A Journey to Philosophy
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About this ebook
The tradition of explanation, which is typical for natural sciences, focuses on the concepts of cause and effect. The tradition of understanding focuses on meanings and interpretation. Natural law theory and legal positivism are also analyzed.
The philosophies of Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Georg Henrik von Wright are discussed at many points in the book. Jürgen Habermas’s discourse theory is presented as a synthesis in social theory and philosophy of law.
Erkki Kemppainen is a philosopher. He has previously been a civil servant for a long time.
Erkki Kemppainen
Erkki Kemppainen on filosofi. Aiemmin hän on työskennellyt pitkään virkamiehenä asiantuntija- ja tutkijaroolissa. Hän on matkustanut maailmalla itsekseen ja monissa yhteistyöhankkeissa.
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A Journey to Philosophy - Erkki Kemppainen
Contents
Preface
Preface to the English edition
Philosophical Issues
Philosophy and applied sciences
Cause and explanation
Aristotle is with us
The concept of categories in Kant’s philosophy
The traditions of sciences
Logical empiricism
Causality
Knowledge and truth
Science and the growth of knowledge
Meaning and understanding
Early hermeneutics
Phenomenology and hermeneutics
Husserl’s phenomenology
Husserl’s later philosophy
Heidegger’s philosophy
French phenomenology
Hermeneutics and beyond
Causality and meaning as a unity
Human being and other people
Which concept?
Situation
Language
Some concepts in the social world
The human being in systems
Facts, norms, and values
The criteria of law
Natural law
Legal positivism
Decision making and legal reasoning
Some other developments
Habermas’s philosophical synthesis
Philosophical roots
Theory of communicative action
Social philosophy and philosophy of law
The possibility of understanding
References
Preface
I started my studies in philosophy in the autumn 1972 at the University of Turku and continued next year at the University of Helsinki. An effort to combine the accuracy of analytical philosophy and the depth of continental philosophy became my remote ideal.
Parallelly with philosophy, I started to study law in Helsinki to earn my living. A civil servant career followed, and during that time I was not active in philosophy. However, philosophy may have had an effect into my work. Philosopher Heikki Kannisto, a teacher respected by many, once said, when we by chance met at Kaisaniemi street, that when philosophy students are moving to other areas, they often keep an inclination to ask the fundamental questions of their new field.
When I retired I returned to philosophy. This philosophical pamphlet is the synthesis of my experiences and thoughts. It is not a systematical presentation of philosophy and its history, but a description of those thinkers and thoughts that I have since student years until today studied and thought about. It is my story of philosophy, a journey from one thought to another. It also became a short introduction to philosophy, especially in the 20th century. The underlying current in this work is the question about the subject, its actions and decisions, and the world where it is.
Most actively in the end of 1970s we had a philosophical discussion group consisting of Timo Kaitaro, Kalervo Koskimies, Markus Lammenranta, Antti Pietiäinen, and me. I also talked philosophically with Jukka Ihatsu and Taina Schakir. Later I have discussed a lot with professor of social work Mikko Mäntysaari, who knows a lot of philosophy.
Tuija Kotiranta, Mikko Mäntysaari, my colleagues for many years, and Kalervo Koskimies have commented on this text. In a deepest way, I thank them, my teachers in philosophy, and all others with whom I have had philosophical discussions during years.
Tampere, January 2020
Erkki Kemppainen
Preface to the English edition
This book is the English edition of my book Kertomus filosofiasta, which was published by Books on Demand, Helsinki, Finland, in 2020. The text follows the original text, but it is a largely rewritten text. At some sections I have added ideas or text, at some other places I have condensed and shortened the text. Some subchapters are quite largely rewritten. The basic course of my thinking is the same.
Markus Lammenranta and Mikko Mäntysaari have commented on the English edition. I thank them for this support.
Tampere, February 2022
Erkki Kemppainen
Philosophical Issues
I met with philosopher Tauno Nyberg in the autumn evening on the 14th of September in 1998 at his home in Helsinki. We had planned to meet for some time, and the meeting took place in time. He died in October. He lived then in Helsinki at Kasarmi Street, on the top floor in a flat with a view over roofs, for example, to Johannes Church. He had been for a long time an independent philosopher after having worked earlier at the Institute of Philosophy in the University of Helsinki.
As a philosopher he was thorough. He thought for a long time about those questions he thought. He was known as a student of G. H. von Wright and the expert of the philosophies of Immanuel Kant and Ludwig Wittgenstein.
His thinking concerning the concept of pain was original. Earlier in his presentation at the Goethe Institute in Helsinki he analyzed the pain basically as the construction of a human being. And: What a human being has constructed that the human being can deconstruct
.
We talked about life and philosophy. For me it was important that he said to me that you are a philosopher. Your comments are philosophical. You understand what I talk.
He concentrated and started to speak systematically about philosophy. At some moments it was difficult for him to sit or stand and then he spoke while lying on the floor with a pillow, all time thinking and speaking peacefully and absolutely in a concentrated way. It became a lecture of 45 minutes.
He started: After all, there are only three questions in philosophy.
First, there is a question about what there is, what is real (metaphysics, ontology). Secondly, there is a question about how we can obtain knowledge about reality (theory of knowledge). Thirdly, there is question about what is good, beautiful, or right, what is valuable (ethics, moral).
This was the main structure of the lecture. It may look simple, and maybe it wants to be that, but it can clarify many discussions and give a starting point for many analyses. I do not have notes about the full content of this discussion, but it has had an impact on me.
The development of empirical sciences in modern times has decreased the role of philosophical ontology. The experience tells what there is. But empirical reality is still linked to many philosophical questions, and more will emerge.
The knowledge is about the relationship between reality and human being. There can be many conceptions of reality. Which description is true? Knowledge can be improved. Ontology and theory of knowledge are interlinked.
The questions about good, beauty and right are a difficult, but very important for human being. What is a right decision?
These are the classical questions and areas in philosophy. It can be surprising that there would be only three basic questions. The idea of Nyberg means that rich philosophical discussion can be reduced to these questions, but it does not mean the narrowing of its themes.
Not all questions settle down easily in this division, but they do have their place. Logic and dialogue, for example, can be understood as methods in this framework. The holistic approach to philosophy of science as well as to technology includes ontology, theory of knowledge, methodology, ethics, and social philosophy (Niiniluoto, 1980; 2020).
It could also be fruitful to observe that these three questions are different questions. It could clarify many discussions.
Nyberg was also thinking more radically. He said that philosophy is not an analysis of concepts. The concepts are objective, the objects of our thinking. The concepts should in essential parts describe or correspond what they are associated. This is not possible with philosophical problems, because they have a special relationship to experience. The concepts of the horse or the table are genuine concepts, but philosophical concepts are not genuine concepts. The treatise of philosophical problems requires a new method.
He also said that greatest mistake in the philosophy of 20th century was the thinking that philosophical problems would be linguistic. That it is not so is self-evident, he almost exclaimed. We did not have time to discuss this confusing idea more. The language has been so central theme in philosophy. Maybe he thought that the linguistic clarification of things is not enough for philosophy. I wonder what