Philosophical availability involves agility of thinking, openness to new ideas even if they conflict with what is known, observation and interest in the world and alterity, and exercise of articulating conclusions. The thinker is available to the universe, and assumes the universe is available to them in return. It is an attitude of curiosity and willingness to be wrong and revise or be surprised. It requires attention and interest in learning, where ideas are hypotheses, much more easily rejected than accepted, with emphasis on the process of thinking, trying, supporting, and kritiking.
That's great, Kate. To be open to the world, to trust it, to gain knowledge as an experience of living the situation. To be right, it is enough to be self-confident, to feel right in oneself, he does not need to justify himself, because any justification is when I present myself as someone else, not as what I am. My only answer is to ask people: What do you think? Is this really the way it is? Is that so?
That's great, Kate. To be open to the world, to trust it, to gain knowledge as an experience of living the situation. To be right, it is enough to be self-confident, to feel right in oneself, he does not need to justify himself, because any justification is when I present myself as someone else, not as what I am. My only answer is to ask people: What do you think? Is this really the way it is? Is that so?