I was trained pretty intensely in critical theory, and have since been practising and growing on that. At the end of the formal course, my teacher said to us that we were among "a dying breed", accompanying the death of philosophical post-modernism, another victim of 9/11 no doubt.
I suppose I'm talking more of the Frankfurt school, Horkheimer et al, logical analysis of arguments is good. Basically means any argument should be entirely logical and no appeal to emotions as a premise, though a premise based upon other emotions holds more weight but in turn makes a refutation more damaging as one can logically attack that emotion. For example, consider "Saddam is an evil bastard", and "America's pride has been hurt".
Both are emotional arguments, yet the latter holds more weight until someone critiques the notion of patriotism and we find it to be an emotional state that holds little water. However, we live in days when this notion of logic down to the individual is dying as we get caught up in emotive, "easy" arguments. If I attack the notion of patriotism in the US or UK, as an intellectual I won't be taken seriously, for no real reason except emotional abhorrence at my views, instead of a logical flaw therein. Such is my experience already and I'm not even 19 yet!! I personally don't like it. I'd rather be convinced of a certain view in a critical debate, rather than an advertising campaign. I'd rather use my brain than hormones in conceptual and political matters.
I know that critical thinking tends to take a dive when the world becomes more conservative, and we live in such days. Anyone else concur?
What do we think?
N.B.: I belong to the camps of emotivism and moral subjectivism (I'm working on my own form of relativism that seems to fit here), so I do know that emotions play a part in our debates. I know that you can take someones logic back to their own individual emotional disposition, but there the debate becomes a matter of yay and nay, or a comparison of individual philosophies as a product of our state of mind. Needless to say, rationally speaking we all have a lot in common to the point that we reach a consensus of premises such that there is usually no need to break a debate down into our states of mind. As a non-cognitivist, I suppose I'm inclined to say that a critical debate becomes something of a comparison of views, as opposed to a moral realist or an absolutist but never mind about this.
Discuss the death of critical theory in all its forms, not merely what I'm talking about .
I suppose I'm talking more of the Frankfurt school, Horkheimer et al, logical analysis of arguments is good. Basically means any argument should be entirely logical and no appeal to emotions as a premise, though a premise based upon other emotions holds more weight but in turn makes a refutation more damaging as one can logically attack that emotion. For example, consider "Saddam is an evil bastard", and "America's pride has been hurt".
Both are emotional arguments, yet the latter holds more weight until someone critiques the notion of patriotism and we find it to be an emotional state that holds little water. However, we live in days when this notion of logic down to the individual is dying as we get caught up in emotive, "easy" arguments. If I attack the notion of patriotism in the US or UK, as an intellectual I won't be taken seriously, for no real reason except emotional abhorrence at my views, instead of a logical flaw therein. Such is my experience already and I'm not even 19 yet!! I personally don't like it. I'd rather be convinced of a certain view in a critical debate, rather than an advertising campaign. I'd rather use my brain than hormones in conceptual and political matters.
I know that critical thinking tends to take a dive when the world becomes more conservative, and we live in such days. Anyone else concur?
What do we think?
N.B.: I belong to the camps of emotivism and moral subjectivism (I'm working on my own form of relativism that seems to fit here), so I do know that emotions play a part in our debates. I know that you can take someones logic back to their own individual emotional disposition, but there the debate becomes a matter of yay and nay, or a comparison of individual philosophies as a product of our state of mind. Needless to say, rationally speaking we all have a lot in common to the point that we reach a consensus of premises such that there is usually no need to break a debate down into our states of mind. As a non-cognitivist, I suppose I'm inclined to say that a critical debate becomes something of a comparison of views, as opposed to a moral realist or an absolutist but never mind about this.
Discuss the death of critical theory in all its forms, not merely what I'm talking about .
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