What Philosophy Is
Chapter 1: What Philosophy I s
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Philosophy is all of rational inquiry except for science, and its value lies not in providing certain answers but in liberating us from narrow conventional thinking by revealing how difficult big questions are to settle.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What philosophy is: rational inquiry into questions that science does not address, such as the limits of knowledge, the nature of reality, and how we ought to live.
- Three major branches: metaphysics (nature of reality), epistemology (nature of knowledge), and ethics (how we ought to act and live).
- Common confusion: thinking science covers all rational inquiry—but whether science can answer every question is itself a philosophical, not scientific, question.
- Philosophy's reputation vs. reality: philosophy is notorious for not settling questions definitively, yet it makes real progress by ruling out bad answers and revealing new possibilities.
- Why philosophy matters: it loosens the grip of uncritically held beliefs, opens the mind to new possibilities, and combats prejudice by showing how hard big questions really are.
🔍 What philosophy is and why it's not just science
🔍 The definition of philosophy
Philosophy is all of rational inquiry except for science.
- This definition distinguishes philosophy from science while recognizing both as forms of rational inquiry.
- The key question: What branch of science addresses whether science covers all of rational inquiry?
- If this question feels puzzling, it's because you already recognize that the limits of science are not themselves a scientific issue—they are philosophical.
- Example: An organization debates whether scientific methods alone can answer all important questions; this debate itself is philosophical, not scientific.
🧩 The three major branches of philosophy
Philosophy covers diverse issues, but most fall into (or across) three major branches:
| Branch | Focus | Example questions |
|---|---|---|
| Metaphysics | Nature of reality | What is a thing? Does the past exist? Are there entities beyond physical objects? |
| Epistemology | Nature of knowledge and justified belief | What is knowledge? Can we have any knowledge at all? Can we know about other minds? |
| Ethics | What we ought to do and how we ought to live | How should we treat each other? How should we organize communities? |
- Metaphysics = "What is it?" questions
- Epistemology = "How do we know?" questions
- Ethics = "What should we do?" questions
- Don't confuse these as entirely separate: many inquiries cut across branches (e.g., philosophy of science involves both metaphysics and epistemology).
🧠 Metaphysics: exploring reality and possibility
🧠 What metaphysics investigates
Metaphysics is concerned with the nature of reality.
- Traditional issues: existence of God, nature of human free will.
- Contemporary issues: What is a thing? How are space and time related? How many dimensions does the world have?
- Historically, philosophers proposed comprehensive metaphysical world views, but these attempts have been "notoriously inconclusive."
🔄 The return of metaphysics
- Since the 19th century, many dismissed metaphysics as meaningless or a waste of time.
- In recent decades, metaphysics has returned to vitality with more modest aims.
- Current goal: not to settle the final truth about reality, but to understand how various claims about reality logically hang together or conflict.
- Metaphysicians explore the realm of possibility and necessity—they are "explorers of logical space."
📚 Epistemology: knowledge and justified belief
📚 What epistemology investigates
Epistemology is concerned with the nature of knowledge and justified belief.
- Core questions: What is knowledge? Can we have any knowledge at all? Can we have knowledge about specific matters (laws of nature, moral principles, other minds)?
🤔 Skepticism and its varieties
Skepticism: the view that we can't have knowledge.
- Extreme skepticism: denies we can have any knowledge whatsoever.
- Selective skepticism: grants knowledge about some things but remains skeptical about others.
- Example: Many people accept scientific knowledge but are skeptics about moral knowledge.
- Common confusion: assuming morality is more precarious than science—but both face many of the same skeptical challenges and share similar resources for addressing them.
⚖️ Justified belief vs. certain knowledge
- Even if we lack absolute certainty, our beliefs can still be more or less reasonable or likely to be true given limited evidence.
- Epistemology is concerned with what makes a belief reasonable or rationally justified.
- Questions about what we ought to believe remain relevant even if we can't have certain knowledge.
🧭 Ethics: reasoning about how to live
🧭 What ethics investigates
Ethics is concerned with what we ought to do, how we ought to live, and how we ought to organize our communities.
- Many new philosophy students are surprised that you can reason about such things.
