कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Thinking About Thinking
Philosophy Now
|April/May 2021
Raymond Tallis reflexes his mind muscle.
Philosophers spend much of their time thinking. Sometimes they think about thinking itself. But thinking about thought is a strange business. It should be impossible, like trying to navigate a stream in a boat made out of water.
We most often characterize thinking as ‘inner speech’. ‘Speech’ because, as Bryan Magee says in his Confessions of a Philosopher (1997), we “cannot express in language what thought is like before it is translated into language.” And so, as we cock our inner ears, we hear a voice ‘in our head’ – the ‘head’ being a rather ill-defined location, but closer to the intracranial darkness behind our eyes than, say, our feet, or indeed, the rest of the universe. It is tempting to think that this imaginary sound is necessary for us to be able to inform ourselves as to what we are thinking. This hardly holds up: it suggests that we require our thoughts to be fully formed in order that we can tell ourselves what they are. We would end up having to have our thoughts before we know what thoughts we are having! At this point vertigo beckons.
All in all, thinking to ourselves seems an instance of something Ludwig Wittgenstein said was impossible: the right hand giving the left hand a gift. Let us temporarily retreat from philosophy to psychology.
Shrinks Think
यह कहानी Philosophy Now के April/May 2021 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Philosophy Now से और कहानियाँ
Philosophy Now
The Possibility- Bearing Animal
Raymond Tallis explores a twilight zone.
7 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
Amazing Times at the Pub Agora
John Douglas Mullen is a philosophical bar fly on the wall.
8 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)
Hilarius Bogbinder considers the all too human life of the notorious iconoclast.
11 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
Heisenberg's Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics
Kanan Purkayastha explains how Werner Heisenberg's 1925 paper turned the quantum theory of the early 1900s into the quantum mechanics of today.
10 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
Cicero & the Ideal of Virtue
Abdullah Shaikh explores Cicero's ideas about the core Roman principle of virtus.
13 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
ROPE
Les Jones has a Nietzschean take on a Hitchcock thriller.
6 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
What Have the Romans Ever Done For Us?
Salve! This issue's theme is Roman Philosophy. But as the rebels in Monty Python's Life of Brian asked, what have the Romans ever done for us? The question seems relevant here; we are philosophers, not archaeologists.
2 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
Paul Guyer
Paul Guyer is an American philosopher and a leading scholar of both Immanuel Kant and aesthetics. AmirAli Maleki interviews him about Kant's political and moral vision.
9 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
Identity in the Age of Connectivity
Sara Asran explores the dynamics of identity online.
6 mins
February/March 2026
Philosophy Now
A Very Short History of Critical Thinking
Luc de Brabandere summarises a long history through key figures of thought.
7 mins
February/March 2026
Translate
Change font size

