-lol...seriously...you don't know how google search works? the first in random...here you are.Don't make me work for your education..its your responsibility mate.Descriptive Science" is meaningless as well. Do you mean descriptive RESEARCH? — Xtrix
You haven't posted a single link or passage about Hoyningen's critique on Kuhn or others....You haven't once posted links or passages about Kuhn or any of the other authors Joshs cited. — Xtrix
So you don't know what normative means, either. Great...
Normative refers to norms or ethics. That has nothing to do with anything I've said, or anything to do with Kuhn. What I'm talking about is ontology. Look it up. — Xtrix
-You are confusing commercial applications with the knowledge that enables technical applications......Yes, certainly what's impressive about science is its "success." That's definitely not a value judgment, I suppose. Having an iPhone must be an "Objective good." lol — Xtrix
-Sorry mate but you are unable to point to a critique by those fellows that will be left standing after I have some time with it.Imagine being so full of yourself that you can't even admit that you don't have the slightest clue what these authors' theses were. — Xtrix
- you do your best mate.!Factually AND "fractally"! Damn...guess we all can't pretend to be geniuses. — Xtrix
oh this is your goal.......ok, that explains your outdated beliefs.You're right to bow out of this conversation with your tail between your legs. — Xtrix
I am sure that I have posted you links ...don't you read my comments or are you preoccupied preparing your apologetic?What works of theirs are you referring? Care to cite some passages? Because you've definitely read them, of course. — Xtrix
-because..they are not strictly human"conditions". Knowledge, wisdom and reason are mental abilities shared by other animals...in a lesser degree of course. Animals do gain knowledge from previous experiences and through basic reasoning they can take wise decisions thus inform their actions accordingly!Why would anyone study other animals when investigating strictly human conditions? Who gives a shit that dolphins appear to surf, when such appearance is a mere anthropomorphism anyway? Crows use tools? Big deal. No crow ever got himself to the moon. — Mww
-This is the demarcation point about knowledge, wisdom and reason? Of course you are kidding right?Big deal. No crow ever got himself to the moon. — Mww
-Unfortunately for you, your ideas on "real" can not be objectively demonstrated to be true.are you aware of a Non real world where we can not exercise them???? — Nickolasgaspar
Yep. So are you. And not so much can not, but simply don’t. But we probably have differing ideas regarding what it means to be real. — Mww
- You literary described the philosophical process and how it includes knowledge ...i quote:C’mon, man. If I literally described the process, how could it have been so difficult for me? But I didn’t describe anything; I just asked a question, which wasn’t answered. — Mww
-fractally wrong statement. Concepts are all based on what we know mixed with some magic, this is why we have anthropomorphic gods, Nature as a thinking agent...souls that resemble our conscious abilities etc etc.All that aside, a concept only arises in relation to what we don’t know, as a representation of it. — Mww
irrelevant statements. I am pointing out that concepts are nothing more than a phenomenon plus a magical claim for its ontology. Phlogiston, miasma,orgone energy , gods are some of the examples.You are confounding the inception of a particular from a general. — Mww
- I have answered your false assumption.It is equivalent to saying the conception of a thing arising because we know it isn’t that, and it isn’t that, and it isn’t that, ad infinitum, which is absurd — Mww
-Its a survival advantage to be able to communicate concepts. i.e."its dangerous outside". the concept of dangerous communicates essential information. Those who were able to communicate and comprehend and reproduce concepts improve the chances of survival of their population.You laugh, but also think we have an ability that reproduces concepts.
Why in the world would we need to reproduce a concept? — Mww
Where did the original go? — Mww
And the production IS the validity, otherwise there is no logical relation upon which a judgement could ensue. And don’t mistake validity for truth, for only experience can prove a conception valid. It’s how we know we got something wrong if experience shows a conception invalid. You know....like....lightning doesn’t really come from angry gods even though it was a perfectly valid conception that it did. — Mww
A central metaphysical idea, intuition, sufficient to explain why no one has to reproduce concepts.
We could do this all day, but I got post-winter lawn duty. Not high on my list of pleasures, but duty nonetheless. — Mww
-Actually we don't have to assume it . We just acknowledge that we can not demonstrate any connection between god and existence so we reject the claim(god is found not guilty of existing until the evidence meet the criteria to overturn the judgment!).So, we assume no connection between God and existence (H0) and then try to disprove that assumption i.e. prove that there's a connection between God and existence. — Agent Smith
It means that those who make the claim must demonstrate the connection between an entity and a state of existence. They should be able to point to characteristic properties that are displayed by entities that exist.What does "connection between existence and God" mean? — Agent Smith
It seems like you're saying it isn't the claim "God exists". If so, the Null Hypothesis method is pointless, oui?
