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Mike_from_NJ
Guest
I choose the Prophet Muhammed. Would that be ok? I would guess not. I think not assuming one philosopher is correct is by far the safest and most rational way to go about things.If you really want to become a philosopher, may I suggest you actually become a student of one (and only one to begin),
It’s clear there is an importance in Aristotle’s work, but he is certainly not the be-all and end-all of philosophy. Hylomorphism? Substance and accidents? Bodies falling based on weight? Why would I want to regress in my knowledge but studying only Aristotle?reading his works (not just reading about him nor just listening to someone else talk about him) and examining the workings of your own being through his descriptions. I would suggest Aristotle, who is good about definitions, because with any later teacher you would still have to go back to Aristotle to find the root of many ideas.
You started by saying to pick a philosopher, you gave Aristotle as an example of a philosopher, then said to believe in the philosopher. Would you ask me to believe in the philosopher if I chose one that ran counter to Catholic thought? How on earth does one just believe in something without gauging its merit?Believe in Aristotle as your “true teacher” and see yourself through him.
Is this really not about you wanting me to pick one philosopher and following him all the way and instead you telling me I should believe everything Aristotle says because Catholic thought uses Aristotle?
Again, this isn’t about you saying to pick a philosopher then check out others from there. You are poorly trying to set it up so that I specifically follow Aristotle, “believe” what he says (although how one just makes an effort to believe something I have no idea), then once I’m fully in line with Aristotle I can then look at other philosophers and find them wanting compared to Artistotle. Have I missed anything in your off-topic explanation?Then, after you say, “I understand”, only then go on to others and try the same. You will see the mistakes in others and the truth in others because you will have already come to know many things clearly that cannot be denied. Aristotle is comparatively easy reading compared to some, and most, if not all, of his extant works are available in English online, and some in Greek if you have learned that yet (which I have occasionally found helpful).
I am always a student. Being a student means taking this as they are and not how we want them to be. It means showing a modicum of intellectual curiousity and not shouting to the rafters that you don’t care if others point out the lack of verifiability in something I think is true.Be a student rather than joking under the bleachers at the high school football game with slackers who try to appear adult. Begin with Aristotle’s Categories - and believe in him until you have learned all he has to show you about yourself and the world.
Being a student all comes back to the OP: How can we show something is true (verifiable) or is not true (falsifiable)? How does one accomplish this with the supernatural?