What is Philosophy? - First Lecture of the Semester

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • I am writing a book! If you want to know when it is ready (and maybe win a free copy), submit your email on my website: www.jeffreykaplan.org/
    I won’t spam you or share your email address with anyone.
    For more philosophy videos: / @jeffreykaplan1
    This is a video intended for college students considering taking a class in philosophy, but who are not sure exactly what philosophy is. This is also a video for parents or other relatives or friends of college students who have decided to major in philosophy, but who are not sure exactly what philosophy is.
    In this lecture, I argue that philosophy is the attempt to rigorously answer questions that cannot be answered either (a) by observation or experimentation or (b) by calculation from stipulated definitions and axioms.

Комментарии • 410

  • @DevendraSingh-qd3bi
    @DevendraSingh-qd3bi Год назад +24

    Your lectures are so serious fun that I watch each of them many times. You speak so well , I love them.

  • @robbrown4718
    @robbrown4718 2 года назад +46

    I am currently studying philosophy, just through the love of it. These videos are incredible, thanks for the time you take in explaining them.

    • @scrubfive9239
      @scrubfive9239 Год назад

      Whose your favorite philosopher

    • @robbrown4718
      @robbrown4718 10 месяцев назад

      @scrubfive9239 hi, I have really enjoyed reading John Searles books

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz 7 месяцев назад

      You must be Chinese sponsored.

  • @babaroro5942
    @babaroro5942 3 года назад +101

    I don't comment a lot, but I feel that I have to do it. Thanks a lot for your channel. I came here a few weeks ago to learn about philosophy of the mind, and stayed there since. It's such a wonderful endeavor to explain those difficult concepts with such pedagogy, and for free, open to everyone !
    You are one very useful teacher :)

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz 7 месяцев назад

      Useless.

  • @1k1ngst0n
    @1k1ngst0n Год назад +4

    keep making these videos please. I love your philosophy content and the videos by Michael Sugrue. You both are amazing.

  • @aliengypsie
    @aliengypsie 7 месяцев назад +6

    I love this guy!! He has helped me with so many philosophy papers….

  • @jamesnewman8011
    @jamesnewman8011 Год назад +5

    Love this channel. I have always liked philosophy, particularly the mind experiments so common in philosophy.

  • @cathylavoie
    @cathylavoie 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for taking the time to make those videos. I appreciate it and you for doing it :)

  • @tommysmith5479
    @tommysmith5479 Год назад +11

    I wish I had taken philosophy seriously when I was at school. Not because of the career prospects but because of the enormous personal benefits. Absolutely loving these videos.

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz 7 месяцев назад

      You must be Chinese sponsored.

  • @samirasharmeen1124
    @samirasharmeen1124 Год назад +14

    Your lecture about philosophy helped me a lot. Thank you so much ❤

  • @michaelperigo6746
    @michaelperigo6746 Год назад +14

    I studied philosophy as part of my MA in Theology at Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology. Loved it because it was challenging and clarifying. Your videos are excellent.

  • @jimmypk1353
    @jimmypk1353 Год назад +2

    One of the BEST videos on the subject. Please also make a video on the "Scientific Method" and whats similar and whats different among Religion, Philosophy and Science at the most fundamental level.

  • @tomschmidt381
    @tomschmidt381 Год назад +14

    I've recently stumbled upon your channel. As a retired engineer I tended to dismiss Philosophy as idle naval gazing. However as I've gotten older have come to appreciate its value. For me this has been driven largely by what the hard sciences have learned over my lifetime and being in awe that brains evolved to prevent being eaten by lions have been able to figure out so much. The models our brains have evolved to create do not do a very good job of describing the underlying reality.
    I loved the stoner reference, I did have a lot of those back in the 1970s.

    • @MathTravels
      @MathTravels Год назад +4

      Naval gazing is actually used all the time - to spot ships, for example.

    • @tomschmidt381
      @tomschmidt381 Год назад +2

      @@MathTravels spell check strikes again, my bad.

    • @MathTravels
      @MathTravels Год назад +3

      @@tomschmidt381 No, I though it was great!

    • @f.demascio1857
      @f.demascio1857 11 месяцев назад +1

      I came here to chirp "navel."
      I'll see myself out.

