The idea that when an aspect isn't subjective, it must be objective, is a fallacy.
Philosophy can make a case for "
the why of existence (e.g. 'the philosophical God', Schopenhauer's Will or Robert Pirsig's Quality) and that means that philosophy can transcend objectivity without losing touch with an aspect that is fundamental to reality. That ability does not spring from existence itself, but from something that is more fundamental than existence itself, and that means that
the potential for philosophy is evidence for applicability of a good that is not subjective, and neither objective.
To give an example of philosophy's special transcendental ability:
Robert Pirsig argued that his concept Quality cannot be objectively determined by science and transcends the traditional subjective/objective dichotomy. Pirsig believed that Quality is the fundamental force in the Universe.
Gottfried Leibniz his Monadology is based on ancient Greek cosmic philosophy and does the same. Nietzsche did the same with his Will to Power of which he argued that it is a fundamental force that underlays the Universe.
Are those philosophical cases subjective or objective? One might find plausibility in their reasoning, but all one would have is their words, and the utility that one intends to derive from such philosophical reason, resides in the scope of the moral 'ought', which is relative to an undetermined, and thus in-objective, future.
Does it render philosophy fundamentally meaningless, or ...?
Philosophers themselves might not always be on the frontier of the purpose of their own work, and fall victim to self-deception. When purpose would be fulfilled beforehand intellectually, what purpose would be left? To even start philosophising about the fundamental nature of reality, one might say that one could be required to fool one's self of the need, as it were.
The wise is silent, is a common wisdom. Wittgenstein concluded ""
Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent". Heidegger called it the Nothing.
User thrasymachus provided the following beautiful insight:
I think Jean luc Marion is right regarding what is "there" that defies assimilation into the representative "totality" (Levinas borrows this from Heidegger) that holds a grip on our existence implicitly, with every spontaneous thought of engagement. Marion asks, what is there, then, that is there, that "overflows"--there is a thesis here, constructed by Sartre, see his Nausea and the Chestnut tree, that tries to illustrate this "radical contingency" of existence-- representation? Wittgenstein calls for silence. So does Heidegger. Marion writes:
... in passing from Wittgenstein to Heidegger, in speaking from the starting point of philosophy (or almost) and not from that of logic (or almost): “Someone who has experienced theology in his own roots, both the theology of the Christian faith and that of philosophy, would today rather remain silent about God [von Gott zu schweigen] when he is speaking in the realm of thinking.”
This is a major argument in this French theological turn, so called. It plays off of Husserl's epoche, which reduces the world to it pure presence(s). The "realm of thinking" does not permit this. The question is, what does this Wittgenstienian "silence" (Heidegger called it the Nothing and the anxiety of taking thought to its death, its terminal point of meaningful application) actually "say"? What is intimated at this precipice of "authenticity" in which one has ascended, in the reduction (epoche) to a great height where all that is average and familiar has fallen away?
This philosophical reasoning transcends objectivity, or in Robert Pirsig his words, transcends the subjective/objective dichotomy.
A user on this forum that might be a pseudonym of Robert Pirsig, author of the most sold philosophy book ever, said the following:
ChaoticMindSays wrote: ↑September 21st, 2010, 4:45 pmI think there are serious problems with the whole... subjective/objective idea. It does not allow for a wide enough range of possibility, it is an either or system. It shouldn't be a either or system.