My experience with philosophy is rather
limited. I haven’t taken any courses in it at university nor at high school. So
this assignment was something new for me. Usually at KTH we learn to solve
problems by finding the correct answer or solution. What we learn about for
example maths and physics require us to accept a scientific stance on what’s
true and what’s not. Thing that have been “proven” by science is regarded as
facts which we seldom dispute.
In Russell’s text he challenges accepted
theories and that we can’t be sure what’s real. I think this text brought some
insight on how we usually take all knowledge as facts and never questions it.
It was also interesting to read about how our view on different objects is only
a view of our own perception and will differ some person to person. Knowing
about this is a good quality to have as a researcher or scientist. I guess we
can widen our own mind if we think like this and not only get in line and
conform to what some textbook or professor tells us to be true.
The text felt a bit repetitive at times
but interesting. That’s usually a great way to learn, but some parts became
confusing to me so I had to reread a lot of paragraphs. I’m comfortable reading
in English but I’m not very experienced in reading this kind of texts so that
might have added to me getting confused. However, after reading the blogs this
week and the comments I got, some of the things that weren’t clear to me became
clearer. I also got the feeling that I wasn’t the only one who thought the text
was a bit confusing sometimes.
It was unfortunate the seminar was
cancelled because it might have enlightened me further on Russell’s views.
I absolutely agree that the typ of philosophical questioning we have been asked to examine in Russell's text is not one we have often encountered in our studies at KTH but non the less important to have done exactly for the reason you mention. For us, as engineers, to be able to truly advance our collective understanding of the world and society it is crucial to be aware of our own flaws as human beings and interpreters of our surrounding (or as Russell puts it the sense-data).
SvaraRadera