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Recall a basic lesson from Nietzsche, that every philosophy is basically a confession. He suggested that we don’t begin with reason. We begin with fear, pain, desire, or resentment. Then we build arguments to justify what we already want to believe. That’s one of the main insights in The... show more
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Very true. This is not necessarily a way of discrediting ideas but of providing additional context and understanding.

Perhaps one of his innovations was to point out bad emotions as motives for philosophies, but Plato used love of physical beauty as a way of trying to draw people into love of ideal forms of beauty and truth. Self-knowledge might require honestly understanding one’s motivations.

True..........life experience helps shape what we believe to a certain extent

Except Nietzsche was wrong.

Depends on the person. I am reasonable and logical. Most people do operate from a place of fear or a desire

Exactly why its so dangerous to copy someones belief system without examining whether you'd actually want to be them or not

People who study astronomy are definitely diverting their attention as far away from themselves as possible. Even the physical sciences have fear, pain, desire, and resentment. Think of competing cosmologies, but only one Nobel Prize.

@bronzeagemantis is this true?

Personal histories can play an explanatory role in the development of a belief or system of beliefs. But they can never prove or refute the truth value of a belief system. The ad hominem is a fallacy because of the fact just stated above. While you can call someone an idiot if their beliefs are false (by definition), you cannot judge someone's beliefs are false because they are an idiot, nor true because of their genius. Similarly, you can call someone a Nazi if their beliefs are a combination of nationalist, socialist, and antisemitic (by definition). But you cannot judge someone's beliefs are false because they are nationalist, socialist, and antisemitic.
