What Is Philosophy?
1.1 What Is Philosophy?
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Philosophy is the discipline that seeks to understand how everything—nature, consciousness, morality, beauty, and society—hangs together in the broadest possible sense, using reason and critical inquiry without being bound by the assumptions that limit other fields.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Philosophy's scope: It examines the broadest range of subjects (nature, consciousness, morality, beauty, social organizations) and cannot automatically rule anything out.
- Historical roots: The sage tradition across India, China, Africa, and Greece shows early philosophers combining wisdom, technical innovation, spiritual insight, and rational inquiry.
- Distinction from other disciplines: Unlike sciences with defined boundaries and methods, philosophy intentionally lacks clear boundaries because it aims to understand the whole.
- Common confusion: Philosophy vs. science—early philosophers were also scientists/mathematicians, but philosophy seeks to understand how all fields connect, not just one domain.
- Core skill: Philosophical know-how involves knowing your way around concepts and understanding how they connect, support, and rely upon one another.
🌍 The sage tradition across cultures
🕉️ Indian sages (rishis)
Sages (rishis): Wise figures who combined spiritual practice, meditation, and ascetic discipline to gain wisdom; considered authors of the Vedas and spiritual forerunners of Indian gurus.
- The Seven Sages (Saptarishi) play a central role in Hindu tradition, partly as wise men and partly as mythic figures descended from gods.
- They derived wisdom from both spiritual forces and tapas (meditative and ascetic practices to control body and mind).
- Women sages: Despite patriarchal culture, early Vedic texts record women like Ghosha, Maitreyi, and Gargi who achieved high levels of enlightenment and contributed hymns and philosophical dialogues.
- Example: Gargi engaged in celebrated debates with the sage Yajnavalkya about natural philosophy and the fundamental elements of the universe.
- Don't confuse: Early equality for women in the Vedic tradition did not last; Indian culture became increasingly patriarchal over time.
🏛️ Chinese sages (sheng)
Sheng (sage): One who listens to divine insight and shares that wisdom or acts upon it for society's benefit; the Chinese character includes the symbol of an ear.
- Confucius and other classical writers emphasized sages for their technical discoveries (fire-making, flood control, building canals), political wisdom, and moral virtue.
- Mythic emperors like Yao, Shun, and Yü were praised for technological innovations (canoes, carts, bows) and virtues like filial piety and devotion to work.
- Chinese philosophical traditions (Confucianism, Mohism) associated key values with these historical/mythical sages.
- Patriarchal context: Confucianism resulted in widespread subordination of women; this began to change only after the Communist Revolution (1945–1952).
🌍 African sages
- Henry Odera Oruka documented African tribal sages who developed complex philosophical ideas through rational inquiry.
- These sages demonstrated a tension: they articulated received cultural wisdom while maintaining critical distance and seeking rational justification for beliefs.
- Oruka confined his study to sayings showing "a rational method of inquiry into the real nature of things."
🏺 Greek sages
Seven Sages: Early Greek wise figures known for practical wisdom, scientific/mathematical achievements, and fundamental claims about reality.
Thales of Miletus (most important):
- Scientific achievements: predicted a solar eclipse (585 BCE), calculated pyramid heights using geometry, studied astronomy in Egypt.
- Philosophical claims: argued all matter is fundamentally water; everything with self-motion has a soul; the soul is immortal.
- Example: He predicted a good olive harvest, bought all the olive presses, then profited by selling them to farmers—demonstrating practical wisdom.
Solon:
- Political leader who introduced the "Law of Release" (cancelled debts, freed debt-slaves).
- Established constitutional government in Athens with representative body and economic reforms.
- Famous saying: "Count no man happy until he is dead"—meaning happiness reflects an entire life, not momentary experience.
🔬 From sages to natural philosophy
🌊 The Milesians (followers of Thales)
- Interested in underlying causes of natural change: Why does water turn to ice? Why do seasons change?
- Distinguished between material elements that participate in change and elements with their own source of motion.
- Thales identified magnets and amber (static electricity) as having "soul"—an internal principle of motion.
