Submitted by BernardJOrtcutt t3_y6c1wy in philosophy
SquadEasyDay t1_isokbny wrote
Reply to comment by Pulivers in /r/philosophy Open Discussion Thread | October 17, 2022 by BernardJOrtcutt
I'm not sure. There is just something "there" in ancient philosophy that isn't there in philosophy after Aristotle. Maybe it's the wisdom vs intelligence (or a better suited word). Maybe an over reliance on our limited senses/perceptions? Less to zero intuition?
Pulivers t1_isopr37 wrote
I quickly relise i'm not smart enough for this conversation. Do you suggest that we don't come up with anything new, but just recite and study old wisdom?
SquadEasyDay t1_isos6e8 wrote
>Do you suggest that we don't come up with anything new, but just recite and study old wisdom?
No, not necessarily, but is the "new" still philosophy? Is it just science Of philosophy? Or intelligence, but not wisdom?
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