Kingkool wrote:Is this just a hobby, or will answering the big questions make a difference? Are you here because you feel comfort in the fact that people care enough to even search in the first place? Does a fear of the unknown drive us to try to answer these questions?
There is a lot of confusion about what Philosophy really is. I think Philosophy can divided in two parts. The first is trying to answer questions which are just
means to answer
other questions. The second is trying to answer those other questions once the those have been answered. Most of philosophy is trying to the find the answer to first-order questions, in order to answer the subsequent questions (hence why there is a lot of confusion in the notion of whether or not philosophy ever makes progress). For instance, just think about the debates over the synthetic a priori. Kant didn't write an extremely long book about whether or not the synthetic a priori is possible
for its own sake, but rather, he did it to answer a subsequent question- whether or not metaphysics is possible. Another example would be the debates over naming in the philosophy of language. Can there be contingent identity statements? If not, then, if a=b, then necessarily a=b. But if that's true, there is an ontological distinction between mental states and brain states (see Saul Kripke). So, again, it seems that philosophy is always in the workshop. That is, always working on questions just to answer other questions.