  • @jumo5893
    @jumo5893 2 года назад +10

    Absolutely amazing videos! You sir should have millions of subscribers

  • @nicolaskrinis7614
    @nicolaskrinis7614 Год назад +9

    I was fortunate enough to have a full semester of philosophy in College. By far, my favorite subject and the most indespensible part of the method and validity of scientific thyeory, method and existence itself. Thank you so much for this. You are a kick-a##, bad-a## prof, the best I have ever seen anywhere. Thank you so much for giving your time to educate us.

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz 7 месяцев назад

      You must be Chinese sponsored.

  • @davidjimenezlopez
    @davidjimenezlopez Год назад +3

    Mathematician here. I would argue that a society is no more real than a triangle is. Of course, it depends a lot on your definition (as it depends for the triangle). If you define a society simply as a group of individuals, then may be it is "more real" (more tangible, more physically present) than a triangle. But I do think that the shared culture of those individuals, their share rights and responsibilities, their shared knowledge, and their institutions are integral parts of a society, without which a society is not a society. Those are as abstract and intangible as a triangle.

  • @dionissiakabylis
    @dionissiakabylis 10 месяцев назад +1

    Absolutely ingenious!!! Best philosophy introduction ever!!!

  • @lindascanlan6317
    @lindascanlan6317 Год назад +2

    You are an excellent professor of philosophy......you attract the inquiring mind...

  • @nawaznigwari6208
    @nawaznigwari6208 10 месяцев назад +4

    I am a student of literature but interested in philosophy as well. The way you express the ideas, let them remain constantly. Keep going sir.

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz 7 месяцев назад

      You must be Chinese sponsored.

  • @olleebenjaminofficial5029
    @olleebenjaminofficial5029 Год назад +1

    I love this, very well presented, you deserve my subscription

  • @vibrations8184
    @vibrations8184 3 года назад +6

    Really appreciate your work 🙂❤️keep it man bruh I am here 😊

  • @lhmonticelli
    @lhmonticelli Год назад

    This is gold! Thanks, Professor Kaplan.

  • @someoneonyoutube8622
    @someoneonyoutube8622 Год назад +6

    I agree to a point. I agree that philosophical questions can be outside the realm of mathematics and empirical science, however the questions of mathematics and science are themselves a part of philosophy.
    In other words science and mathematics and religion are a subfield of philosophy but philosophy is not a subfield of any of these things.

    • @DipayanPyne94
      @DipayanPyne94 Год назад +2

      Exactly ! Good observation ! That is exactly how it was in Ancient Greece !!

    • @jan_v_ier
      @jan_v_ier Год назад

      this makes sense. it answers @Kurt Mohler's question. Cause if mathematics is a subcategory of philosophy that would explain why

    • @someoneonyoutube8622
      @someoneonyoutube8622 Год назад

      @@jan_v_ier im glad to hear it but I have a question or two of my own. Who’s @Kurt Mohler and what was his question?
      You have me feeling like the supercomputer from Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy.

  • @educationalvideos5497
    @educationalvideos5497 2 года назад +17

    Great work! I had a wider understanding of Philosophy because of you sir.

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz 7 месяцев назад

      You must be Chinese sponsored.

  • @SeekersofUnity
    @SeekersofUnity 3 года назад +5

    Bro I love these videos. Thanks so much.

  • @bakkaabhilash5393
    @bakkaabhilash5393 2 года назад +200

    I'm an Engineering student, but watching philosophy videos😂

    • @sharkcrocodile4257
      @sharkcrocodile4257 2 года назад +20

      You can be both

    • @AbhiRam-qr5oe
      @AbhiRam-qr5oe 2 года назад +8

      Same here 😂

    • @gerededasein1182
      @gerededasein1182 2 года назад +3

      You get two gold stars!

    • @fefevicario
      @fefevicario Год назад +4

      Same here 😂

    • @JamesEIvoryIII
      @JamesEIvoryIII Год назад +5

      And keep in mind that no triangles exit, and, if they’re stipulated to exist, they’re never 2-dimensional but are 3 dimensional- owing to the 3D atoms in the ink used to describe the 2-dimensional plane that itself is actually 3-dimensional. 😂 And I get that. 🤵⌒🐬⌒µ⌒🦉

  • @SKhan-qi3xz
    @SKhan-qi3xz Год назад

    Very appropriate explanation of the question what is philosophy...you have simplified to the maximum possible..thank you

  • @pl5094
    @pl5094 2 года назад +12

    Thank you for posting your lectures and reading lists online. May I know if it is possible for us to have a look at the essay and quizzes questions for your courses? I am new to philosophy and would like to know how difficult it would be to write a piece of philosophical article. Thanks a lot.

