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  • gvngndz [none/use name,comrade/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    I meant that you are a westerner, and you approaching eastern philosophy like a westerner because you are not aware of how the western approach has developed over time, making you think it's the universal way of thinking. By not learning about western philosophy, you are actually making yourself more susceptible to it. To me the way you complained budhism not really qualifying as scientific philosophy show to me that you subscribe to some enlightenment era western notions of science, and there isn't anything wrong with that, but you are biased without even being aware of the fact that you're biased. This is kinda what Zizek is rambling about when talks about ideology .

      • gvngndz [none/use name,comrade/them]
        ·
        3 years ago

        Being aware that you're biased and being aware of what your biases are not the same thing.

        Nietzsche is a very good philosopher, but he is very individualistic which is probably why you have the idea that all western philosophy is very individualistic. But there are many philosopher from the west who aren't. So, if you are interested in philiosophy, please, start over at "The Republic" and then make your way up from there (you can skip most western philosophy after Plato and before Descartes).

          • gvngndz [none/use name,comrade/them]
            ·
            3 years ago

            Yeah sure I can agree with that, it's a good idea to read both and it's true that there are many points of similarities between the two , it's just that I tend to recommend people to read the philosophy that their society holds to be true first, for all the reasons I've stated above.