Hi, everyone.
I just started reading Total Freedom by Chris Sciabarra (warning: politics book), and a good half of it seems to be about 'dialectics' as a thinking tool, but it's been total rubbish in trying to explain it. From poking around on the internet, it seems to have been a proto-systems theory that became a Marxist shibboleth.
Am I understanding that correctly? The LW survey says about 1 in 4 of us is a communist, so I'm hoping someone can point to me resources or something. Also, I've read through most of the sequences, and it didn't use the word dialectics in there at all, which seems strange if it's such a useful thinking tool. Is there something wrong with it as an epistemological practice? Is the word just outdated?
Sorry about the (tangentially) political post, I'm just kind of confused. Help?
Like many systematizers, he made up a boatload of his own terms by choice. In his case, there were ideological reasons to do so, as from his perspective, the general level of semantic hygiene was so low that you'd be better off starting from scratch.
There are all sorts of claims made by people who use the word. Much of it seems like crap to me.
But I think what I described is the basic Hegelian insight, which is both useful and in line with insights from Korzybski. The concept that seeming contradictions from competing conceptual systems can be resolved by a more comprehensive conceptual system which preserves the truth of both is useful, IMO.
For a change, today I'm focusing on the wheat instead of the chaff.
As far as terms with bad semantic hygiene "dialectics" seems to be a prime example and that might motivate us also to avoid using it.
I think the core idea is quite obvious if one has a good grasp on what a conceptual system happens to be.
The more complicated questio... (read more)