The Art of Controversy: Schopenhauer
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About this ebook
This work is indispensable for anyone looking to engage effectively in debates. While identifying errors in others' arguments is valuable, recognizing flaws in our own discourse is crucial for continuous intellectual growth. "The Art of Controversy" serves as a guide to "intellectual fencing," emphasizing that rhetorical skill and strategic thinking are as important as the underlying truth in any debate.
Arthur Schopenhauer
Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) entwickelte eine Philosophie, die zeitgenössische Annahmen der Erkenntnistheorie, Metaphysik, Ästhetik und Ethik richtungsweisend und vorgreifend mit empiristischen, hermeneutischen und phänomenologischen Elementen verbindet. Sein Denken wirkt weit über die Philosophie hinaus in Literatur, Musik und Bildender Kunst.
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The Art of Controversy - Arthur Schopenhauer
Arthur Schopenhauer
THE ART OF CONTROVERSY
First Edition
img1.jpgContents
INTRODUCTION
THE ART OF CONTROVERSY
PRELIMINARY: LOGIC AND DIALECTIC
THE BASIS OF ALL DIALECTIC
STRATAGEMS
ON THE COMPARATIVE PLACE OF INTEREST AND BEAUTY IN WORKS OF ART
PSYCHOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS
ON THE WISDOM OF LIFE: APHORISMS
GENIUS AND VIRTUE
INTRODUCTION
img2.jpgArthur Schopenhauer
1788-1860
Arthur Schopenhauer was a 19th-century German philosopher. He is best known for his work The World as Will and Representation
(1818), in which he characterizes the phenomenal world as the product of a blind, insatiable, and malevolent metaphysical will. He wrote other renowned works such as The Pains of the World
and Aphorisms on the Wisdom of Life,
among others.
Building on Immanuel Kant's transcendental idealism, Schopenhauer developed an atheistic and ethical metaphysical system that has been described as an exemplary manifestation of philosophical pessimism.
Early Years
Arthur Schopenhauer, the son of Heinrich Floris Schopenhauer, a wealthy merchant, and Johanna Henriette, was born in Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland) in February 1788. The country's partition in 1793 led the family to move to Hamburg (Germany). Heinrich decided to begin his son's education and sent him to France, where he was well received by the Gregoire family.
He learned the language of that country in a few months and began to demonstrate his aptitude for study. In 1799, he was sent to the prestigious Runge Institute, intended for future merchants, where he remained for four years. After young Schopenhauer insisted on attending gymnasium to pursue university studies, Heinrich Schopenhauer proposed a choice: take a long trip with the family, with the promise of taking up the profession of merchant afterward or stay and follow his academic ambition.
After his father's death in April 1805, his mother decided to move to the city of Weimar with his younger sister, Luise Adelaide, where she established contact with several German intellectuals, including the great poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Arthur Schopenhauer, on the other hand, kept the promise made to his father for another two years until his mother, in response to one of his letters, encouraged him to seek happiness and advised him to make a decision about his future.
The young Schopenhauer traveled the world and learned languages. These experiences, however, only sharpened his philosophical curiosity.
Education
He then decided to resume his studies, learning Spanish and Italian during the same period, and later enrolled at the University of Göttingen in 1809. Initially, he chose the course of Medicine but soon switched to Philosophy. His records indicate that he studied many subjects with varied topics, such as psychology, poetry, zoology, and history.
He was introduced to the thoughts of Plato and Immanuel Kant, in addition to reading many classics.
Eager to study with Johann Gottlieb Fichte, he continued his education at the University of Berlin. It was in 1813 that he obtained his doctorate and moved to Dresden the following year, where he began writing his great work The World as Will and Representation
(1818), which was re-edited twice (1844 and 1859). The work did not receive a good reception, and many criticisms were made of his proposals. Part of the first edition was even used as wrapping paper, and the second edition also did not find many readers.
He attempted an academic career in 1820 at the University of Berlin, but despite being admitted, his attempt to compete with Georg Wilhelm Hegel caused him to give it up, as he could not attract enough students to his course. In the following years, he offered translations but achieved nothing significant.
With the cholera epidemic of 1831, an event that fatally affected Georg Wilhelm Hegel, Schopenhauer left the capital, Berlin, and settled in Frankfurt. From 1836 onwards, he dedicated himself to reading and writing regularly, determined to gain popularity. There was a brief success in 1839 when he was awarded by the Norwegian Academy of Sciences for a dissertation.
