Re: Philosophy Unbound: Schopenhauer vs. Steiner (Round One)
Posted: Wed Jun 02, 2021 5:12 am
Hi there, you wrote:
"So, if I am reading you correctly, then you are suggesting that not only was Steiner's understanding of Schopenhauer very shallow, so is BK's understanding, so is Cleric's, and so is every other commentator on his philosophy."
You aren't. Far from it. I actually see creative and help aspects in the various takes on Steiner in this thread. I have my partial understanding. Steiner had his own partial understanding of what he experienced. As he said in 1912 when realizing he couldn't yet find the right words to express his epistemology in the phenomenological manner he wanted to (ends up published after his death in the partial Anthroposophy- A Fragment).
You'll probably only hear me speak of 'shallow' interpretations when it is one great thinker claiming they have demolished another great thinker by pointing out a simple error in logic based on a carefully worded summation of that person's thoughts. As I've already said, I think of these two as great thinkers, but I see them being shallow when they make those pronunciations. Take it for whatever it's worth, which probably isn't much in this context.
"You are saying he snuck in an understanding of universal Will that has escaped all of these other brilliant minds and every later philosopher who built their philosophy of Will on his foundation."
No, I didn't say that. The only reason you won't be able to point to me saying that is because I didn't. At all. But this is getting taxing for both of us. When it gets to point where you need to put words in my mouth and I need to keep repeating that I'm not offering A Pristine Understand Of The Wole, I just think we stand back and see what we could say that might actually matter. I've tried to point to why I think a brilliant mind can misunderstand another brilliant mind. I've tried to show other ways things can be taken. And I've tried to demonstrate that I at least have a decent grasp on Steiner and the various ways he makes his arguments. But I'm failing to make anything translate. That is certainly my fault to the degree that I'm not a great writer or very articulate about these things.
Another example, you write:
"Now if you can point me towards another person's writing who takes the same view as you do on Schopenhauer, then I may be able to adjust that understanding of what you are claiming and come to a better one. Is there any such person?"
And I thought I had stated several times that not only was I not speaking as an expert on Schopenhauer, I wasn't even claiming to know exactly what he meant. I thought I made it clear that I was showing how his words can be coherently understood in other ways that you or Steiner framed them. Again, somehow I came across as claiming I had a specific take that nobody else had grasped about Schopenhauer. If, however, we are interested in other philosophers who do incredible jobs sorting out the way various great minds speak past each other, there are many. Eugene Gendlin, McKewon, Dilthey, Oppy, and even some of Wittgetnsein's work can be very helpful in this regard. But that leads us too far afield, again.
But I'll end where I often end: I don't think Bernardo (he would certainly agree) knows enough about Steiner's epistemology to even begin seriously addressing Steiner's commentary on Schopenhauer. But I understand that in the context of the podcast, he wanted to respond to what he had heard read to him. And I think that Steiner begged his own understanding into his own reformulation of one line of argument that Schopenhauer made. I've tried to show that by not dogmatically claiming this is exactly what Steiner meant and this is exactly what Shopenhauer meant, but to simply show that there are other coherent ways to seriously read the various terms that allow for other light to shine in. I know that there are some who stand from a vantage point who don't just read my words as nonsense, but I also know that I'm simply not skilled enough to make sense to a wide range of people. All I can say is that I easily remember what it was like when I held the opinion that Steiner had demolished Schopenhauer and that Schopenhauer was blind to the essential nature of thinking. I don't think I was stupid for holding that opinion and I hope I don't sound like anybody is stupid who believes one of these thinkers is simply right and the other simply wrong. That is a common and understandable way of approaching the logical facet of their works.
"So, if I am reading you correctly, then you are suggesting that not only was Steiner's understanding of Schopenhauer very shallow, so is BK's understanding, so is Cleric's, and so is every other commentator on his philosophy."
You aren't. Far from it. I actually see creative and help aspects in the various takes on Steiner in this thread. I have my partial understanding. Steiner had his own partial understanding of what he experienced. As he said in 1912 when realizing he couldn't yet find the right words to express his epistemology in the phenomenological manner he wanted to (ends up published after his death in the partial Anthroposophy- A Fragment).
You'll probably only hear me speak of 'shallow' interpretations when it is one great thinker claiming they have demolished another great thinker by pointing out a simple error in logic based on a carefully worded summation of that person's thoughts. As I've already said, I think of these two as great thinkers, but I see them being shallow when they make those pronunciations. Take it for whatever it's worth, which probably isn't much in this context.
"You are saying he snuck in an understanding of universal Will that has escaped all of these other brilliant minds and every later philosopher who built their philosophy of Will on his foundation."
No, I didn't say that. The only reason you won't be able to point to me saying that is because I didn't. At all. But this is getting taxing for both of us. When it gets to point where you need to put words in my mouth and I need to keep repeating that I'm not offering A Pristine Understand Of The Wole, I just think we stand back and see what we could say that might actually matter. I've tried to point to why I think a brilliant mind can misunderstand another brilliant mind. I've tried to show other ways things can be taken. And I've tried to demonstrate that I at least have a decent grasp on Steiner and the various ways he makes his arguments. But I'm failing to make anything translate. That is certainly my fault to the degree that I'm not a great writer or very articulate about these things.
Another example, you write:
"Now if you can point me towards another person's writing who takes the same view as you do on Schopenhauer, then I may be able to adjust that understanding of what you are claiming and come to a better one. Is there any such person?"
And I thought I had stated several times that not only was I not speaking as an expert on Schopenhauer, I wasn't even claiming to know exactly what he meant. I thought I made it clear that I was showing how his words can be coherently understood in other ways that you or Steiner framed them. Again, somehow I came across as claiming I had a specific take that nobody else had grasped about Schopenhauer. If, however, we are interested in other philosophers who do incredible jobs sorting out the way various great minds speak past each other, there are many. Eugene Gendlin, McKewon, Dilthey, Oppy, and even some of Wittgetnsein's work can be very helpful in this regard. But that leads us too far afield, again.
But I'll end where I often end: I don't think Bernardo (he would certainly agree) knows enough about Steiner's epistemology to even begin seriously addressing Steiner's commentary on Schopenhauer. But I understand that in the context of the podcast, he wanted to respond to what he had heard read to him. And I think that Steiner begged his own understanding into his own reformulation of one line of argument that Schopenhauer made. I've tried to show that by not dogmatically claiming this is exactly what Steiner meant and this is exactly what Shopenhauer meant, but to simply show that there are other coherent ways to seriously read the various terms that allow for other light to shine in. I know that there are some who stand from a vantage point who don't just read my words as nonsense, but I also know that I'm simply not skilled enough to make sense to a wide range of people. All I can say is that I easily remember what it was like when I held the opinion that Steiner had demolished Schopenhauer and that Schopenhauer was blind to the essential nature of thinking. I don't think I was stupid for holding that opinion and I hope I don't sound like anybody is stupid who believes one of these thinkers is simply right and the other simply wrong. That is a common and understandable way of approaching the logical facet of their works.