Since the Null Hypothesis seems to be about correlations, it's mostly got to do with causal hypotheses and isn't suitable for proving/disproving existence. Existence, causation, two different things! — Agent Smith
-Obviously you aren't. You are not even making a philosophical case since you are arguing for the supernatural!!!I'll just point-out that I'm not making a scientific case. Besides, Atheism is a belief in Absentia. — Gnomon
The problem is that philosophy on supernatural principles is not real philosophy. there is no wisdom to gain from unfalsifiable conclusions that do not advance our understanding of the world.BTW, my position is not anti-science, but pro-philosophy. — Gnomon
-I don't know what you mean. Not being a theist doesn't guarantee rational thinking. There are atheists who are spiritualist, or supernaturalists and accept all kind of weird and unfounded claims.I'm also not a Theist, so the typical anti-theism arguments miss their imaginary target. — Gnomon
-I get what you are saying....but there is objectively bad and good art. No...to be more precise, there is art on the canvas, or an audio track, on marble, on a piece of paper etc...and art that one claims he has on his head and haven't find the time to express it on a medium.IMHO, Philosophy is more of an art than a science. — Gnomon
-Nobody did that. The demanded standards are based on Logic. Objectivity and Sufficiency is what your evidence need to have.So demanding reductive scientific evidence for a holistic concept is like, requiring Picasso to justify his odd imagery with empirical facts. — Gnomon
-because chronicling isn't philosophy of science. It doesn't address the reasons or the methods that allow science to be so successful in our epistemic inquiries.Why don’t we conduct a course on philosophy of science right now? First lesson; a survey of the history of philosophy of science — Joshs
The nature of science? when did I do that? Pls tell me what I said that points to the nature of science!You have represented a certain philosophical position on the nature of science, but let me ask you this. — Joshs
-Yes I find this question fair....and most of their critique outdated based mostly on Normative guidelines. In my opinion in order to understand why science is successful, our input must be Descriptive. This is why focusing in the history of science and the Normative objections fail to realize and describe the reasons why science works far better compared to any other empirical methodology.How would
you characterize the philosophical approaches to science offered by philosophers such as Thomas Kuhn, Paul Feyerabend and Joseph Rouse? This is a legitimate question if you are going to represent yourself as someone who has a thoroughgoing knowledge of science studies in philosophy. — Joshs
As I already noted no decent survey course on the history of this topic would leave out these authors but again their normative convictions are not helpful in understanding what is science, how it works and why it is so successful.. No decent survey course on this topic would leave out the authors I mentioned above. — Joshs
-I am aware of this outdated Normative approach and the distortion of concepts like Objectivism.Also , the position Xtrix has been putting forth in this thread is generally consistent with their perspectives on science. — Joshs
-He is reproducing outdated and failed critiques. What would you say to someone who would argue in favor of the heliocentric model....just because it was part of the scientific curriculum...once upon a time?So maybe instead of accusing Xtrix of being unfamiliar with the philosophy of science, you should instead simply state that you dont agree with the views of the authors I mentioned — Joshs
I suppose you could also claim that these writers are not legitimate philosophers of science, in which case you may want to encourage them to take a course on philosophy of science. — Joshs
-As I said before I am aware of this critique based on Normative guidelines, but their authors have failed to explain the run away success of science.Or you could claim that Xtrix is misinterpreting Kuhn, Feyerabend et al, in which case I’d be glad to go over with you what they have written and match them up against what Xtrix is claiming. — Joshs
-I guess you can see now why you have to wait for a response before trying to answer your initial question.....Or you could say that you haven’t read the work of these authors, in which case I would respond…yep, you guessed it:go take a course in philosophy of science. — Joshs
I utterly reject epistemology for strictly logical and philosophical reasons which I am not prepared to divulge at this time. — jas0n
Science doesn't produce objective facts. — Xtrix
-This is an other misconception of yours. There isn't such a thing as "A scientific Method". Again science has many methodologies that are capable of producing objective facts.Yes, please educate us all about what you've learned about the "Scientific Method" (which isn't capitalized, by the way) and its "objective nature" from your high school science cours — Xtrix
-You either sound confused or you purposely trying to switch sides in this argument.There is no scientific method. There are many methods, and many questions, that is employed by human beings to understand the world. — Xtrix
-We can take this to my native language....but you won't be able to write a word.It's funny listening to a person who can compose the above sentence give advice about "taking courses."How about a course in English? — Xtrix
Yes, that's exactly my point. What is called "real" is, according to the view I was discussing, determined by science. Science, in turn, is not without ontology. You, like other believers in scientism, like to claim that there's a special "method" that "produces" objective facts -- that somehow this "knowledge" is distinguished from philosophy. None of that is the case. — Xtrix
Science has a philosophical basis. Science -- modern science -- has, in fact, emerged from philosophy, what used to be called "natural philosophy." Eventually you get to assumptions, axioms, beliefs, that cannot further be justified by appeals to empiricism, the senses, or "objectivity." I don't expect you to understand any of this, however -- you certainly haven't understood anything else I've written. You're interested solely in posturing, and you're making a fool of yoursel — Xtrix
"Knowledge Based" is not capitalized, by the way. Try engaging less with philosophy and more with basic writing and arithmetic. — Xtrix
When one can arrive at the same results with the method published by others that means that the conclusions are objective based on an objective methodological process. — Nickolasgaspar
Riveting!
