When philosophers try to answer a question like 'is it right to do X?', or 'do I

When philosophers try to answer a question like 'is it right to do X?', or 'do I

When philosophers try to answer a question like 'is it right to do X?', or 'do I have a soul?', they are asking the same questions which we all ask, and answer for ourselves, in everyday life. If philosophers research these questions intensively (perhaps for many years) before publishing their findings, and if even then there will be some counterarguments, how can we ever hope to find approximately true answers in our less formal, everyday musings? Thank you.

Read another response by Nicholas D. Smith
Read another response about Philosophy
Print