Philosophy is dominated too much by the conjunction 'therefore' – as if truth is merely deducing conclusions from premises. Philosophy, I think, should be more concerned with the phrase 'and yet.'
- We never encounter the world itself, only representations, models or simulations of the world; and yet we navigate the world expertly, reliably, reproducably – at once all at sea and yet sure footed.
- Science is produced out of local, particular networks; and yet these knowledges are consistently applicable to previously unencountered phenomena – at once particular and yet 'universal'.
- Every existing thing is unique, evolving, divergent, following a singular and individual trajectory; and yet there are structural homologies that occur between things of little common ancestry, highly similar patterns found in highly different beings – at once sui generis and yet uncannily similar.
Most contemporary philosophers myopically militate for either one clause or the other in a fist-pumping, ball-swinging dialectical ballet born from lusting after victorious arguments. They always make the same mistake: beginning from an observed fact and deducing a truth from it by a series of 'therefores'.
- 'We only encounter representations of reality not reality itself; therefore, all representation is self-referential and relates only to itself.'
- 'Our techno-scientific apparatuses work; therefore, our knowledge is true since it would be a miracle if our machines worked otherwise.'
Et cetera.
These arguments – and many others – can be made with startlingly complex and rigourous reasoning. And yet (!) they miss the point: the role of philosophy should be to investigate the paradox, the way in which both sides are both right and wrong – the 'and yet' of the situation.