Adler's Knowledge And Opinion

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The fourth philosophical mistake that Adler discusses are known as “Knowledge and Opinion.” The mistake here puts mathematics, investigative science, and history on the side of knowledge and everything else on the side of opinion. This denies the claim that philosophy gives us truth. Many early philosophers believed philosophy was based on opinion. Adler maintains that philosophy is genuine knowledge and, like the empirical sciences, can be knowledge of reality. If philosophy were mere opinion there would be no philosophical mistakes. You know something when you believe something to be true, you have a reason to believe it is true, and it is true. A child can repeat the phrase 2+2=4 but until they understand why that is, they don’t have knowledge. …show more content…

This mistake has to do with the identification of happiness. Happiness is a word we all use to describe a pleasurable feeling, but this as Adler explains is contentment not happiness. Philosophers, like Mills and Dewey, and most people find it difficult to accept a notion of happiness. A person only has a happy life after dying well. Happiness is based on the quality of a morally good life, a whole life enriched by the cumulative possession of all the real goods that every human being needs and by the satisfaction of those individual wants that result in obtaining apparent goods that are innocuous. Contentment, he says, is that a person is satisfied at a given moment but that can change at any moment. A content person has everything they think they want or need at that given …show more content…

In this section, Adler corrects the teachings of Rousseau, Hobbes and Locke and their arguments about the state of nature. One teaching Adler disputes goes by the name of “the state of nature”. This phrase, when used by Hobbes, Locke, or Rousseau signifies a condition of human life on earth in which individuals live in isolation with complete independence. The second thing Adler disputes is that human beings were dissatisfied with living in a state of nature, that they decided to put up with it no longer and to agree upon certain rules for living together under some form of government that eliminated their isolation. Adler’s argument is that these three treat the state of nature as if it was a historical reality and not a thought experiment. He argues that society and government have grown over time because humans are naturally social

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