Joe Wordsworth
Logician
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2004
- Posts
- 4,085
Originally posted by poohlive
Hey now! You can say what you want about Mutt's other choices, but I don't think anyone would disagree that Shakespeare was one of the world's formost minds, with philosophical insights in all of his work. He wrote hard termed opinions about fate, love, god, time, and even old age. And unlike other philosophers, he gave it to his audience in easy to understand plays that showed them much more than any philosophical term paper ever could.
Shakespeare may have been a brilliant man, he may have just been a creative man. I won't deny he was a talented playwright, but I don't have any great respect for him as a philosopher--and for good reason.
Experential confirmation, I can surely extend that; but conceptual clarity? Rational cohesion? He was an entertainer, and while it may be comfortable to credit to the people that entertain us with wisdom or knowledge or truth...
...that's a bit too much like crediting Britney Spears as a philosopher, because she's an entertainment and a creativity. That wouldn't be to say that Spears is on par with Shakespeare, just that they are the same category--should we credit one, we must credit the other. Was Shakespeare chock full of great philosophy--well, not really, no. It was full of emotives and notions, but none were explanative treatises.
A sense of "I walked away with a better sense of the world" or "I learned about people" or "Reading Shakespeare's descriptions of X" is categorically no different than saying that "Lucky", "Hit Me Baby One More Time", or some other song held the same emotive, entertaining, or circumstantially meaningful weight.
I mean, damn, I don't agree with Nietzsche nor Kierkegaard (the anti-religious poster-boy nor the "leap of faith" term-coiner), but they are philosophers. Putting Garth Ennis (whose work in comic books I really like) up there is to do both the philosophers and entertainers a disservice.
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