- Common confusion: thinking morality is just commands (from God or society) that must be obeyed, not inquired into or tested.
🚫 Why commands-based views leave no room for inquiry
Two popular views treat morality as mere commands:
| View | Source of commands | Problem |
|---|---|---|
| Religiously inspired views | Divine being | Commands are to be obeyed, not assessed for reasonableness |
| Moral Relativism | Society | Substitutes society's commands for God's commands; still no room for rational inquiry |
- Philosophy takes seriously the possibility of rational inquiry into how we ought to live and treat each other.
- If philosophy hasn't produced absolutely certain answers in ethics, it's because philosophers treat moral questions as things we need to discover, not simply matters of "somebody's say-so."
🔬 Why ethics is hard (and that's okay)
- The long, unfinished history of science should give us humility about how difficult careful inquiry can be.
- We don't know for certain what the laws of morality are—but we also don't have a unified field theory in physics.
- We are far more complicated than atoms, so why expect morality to be easier than physics?
💎 The value of philosophy: liberation through uncertainty
💎 Russell's core argument
The excerpt discusses Bertrand Russell's essay "The Value of Philosophy" (Chapter 15 of Problems of Philosophy).
Russell's thesis: The primary value of philosophy is found in its uncertainty, not its results.
"The value of philosophy is, in fact, to be sought largely in its very uncertainty."
- Philosophy loosens the grip of uncritically held opinion and opens the mind to a liberating range of new possibilities.
- It "greatly increases our knowledge as to what [things] may be" even while "diminishing our feeling of certainty as to what things are."
🔒 The "security blanket paradox"
The excerpt introduces a psychological predicament:
- Humans cling to possessions, people, or beliefs for a sense of safety (like passengers after a shipwreck).
- The paradox: having a security blanket gives us one more thing to worry about—the asset becomes a liability.
- Clinging to comforting beliefs becomes counterproductive.
Russell's description of the consequences:
"The man who has no tincture of philosophy goes through life imprisoned in the prejudices derived from common sense, from the habitual beliefs of his age or his nation... In such a life there is something feverish and confined."
- The philosophic life, by contrast, is "calm and free."
- Philosophy removes "the somewhat arrogant dogmatism of those who have never traveled into the region of liberating doubt."
🆚 The stark choice
We face a choice between:
- Clinging: the feeling of safety from holding onto familiar opinions.
- Liberation: loosening our grip to explore new ideas.
The paradox of the security blanket makes clear which choice is rational: choose the liberty of free and open inquiry.
🌱 Can philosophy make progress?
Common worry: Must we remain forever uncertain about philosophical matters?
The excerpt offers several responses:
- Some questions may be unanswerable (at least by us), but not every philosophical issue is like this.
- Philosophy has birthed sciences: many philosophical questions became scientific ones once methods were developed.
- Russell wrote 100 years ago: problems that looked unsolvable then often look solvable now (just as DNA structure was once considered unknowable).
- Progress without certainty: we can often rule out many potential answers even when we can't narrow things down to a single correct answer.
Don't confuse: "We can't know the answer" vs. "There is no right answer."
- Example: We can't know whether there is intelligent life on other planets, but there obviously is or isn't—the question has a right answer; we just haven't figured it out.
- Similarly, we may never establish whether humans have free will, but there must be some fact of the matter.
- It would be intellectually arrogant to think a question has no right answer just because we aren't able to figure out what that answer is.
🌐 Philosophy and science are interconnected
🌐 Branches of inquiry intermingle
- "Assorted tangled vines of inquiry branch off from the three major trunks of philosophy, intermingle between them, and ultimately with scientific issues as well."
- The notion that some branches of inquiry can proceed entirely independent of others "ultimately becomes difficult to sustain."
- The scientist who neglects philosophy runs the same risk of ignorance as the philosopher who neglects science.
🔗 Cross-cutting inquiries
Examples of how philosophical branches overlap:
| Field | Metaphysical aspect | Epistemological aspect | Ethical aspect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philosophy of science | What is science? | How can we know scientific truths? | — |
| Philosophy of love | What is love? | — | What is the value of love? |