  • @jonc6157
    @jonc6157 Год назад

    Back in 1996 I was in Greensboro college area with my Air Force comrades... we were partying with the college gals, wow small world, fast forward, I degreed in Phil + Social Sci for a double, worked hard in other occupations for many many years, half retired now after hard work grinding and investing, enjoying these awesome vids... !

  • @Priestbokmei1
    @Priestbokmei1 Год назад +1

    Great lecture, Professor! I wish I had you when I was in school!

  • @pjd4268
    @pjd4268 Год назад

    I am really loving that you break my brain into gooo and I have to stuff it back in again...(and asprin). :)

  • @user-mn8fj9bn7f
    @user-mn8fj9bn7f 3 года назад +6

    Really interesting thanks for making these videos!

  • @paulmoran2941
    @paulmoran2941 Год назад

    Man, this might be the best video I've seen in my life, for me, you know.

    • @paulmoran2941
      @paulmoran2941 Год назад

      Amazing job

    • @DipayanPyne94
      @DipayanPyne94 Год назад

      Well, that means that you haven't seen many awesome videos then ! 😂 But yeah, I get you. The video above is awesome ...

  • @lamaddukkelleng3834
    @lamaddukkelleng3834 3 года назад +8

    Very interesting and making philosophy simple to understand

  • @blueocean9305
    @blueocean9305 11 месяцев назад +4

    I encouraged my son to be a Philosophy major. Why? It teaches you to think clearly. This education has helped him in law school and in his law career.

    • @cheechee6473
      @cheechee6473 3 месяца назад

      Did he do anything with his degree other than law school?

  • @origaminoh8995
    @origaminoh8995 Год назад +1

    Love your lecture! Many thanks

  • @nabilfares555
    @nabilfares555 Год назад

    “Fair way to arrange society” plus some axioms about fairness, society and other related model components can then potentially have proof.

  • @gerrygrossny
    @gerrygrossny 2 года назад +1

    Amazing video! Who would of thought that Charlie from "It's always sunny..." could be so smart!!!! :)

  • @luismichaels7880
    @luismichaels7880 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for this!

  • @PrimataFilosofico
    @PrimataFilosofico Год назад +6

    Great class! By the way, have you some text published on this topic? Thank you in advance.

  • @brstudio6403
    @brstudio6403 Год назад +5

    I don't know what you would say at the age of 45 years I will enroll myself as a student of M.A. in philosophy from IGNOU in our country! I like the subject very much. I will follow your channel obviously. you're really doing a nice job.

  • @datrucksdavea2080
    @datrucksdavea2080 Год назад +1

    Good points, thank you for your lectures.

  • @arjumandbano8589
    @arjumandbano8589 10 месяцев назад

    Wow! Great job! Thanks, prof.

  • @darioadame9
    @darioadame9 2 года назад +5

    Thank you very much, Mr. Kaplan. I didn’t get why philosophy was born in Greece. Your explanations help me out a lot to come up with an answer.

    • @jeetsharma5691
      @jeetsharma5691 2 года назад +5

      Philosophy was not born in Greece , that is the Eurocentric misinformation . Thousand years before there were Indian and Chinese philosophers.

    • @mattkohlin2608
      @mattkohlin2608 Год назад +1

      @@jeetsharma5691 philosophy has existed since mankind could make choices

    • @digitig
      @digitig 11 месяцев назад

      The first of the "Greek" philosophers were actually from modern-day Turkey.

  • @peterorthmann5612
    @peterorthmann5612 2 года назад +2

    I will have to contemplate HOW you did that, but THANKS. So well done.

  • @balajameel1085
    @balajameel1085 11 месяцев назад

    Hmmm very interesting course of study. It awakes one's curiosity in knowing what he ought to know.

  • @havenbastion
    @havenbastion 11 месяцев назад +1

    Philosophy is best understood as three distinctive areas, each with its own tools and aims. Truth Wisdom, Practical Wisdom, and Academic Philosophy require answers, solutions, and credentials respectively. An answer is a framework of understanding. A solution is an action plan.

