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Single Idea 3798

[filed under theme 1. Philosophy / D. Nature of Philosophy / 5. Aims of Philosophy / a. Philosophy as worldly ]

Full Idea

The unexamined life may not be worth living, but the overexamined life is nothing to write home about either.

Clarification

A reaction to Socrates' famous remark

Gist of Idea

An overexamined life is as bad as an unexamined one

Source

Daniel C. Dennett (Elbow Room: varieties of free will [1984], §4.2)

Book Ref

Dennett,Daniel C.: 'Elbow Room - Free will worth wanting' [MIT 1999], p.87


A Reaction

Presumably he means a life which is all theory and no practice. Compare Idea 343.

Related Idea

Idea 343 The unexamined life is not worth living for men [Socrates]


The 10 ideas from 'Elbow Room: varieties of free will'

Awareness of thought is a step beyond awareness of the world [Dennett]
Foreknowledge permits control [Dennett]
Causal theories require the "right" sort of link (usually unspecified) [Dennett]
The active self is a fiction created because we are ignorant of our motivations [Dennett]
An overexamined life is as bad as an unexamined one [Dennett]
I am the sum total of what I directly control [Dennett]
You can be free even though force would have prevented you doing otherwise [Dennett, by PG]
Rationality requires the assumption that things are either for better or worse [Dennett]
Why pronounce impossible what you cannot imagine? [Dennett]
Can we conceive of a being with a will freer than our own? [Dennett]