy, which that medical research that hugely influential goes on to find favor Earth is at the center remains unsurpassed Academy in in the Roman Empire. of the universe and until Athens. does not move. the work of Vesalius in 1543.
c. 385 BCE c. 332 - 265 BCE c. 100-178 CE c. 150 BCE
335 BCE 323 BCE 122 CE 220 CE
The death of Alexander Construction begins The collapse of the
Aristotle, Plato’s the Great signals the end on Hadrian’s Wall in Han Dynasty student, opens his own of the cultural and political Britain, marking the marks the end of school in Athens—the dominance of Greece in northernmost border a unified China. Lyceum. the ancient world. of the Roman Empire. The Period of Disunity begins.