  • @artgarrido5294
    @artgarrido5294 Год назад +3

    I am 72 years old man ,learning from your channel and realized that if your channel would have been available to me when I was younger my life would have been very different, perhaps a happier one .
    It helps me now , and for that I kindly thank you.

    • @DipayanPyne94
      @DipayanPyne94 Год назад +1

      So many people learn these things very late in life. It's not their fault. I hope you are doing well ! I wish you good health so that you are able to engage in philosophical discourse !! 😄

  • @Aelorick
    @Aelorick Год назад

    Philosophy is the discipline that examines the human capacity to produce meaning.
    This is my take on the subject, of course, but I'm willing to argue it as well.
    The video is great but it doesn't answer what philosophy is, just what it isn't.
    Keep up the incredible work, Jeffrey!

    • @sibanbgd100
      @sibanbgd100 10 месяцев назад +2

      Examining the capacity of humans to produce meaning is just a part of epistemology. Asking if there is a world separate from myself or if I exist are clearly questions that fall under philosophy, but not your definition. David Hume, John Locke, and George Barkley would somewhat agree with you. They thought that philosophy should, 1st and foremost, define the limits of a human mind to understand/produce meaning.

    • @Aelorick
      @Aelorick 10 месяцев назад

      @@sibanbgd100I see your point, but asking those questions and trying to answer them is a production of meaning.

  • @fancypotato2188
    @fancypotato2188 3 года назад +14

    Thank you, I've watched this twice now. I'd like to request a video on good philosophy books for beginners and/or your favorite if you have the time.

    • @jan_v_ier
      @jan_v_ier Год назад +1

      I don't know if you are going to read this, but he just put out a new video about the 7 philosophy books to read.

  • @madesuarjana5311
    @madesuarjana5311 2 года назад +3

    Thnks Sir, your explaination really help me to learn philosofy

  • @Torbjorn6452
    @Torbjorn6452 Год назад

    Thank you, this has been insightful 👍

  • @user10cool
    @user10cool 2 года назад +3

    Awesome video. Thanks

  • @jaatreloded
    @jaatreloded 3 года назад +12

    I am from India, I like watching your video they are informative and easy to understand.
    While watching your videos I feel like I have always been wanting to watch videos on Philosophy and legal Philosophy like your videos.
    Thank you.
    I want to ask, do you write on a transparent glass backwards, so that it is visible to us the right way.?

  • @jamesisin
    @jamesisin Год назад +4

    I feel so much better about my two philosophy degrees now.

  • @faithijahi8813
    @faithijahi8813 8 месяцев назад +1

    Wow thank you so much for sharing today we had a lecture on introduction to phylosophy bt i didn't understood. I tried to search on RUclips thank God I found your lec here

  • @t.s.p5669
    @t.s.p5669 2 года назад

    Many after holding degrees of attainments could neither understand nor therefore teach... that makes educational attainments meaningless and wastage of resources. It's a good presentation. Thank you!

  • @nHans
    @nHans Год назад +1

    At first, I thought this was a re-upload of your March 2020 video, also titled _"What is Philosophy?" Edited to 30 minutes, down from 51 minutes. The talking points are identical: children, stoners, religious people, pickles, baby chicken, 9, empirical v. non-empirical, triangle, ice tea, chemists, GMAT, LSAT, GRE, money. But this looks like a different recording. For one, you've written using larger letters.
    Now I'm convinced you're a real professor. Because my college professors were exactly like that-every semester, they gave identical lectures. Same talking points, same scribblings on the board, same jokes. After a few years, they didn't even have to think about what they wanted to say. They spoke robotically from rote memory.
    Anyway, looking forward to next semester's _"What is Philosophy?"_ lecture. I bet you'll be able to trim it even further, say around 18 minutes-TED length.

  • @Gator732
    @Gator732 2 года назад +3

    Great video, clear and well explained. A few questions though 9:50 Couldn't you lay out say nine apples and visually observer them? And could you physically experiment with the nine apples? Therefor making it empirical? Also 10:43 Couldn't God take the place of the triangle in this scenario where I could draw my take on God with the ink and therefor making it non-empirical?