The long-awaited recognition, however, only came with the publication of Parerga and Paralipomena
(1851). This collection of short reflections on various topics was intended for the general public, and the philosopher wanted it published before his death. With the low sales of his earlier major work, few were willing to publish the book.
In correspondence with Julius Frauenstädt, he presented the problem and lamented it, comparing himself to a dancer who was receiving offers to publish her memoirs and gaining prominence in the newspapers. It was this admirer’s intervention that solved the problem and forwarded the book for publication.
He began to be visited by many admirers, intellectuals, and artists, and his books and thoughts gained prominence in magazines around the world. A course was opened in Leipzig to study his philosophy, and his bust was modeled by the artist Elisabet Ney.
In 1860, he began to experience tachycardia and breathing problems. On September 21, he was found in his apartment already deceased. With his mother and sister already deceased, he had left in his will funds destined for the Prussian soldiers who fought in 1848-1849.
Schopenhauer's Philosophy
Arthur Schopenhauer's philosophy is influenced by Immanuel Kant, but without an imposing reason. He believed that what we know of the world is presented to us by the senses and is organized subjectively. Reason only forms abstract ideas from empirical data. It is intelligence, present in all living beings, that identifies an external cause for these impressions, but which is inaccessible to us.
Thus, we only have representations of the world. This would make the world an impenetrable fortress that prevents us from knowing it as it really is. Arthur Schopenhauer then proposes that we do not deny an immediate path opened through our voluntary acts. Through our bodies, we are simultaneously an object represented and a will that becomes objective in actions.
In human beings, there are no reactions of cause and effect as in nature; the will manifests itself directly and is known. What happens with my body can be attributed to other human beings, to all animals, and to nature in a certain sense. The will manifests itself specifically in humans, but every phenomenon would be the expression of a will. The word will,
therefore, does not refer to a conscious act and diverges from our common use; it indicates instead a power or drive of beings towards life, a will to live (Wille zum Leben in German).
It can be seen that Arthur Schopenhauer does not subscribe to the prevailing philosophical conception of his time, namely the Enlightenment, in his assertion that this power cannot be understood rationally. It is a constant and purposeless drive, not granting the intimate reality of things a sense to be understood. This pessimistic metaphysical observation will have implications for this philosopher’s moral conception.
His moral reflections are based on a critique of Immanuel Kant's ethical perspective. According to this critique, instead of assuming an a priori principle, we should undertake an empirical investigation and try to find actions with unquestionable moral value. Actions are manifestations of invariant internal dispositions, and interest is the basic explanation of any of our actions, which would explain selfish motivations. In any case, we find actions that are not based on interest, identified with compassion. Moral actions, therefore, are always related to the other.
These actions, however, are not expressions of a willing but of the denial of the will. It is the moment when the illusion of phenomena is understood, and the other is recognized as a fellow being. This process is identified by the philosopher himself as mysterious, in view of the selfishness observed in human actions, and its explanation represents a limit that human knowledge does not reach.
Main Works of Schopenhauer
The philosopher begins his great work, The World as Will and Representation,
with a statement he adopts as true: the world is my representation.
Although this truth holds for any being, only the human being can become conscious of it. Arthur Schopenhauer advised in the preface to the first edition of his great work that the book should be read twice. The first reading should be done patiently, and the second, already with the negative experience of acceptance, would indicate that the work is delivered to humanity, not to his contemporaries. The central thought was not altered, with the new editions consisting only of textual corrections and additions to the four books that composed the initial edition. Although the reading requires prior knowledge of Immanuel Kant's epistemological theory, as indicated by the author himself, the language is accessible, and the text contains many analogies and examples.
The various texts of Parerga and Paralipomena
(1851) have been published in Brazil in books organized thematically, such as Aphorisms on the Wisdom of Life
(2002), The Art of Writing
(2005), On Ethics
(2012), and others. Some of his lectures have also been published, such as Metaphysics of the Beautiful
(2003), in which he presents in a more didactic manner a study on the essence of beauty.
About the Work The Art of Controversy
The Art of Controversy,
a notable work by Arthur Schopenhauer, explores the strategies and tactics employed in debates and discussions. Written around 1830-31, during Schopenhauer's final period in Berlin, this treatise, also known as "The