Philosophical ideas exist within an
unfolding tradition. One can think, have the ideas of being moral, virtuous, only by comprehending the tradition, in which they are enshrined
becoming the tradition in one’s own mind, and belief by one's naive utterances that one is rising out of the moral swamp.
In Wittgenstein we read intensely about what is essentially communal about language, and of how the very notions of truth and falsehood have sense only against a social background.
In our the striving for truth, virtue and love, we seek what may be beyond us
and if you accommodate the meytaphsical quest for what is beyond us and yet perceivable, ;...it is there...I know it is...' life is not meanignless.
becoming the tradition in one’s own mind, and belief by one's naive utterances that one is rising out of the moral swamp.
In Wittgenstein we read intensely about what is essentially communal about language, and of how the very notions of truth and falsehood have sense only against a social background.
In our the striving for truth, virtue and love, we seek what may be beyond us
and if you accommodate the meytaphsical quest for what is beyond us and yet perceivable, ;...it is there...I know it is...' life is not meanignless.
No comments:
Post a Comment