  • @sapnanahar8273
    @sapnanahar8273 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for making this video

  • @Steve-hu9gw
    @Steve-hu9gw 2 года назад +3

    While building a fair society certainly involves philosophical reflection, I don’t believe doing so can necessarily be divorced from empirical investigation. Provided one believes how people feel and their well-being are relevant to building a fair society, then one will necessarily run into empiricism as one investigates, even scientifically, how people actually feel and fare in various societies, past and present. Indeed, one might well spend much more of the process diving into empirical research than engaging in philosophical discussion.

  • @stevenpace892
    @stevenpace892 8 месяцев назад +1

    I have another definition of philosophy. Mine is based on its purpose (what it is for). Philosophy is the infrastructure of thought, in other words it is the study of assumptions. It is interesting that it is nearly a synonymn of Jeff's definition except it includes all religion as well as a proper subset.

  • @prashadndezoysa2506
    @prashadndezoysa2506 Год назад +1

    An excellent explanation

  • @nabilfares555
    @nabilfares555 Год назад

    Fantastic video. Really cool.

  • @amberzulphiqar5
    @amberzulphiqar5 8 месяцев назад

    Loved your video ❤

  • @MarkAhlquist
    @MarkAhlquist Год назад

    Fantastic video!

  • @chandrashekharahire4798
    @chandrashekharahire4798 Год назад

    Thank you very much for sharing this video Sir

  • @TheNaiveMonk
    @TheNaiveMonk Год назад

    Thanks for sharing. ❤

  • @skyknight1989
    @skyknight1989 Год назад

    You are amazing, dude

  • @zapazap
    @zapazap Год назад

    The chief philosophical question about fairness is: what is fairness? (Which might be best approached by first asking: what is "fairness"? Ie what do we mean by the *word* in our language games?)
    Once we have a shared understanding of what constitutes "fairness", the question of whether a given social arrangement is fair becomes empirical. Yes?

  • @ellafant
    @ellafant 7 месяцев назад

    What I've been looking for.

  • @sasanrahmatian312
    @sasanrahmatian312 Год назад

    At 14:41 Professor Kaplan raises the question of “What is the fair way to arrange society?”, and then goes on to assert that it cannot be answered empirically. Yes, it cannot be answered through controlled experiments, but if we have information about various ways in which past societies were arranged and, for each, how fair it turned out to be, then we can run a correlational test to see if there is any relationship between the two variables (societal arrangement and fairness). It is through such scientific studies of history that we know societies arranged based on totalitarianism and injustice do not last long because the human spirit yearns for freedom and justice.
    But philosophy would still be useful in this context as it would help define terms such as “societal arrangement” and “societal fairness” operationally before any data can be collected. Philosophy can also be useful in interpreting the results, as to why a particular connection exists between these two variables.

  • @shauntothefuture6253
    @shauntothefuture6253 3 года назад +9

    Thank you for this video. I have always seen myself as poetic and philosophical, but is that not subjective ? It is an opinion, my own and the opinion of others.

  • @clemens1993
    @clemens1993 Год назад +1

    So, to sumarize:
    The question "What is philosophy" is philosophical in itself.
    But you argue, that it is the search for answers with rational arguments, that can't be observed or calculated.
    Therefore (this are my 2 cents), it is very useful to predict consequences, that you don't want to risk find out impericaly.

  • @rossg9361
    @rossg9361 10 месяцев назад

    It is the examination of concepts.

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 Год назад +1

    Next class we'll try to define what's art.
    (My nephew is studying philosophy - he's a good student. We need more philosophy, more philosophers and more non-philosophers applying the throught process philosophers use.)

  • @bonifasmarandiofficial5910
    @bonifasmarandiofficial5910 Год назад +1

    Great class... 😊

  • @TXKurt
    @TXKurt Год назад +1

    @26:05 Whoa! I think of statistics as a kind of applied mathematics. What is going on between the Mathematics and Statistics results on the GMAT?

  • @clubtercelquebec
    @clubtercelquebec 11 месяцев назад

    Please balance the audio left and right. :) other than that, really nice initiative to spread knowledge freely.

  • @clementgavi7290
    @clementgavi7290 11 месяцев назад

    Philosophy is the position taken by thought in relation to being, that is to say, to what is.