- Connection to modern language: The words "animal" and "animation" derive from Latin anima (soul), reflecting this ancient idea of soul as motion-principle.
⚡ Early scientific explanations
- Xenophanes: Explained rainbows, sun, moon, and St. Elmo's fire as apparitions of clouds—an early example of explaining phenomena through underlying mechanisms.
- Parmenides: Used logic to argue that fundamental reality must be unchanging; observed changes are illusions.
- Democritus (atomist): Reasoned that all perceived qualities are human conventions; underlying reality consists of unchanging atoms flowing through void.
- Don't confuse: Ancient Greek atoms differ from modern atomic theory, but the core idea—observable phenomena have basis in underlying matter configurations—connects ancient and modern science.
📐 The Pythagoreans
| Aspect | Description |
|---|---|
| Mathematical discoveries | Pythagorean theorem (relationship between sides of right triangle) |
| Natural philosophy | Mathematics explains nature; universe has unified rational structure |
| Harmonics | Recognized relationships between numbers and sounds; planets may produce music |
| Beliefs | Soul is immortal and reincarnates; animals have souls deserving respect |
| Community | Strict rules about diet, clothing, behavior; serious scholarship |
Women Pythagoreans:
- Themistoclea: Delphic priestess who inspired Pythagoras to study philosophy.
- Theano (Pythagoras's wife): Contributed to discoveries in numbers and optics; wrote treatise On Piety.
- Myia (their daughter): Applied Pythagorean philosophy to practical life, including motherhood.
- Example: The Pythagorean school shows how early philosophical/scientific thinking combined with religious, cultural, and ethical practices to embrace many life aspects.
🧩 Philosophy as understanding the whole
🎯 Wilfrid Sellars's definition (1962)
"The aim of philosophy, abstractly formulated, is to understand how things in the broadest possible sense of the term hang together in the broadest possible sense of the term."
What this means:
- Philosophy is committed to understanding everything insofar as it can be understood—the widest possible range of topics.
- Philosophers cannot rule out any topic on principle.
- However, not every topic deserves equal attention; philosophers focus on what is informative and interesting—things that help us understand how the world hangs together.
What to avoid:
- Conspiracy theories or paranoid delusions (not real, though understanding why people believe them may be worth studying).
- Trivial facts like daily grain-of-sand counts on a beach (factually true but uninformative about how things connect).
🗺️ Philosophical know-how
Philosophical know-how: A practical skill of knowing your way around the world of concepts—understanding how concepts connect, link up, support, and rely upon one another.
- Similar to practical knowledge like riding a bike or swimming (not just factual knowledge).
- Involves knowing where to look for interesting discoveries and which places to avoid, like a fisherman knowing where to cast his line.
- Difference from other disciplines: Scientists and academics also know their way around concepts in their specific fields, but philosophers want to understand the whole.
🔍 The manifest vs. scientific image
- Manifest image: The natural world as we experience it directly.
- Scientific image: The natural world as science explains it.
- Sellars suggests philosophy's skill is most clearly demonstrated when reconciling these two pictures of the world.
- Philosophy aims to bring these images into focus together, maintaining "an eye on the whole."
🎓 Philosophy as an academic discipline
🚫 What philosophy lacks (intentionally)
- No clear boundaries: Unlike biology ("science of life") with defined subject matter, philosophy examines nature, possibility, morals, aesthetics, politics, and any other field.
- No single method: Unlike experimental sciences that broadly follow the "scientific method," philosophy lacks easy prescriptions.
- Why this is necessary: Because philosophers seek the broadest possible understanding, they cannot be confined by the assumptions or boundaries that define other disciplines.
🔄 Philosophy's relationship to other fields
- Over 2,500 years, philosophers have "turned other special subject-matters over to non-philosophers" as fields became specialized.
- Philosophy remains the discipline that examines how all these specialized fields connect and what they mean together.
- Don't confuse: Philosophy isn't just "thinking about anything"—it requires cultivating the skill of understanding conceptual connections and focusing on what reveals how things hang together.