Monday, May 4, 2009

Occam

My gripe with "existentialists" is that they assume everyone else in the world feels exactly the way they do, or that existentialism is an incurable advancement, so to speak.

I just think people misunderstand Occam's Razor, that's all.

2 comments:

John said...

It's nice to have someone reference Occam. In my first encounters with Heidegger I was referred to Occam by my Latin teacher to read parts of Occam in Latin.

Of course, I had to read in English to really get it since I'm not as fluent as I'd like in latina.

You are right that it's misunderstood.

I think if one looks at existentialism as a state of being/thinking/experiencing, then it becomes more clear the way some 'existentialists' are...that this incurable advancement as you put it, is seen as a here-and-now phenomenon, which tends to go along with existentialism anyway.

Regardless, to me existentialism seems more thematic, and that it is not even possible to wear it is a helmet. On the other hand, in that it is a rejection of the abstract in favor of a more objective reading of experiences, its interpretations and power as a philosophy can change dramatically from person to person. The bonehead college student and Nietzsche are two radically different sources from which to derive a reading of existentialism in any serious light.

BuffyNiggz said...

I'm glad you're starting to regularly update this now.