  • @achrafboof1892
    @achrafboof1892 7 месяцев назад

    You're a Genuous🤓
    you maked philosophy looks so fun to study🔥🔥🔥

  • @monicasen-pq2up
    @monicasen-pq2up Год назад

    Prof. Kaplan, do you think Prof. Singer's article on affluence, famine, and morality could also be alternatively titled "Charity Is not Feel Good on the Cheap"?

  • @apaulpen
    @apaulpen Год назад +3

    clearly explained! very compelling, that i now want to shift from computer science to philo lol)

  • @darrellee8194
    @darrellee8194 Год назад

    8:43 I think that 9 being prime is not a good non-empirical question.
    I think all mathematics are constructed from the natural numbers and
    Euclidian geometry.
    We learn about the natural numbers and geometry from experience by manipulating collections of distinct items in space and time.
    Composite numbers are numbers that can be arrange into a square or rectangle with rows and columns of equal size (with at least two rows
    or columns)
    Prime are natural numbers that can't be arranged as such.
    Thus nine being prime is defined by observation and experiment.

  • @1337flite
    @1337flite Год назад

    Fair is a matter of perception - I think what is a fair society or fair structure for society is subjection - it is subject to your perception, your taste. What you percieve, what you think "tastes" fair.
    I think we can find a definition of "fair" that most reasonable people would agree on, something like "a situation wehre all parties benefit or suffer equally". The problem comes with measuring equal benefit of suffering.

  • @fferreres
    @fferreres Год назад

    Great lecture. Here are some thoughts. I think it's great how it distinguishes it from science and math, but then could do more to relate them all. When you take these three (and possibly religion or "faith", four) together, only then you can be confirm your "sophos". What do I mean by that?
    Let's take "What is a fair way to arrange society". The first needed is consensus about the meaning of Fairness, assuming that can be achieved. It's not even an argument about how to organize anything, but runs prior to that. The meaning, usually, will be derived by observing commonality in examples that we thought were more or less fair, or more fair in some ways than other examples. Now, there may be no way to organize it fairly, because there may be no agreement on the definition. Now, if someone can provide a definition and have all others agree, we are not far from a religion: a definition is just a concept explained with words attached to a label. The abstract concept of fairness when narrowed, can be reasoned now logically and mathematically. But since we are talking about "organizing Society", it's likely that whatever the axioms and rules at play, wherever logic takes us, if applied to an actual Society, would have effects on its members. Do they matter?
    For example, is it fair to organize society in a way that gets all it's members killed? Half the members drowning? All of them sad and depressed? So from axioms (what is the essence of "fairness" if it exists, or its fruits, and what is the noun "society"), we develop arguments and reach conclusions or "wise" answers, which are supposed to be wise irrespective of actual examples. But if in practice by Society we mean societies like any, including ours, then when applied to societies, we would expect the outcomes to be congruent with what we have defined is Fair.
    Now, what if, and that's what often happens in practice, what is fair ends up resulting in the most unfair, horrendous consequences, abhorrent and a mockery of any fairness and patently unjust and unfair? We could argue that it is Fair, but that unfortunately humans (or any other society) can live fairly. Well then, is it fair to organize societies in a way that results in unfairness? This would inform the definition, which may need fine-tuning. And this makes Mayeutics more interesting. For it is about logic (math), it is also about experiments (ie. reasoning by bringing to mind past real life experiences and actual observations as in Plato's dialogs, and making predictions), and making effort to try to predict the consequences ofways to organize society, as it is about Wisdom, either by faith (if religiously), or reasoning i(f philosophically addressed).
    Usually, we have these separated, because philosophy isn't about experiments, nor math, then we can arrive at false wisdom, for example, concluding that in order to organize society in a way that is fair, we'd have to organize it in a way that results in unfairness. The fault isn't the logic, it's either the definitions or the misunderstanding of important details - the wrong model. And this is in part why philosophy can't be just about things that aren't math or experiments, but rather, the perfect complement in tandem with them, for those with Sophos in their hearts.

    • @gusmath1001
      @gusmath1001 Год назад

      I suggest that you read Plato’s Republic.

