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What Is The Nature Of Philosophy?

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    To think beyond the self and to grasp meanings that seem hidden and hopefully internalize truth and live that way
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    Guest

    Guest 

    answered 6 months ago


                            
                            
                            
                              
      Philosophy
      is not a theory but a vision of life Darsana. It is not merely love
      of wisdom but signifies a real 'possession' of it. The philosophers are
      therefore not professors, academicians or doctrinaires, or even spectators, but
      true participants of life in its real meaning and relationship. To be a philosopher,
      thus, implies more substance than what is often taken to be its value in life.
      A philosopher is not concerned with human beings alone: His concern is with all
      creation, the universe in its completeness. His thought has to reflect the total
      import of existence in its togetherness.

      A
      philosopher's task calls for a great strength of will and clarity of
      understanding, side by side with an exalted moral consciousness. The usual
      prerequisites for a student of philosophy have been stated to be (1) Viveka or
      discrimination of reality as distinguished from appearance; (2) Vairagya or
      disinterest in those appearances which are divested of reality; (3) Sama or
      tranquillity of mind, (4) Dama or self-restraint, meaning control over
      the clamours of sense; (5) Uparati, or freedom from the
      distractions characteristic of selfish activity; (6) Titiksha or power
      of fortitude in the midst of the vicissitudes of life, (7) Sraddha or
      faith and conviction in the meaningfulness of the pursuit of philosophy; (8) Samadhana
      or ability to concentrate the mind on the subject of study; and (9) Mumukshutva
      or a sincere longing to attain the practical realisation of the Absolute.
      Without the equipment of these necessary qualifications, a student under the
      scheme of philosophy will be a failure and cannot get at either its method or
      its purpose. Though the discipline needed is arduous indeed and no one,
      ordinarily, can be expected to be full with it to perfection, it has to be
      accepted that it is an inviolable condition of the pursuit of philosophy, at
      least in an appreciable measure. Else, philosophy would only shed as much light
      to the student as the sun to the blind.

      Philosophy
      has often been identified with a life of contemplation, without action. That
      this is a misrepresentation based on ignorance would become obvious from the
      nature of philosophic wisdom, as has been stated above. Though wisdom is a
      state of consciousness and implies concentration and meditation, it does so not
      in any exclusive sense, for philosophic wisdom is all-inclusive. It synthesises
      the different sides of the psychological nature, e.g., the knowing, willing,
      feeling and active. Any lopsided emphasis is contrary to the requirements of a
      wisdom of life. The teaching of the Bhagavadgita, a monumental embodiment of
      the gospel of the philosophic life, is a standing refutation of the notion that
      philosophical knowledge is tantamount to actionlessness. A philosopher, in his
      heightened understanding, has also the power of sublime feeling and action for
      a universal cause.

      Philosophy
      is not also opposed to religion; on the other hand it is the lamp which
      illumines the corners of religion both within and without. Philosophy supplies
      the raison d'ĂȘtre of religious practices, even of ritual, image and
      symbol. If religion is the body, philosophy is the life in it. Philosophy
      ennobles religion, sublimates art and stabilises the sciences, such as
      sociology, ethics and politics. It was the hope of Plato that the philosopher
      and the ruler be found in the same person, if the world is to have peace.
      Philosophy is also the remedy for the illnesses which psychoanalysis has been
      immaturely attempting to trace back to a supposed irrationality of behaviour.
      Philosophy discovers the rationality behind the so-called irrational urges.

      In
      India, philosophy as Darsana has always been associated with practice or
      Sadhana. What goes by the name of Yoga is the implementation of
      philosophy in practical life, with reference to the psychological functions
      predominating in an individual. Philosophy has therefore relation to one's being
      more than to one's intellectual grasping of outer situations. The
      philosophic truth is neither the inner nor the outer merely, for it is the whole.
      The cosmic gets mirrored in the consciousness of the philosopher who lives
      it more than anything else.

      Philosophy
      is different from any kind of extreme, whether in thinking or living. The golden
      mean is its rule, which excludes nothing, but includes everything by
      way of transformation to suit the constitution of the whole which is its aim.
      To arrive at this finale of knowledge, it considers the cases of perception,
      inference and intuition; observation, implication and the testimony of
      experience. It neither denies nor affirms peremptorily. Philosophy is, thus,
      necessary for every stage and kind of life to make it a joy. There is no
      satisfaction where there is no meaning. Philosophy is the discovery of the
      meaning behind life.

      Philosophy
      is impartial judgment without prejudice, underestimation or overestimation. It
      recognises the values accepted in the different fields of knowledge and
      iterated in the various viewpoints of observation and logic in order to
      construct an edifice of integral envisagement. From this it follows that philosophy
      does not take sides, has a place for every standpoint of thinking in its proper
      perspective, and its function is to so fit everything into its broad scheme
      that nothing is either ignored or made to strike a dissonant note in the
      harmony of its development. Its position is that of the chief judge in the
      government of the universe. It listens, understands, sifts, weighs and
      considers the status of any given circumstance not from the standpoint of the
      circumstance in its isolatedness but in its relation to the whole of existence.
      No one can, therefore, afford to turn away from the divine gift called
      'philosophy'.
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      Jmaks 

      answered 5 months ago

      A philosophy is a way of living, and unlike religions which denote a belief in god(s), a philosophy dictates how to live life with out a god. Also a philosophy is a way to study and better understand the world around you, though without going into religious topics (usually). For example Confucianism is a philosophy it teaches people about literature and life but without going into religious topics.
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      Jmaks

      Jmaks

      commented 5 months ago

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