  • @ajaykumara7158
    @ajaykumara7158 Год назад

    Wonderful lecture Sir

  • @darrellee8194
    @darrellee8194 Год назад +1

    10:51 - Never seen a triangle?
    Consider the Kanizsa triangle illusion. Since the triangle we are seeing
    isn't there, I submit that it is in fact a abstract triangle. And it's a real triang because you can't not see it.

  • @BrianHartman
    @BrianHartman Год назад +1

    This is a great series. Thanks for putting it online. :)
    I have a question about the number 9 example: You say that we didn't discover that 9 was a prime number experimentally, but you *could* do that, couldn't you? you could take all the numbers between 1 and 9 and see if anything other than 1 produced a whole number when you divided 9 by that number.

    • @autumnfox4870
      @autumnfox4870 Год назад +1

      This isn't true really because division and the existence of numbers are defined axiomatically. Kaplan makes this point in the video itself.

    • @BrianHartman
      @BrianHartman Год назад

      @@autumnfox4870 But this isn't about division directly. It's about prime numbers. We're still finding prime numbers today. A prime is a particular kind of number.

    • @nemesis5640
      @nemesis5640 6 месяцев назад

      When you use the word "number", you must consider what you mean by that. The way "numbers" are defined are a bit more abstract, namely: we start from nothing, the only thing we expect to exist is the object "nothing"/the empty set. (= A set with no elements). We define this to be zero, the next step we allow is combining the empty set with itself in any way. You can interpret the empty set as an empty box, it's still an object, but empty. Now let's make a set with element: the empty set: {{empty set}}. Intuitively this is a box with an empty box inside it. Do this process infinitely many times and we define a new "number", which is a set, to be smaller than another number if it is contained in that set. 0 < 1 because {} is in {empty set} (Theorem used: the empty set is in any set), 1 < 2 because {empty set} is in {{empty set}, empty set}. The operations between numbers are also rigorously defined in mathematics. Asking what the properties (eg. division) of numbers are is useless when you are unaware of what a number is in itself, without using circular reasoning. Hope this helps a bit. (Another great, simple, question would be: why is 0*a = 0 for any integer a? Try to prove this without using the following argument: "because 0 times any number is zero" in any way. To prove this look up axioms of a "field").

  • @gabrielgkabelen9824
    @gabrielgkabelen9824 Год назад

    Thanks a lot dear Friend.

  • @feyza823
    @feyza823 2 года назад +1

    I LOVE the little "..or whatever" additions

  • @sivaprasad29
    @sivaprasad29 9 месяцев назад

    Good , beneficial

  • @Kirbydo
    @Kirbydo 11 месяцев назад

    Can a certain experience be still a philosophical question? "Let's say a person that pronounced dead then came back to life" is that considered as observation or experimental in a way?

  • @thisissaurav
    @thisissaurav Год назад

    Thanks a lot ❤

  • @SeekersofUnity
    @SeekersofUnity 3 года назад +3

    How do you write backwards?

    • @mack626
      @mack626 3 года назад

      He has a really cool video about it, it was a few months back

    • @alhilford2345
      @alhilford2345 3 года назад

      Mirrors.
      Look at his shirt and wedding ring.

  • @scrooglemcduck1163
    @scrooglemcduck1163 7 месяцев назад

    Question: Why is this lecture listed twice? (This one is better than the one from three years ago.)

  • @JamesEIvoryIII
    @JamesEIvoryIII Год назад

    Love this guy! 🤵🔬😎

  • @J.AwolowoSonpon-pg6tl
    @J.AwolowoSonpon-pg6tl 9 месяцев назад

    I love logic and ethics.

  • @filmcommunity98
    @filmcommunity98 3 года назад +4

    Please sir, Make a video on John Rawls, A Theory of Justice, ?? I am from India (university of North bengal)

  • @9xixix9
    @9xixix9 9 месяцев назад

    Not sure if this question has been answered / posed: HOW does the clear board work?? Is he writing backwards?? Is it even glass, why is there no reflection?? Why are the markers neon?? Where do you get them! How have I hated philosophy classes in college yet am now watching this at 1am?? Grateful for you professor. (But I need to know about the magical invisible board!!!)

    • @9xixix9
      @9xixix9 9 месяцев назад

      Answering my own question, is it that when recording the words are actually backwards but you flipped the video in post??
      Must knowwww

  • @mahixgeerai253
    @mahixgeerai253 2 года назад +2

    Philosophy is really interesting