"Conclusions are objective because they are based on objective methodological processes." — Xtrix
-And my position is that both paradigm are pseudo philosophical since none of them can produce wise claims(philosophical) that can bring change in our life and expand our understanding.What I'm saying is that one's paradigm determines if God or the universe seem self evident or not to you. It goes deeper than belief or unbelief. Than proof or lack of proof. — Yohan
I have a rotary phone and it's not plugged into the wall or anything but I can talk to God on it. My nurse likes to pretend I'm just imagining things, and I pretend to agree to spare her feelings, because she is scared of not being scientific. But me and God laugh together like mad when she leaves the room. — jas0n
Whereas,
Nickolasgaspar — Nickolasgaspar
Is more concerned with technological correctness. — Athena
I would have worded it a little differently, but still, I submit that’s exactly what they are. — Mww
Knowledge is always contingent, from which follows the surety of conclusions is just as contingent, which makes explicit I may be wise now regarding something I know but unwise later regarding something else I know. Wisdom resides more in judgement than knowledge. — Mww
-Correct...but are you aware of a Non real world where we can not exercise them???? This is the problem with pseudo philosophy....it pollutes really good syllogisms!Exactly right. While wisdom resides in judgement, that wisdom is possible in order for it to be contained in judgement, is predicated solely on reason and logic, the real world being merely the occasion for the exercise of them. — Mww
-Obviously the dude who stated that has never studied other animals.All three of which are antecedent to knowledge, or, which is the same thing, knowledge presupposes all three of those strictly human a priori capacities. — Mww
And in the negative, how wise would you be, to deny the validity of that made up conception, when it is impossible to express your denial without using it? — Mww
-unfortunatelly people try to address their frustration by going over those limitations. (Magical supernatural claims). Removing frustration is not part of metaphysics. Metaphysics job is to provide frameworks that can be evaluated. The end of frustration (and not always) comes after the end of this evaluation.(falsification/verification).......which disappears as soon as the limitations of it are realized. A central metaphysical idea. — Mww
those are not opposed practices. Making up answers without epistemic foundations is bad metaphysics...independent of our assumptions......serves no purpose, as opposed to making up answers and assuming things that do not contradict that which is known, which does. A central metaphysical idea. — Mww
-First of all you are promoting a red herring. We are addressing necessity. Sufficiency in the case of experiencing depends on the biological hardware......which is absolutely necessary, but not sufficient. The mere fact of existence does nothing to explain that by which experience obtains. A central metaphysical idea. — Mww
"Speculative metaphysics starts with things known, and uses that to arrive at logical arguments for that which is sufficiently explanatory in keeping with internal consistency and non-contradiction. — Mww
Regarding the other functions you mention, I am interested if you think these could happen without any subjectivity. Could a complex entity, a cybernetic brain or something, could do all these things, but without actually experiencing anything? — bert1
Sure, but I don't think that proves anything about panpsychism. Could you spell it out? — bert1
I only assert that subjectivity does, and that is all I mean by 'consciousness'. — bert1
-wait......is this a serious argument? like there isn't an intermediate state being dead and not dead?being eating and not eating. Those are true dichotomies sir!!! What would an intermeditate state would be like for you? Conscious, semiconscious, non conscious?I'll try. I mean there are no intermediate states between x not being conscious at all, and x being conscious. — bert1
Asking for objective verification of subjectivity may be asking for a square circle, an ore of nonexistium, a bucket of pure being. — bert1
-Educations plays no role in superstitious beliefs. We know from neuroscience that decision in our brain are taken and they we reason them to our selves.That's not true of modern educated panpsychist philosophers, physicists and neuroscientists. — bert1
It's a concept related to one you depend on. As I went on to suggest.
You are knee-deep in metaphysical assumptions that you haven't even noticed yet.
. — jas0n
This is really hopeful. Questioning our presumptions is the only way we canI agree w/ the last part...or do I? I mean I always assumed I was after the truth.... — jas0n
So the idea of the pure witness is basically just...consciousness. If you want to ghost story to attack, consciousness is a good one. Religion is such an easy target these days. — jas0n
-Because this is why we avoid to be scammed by con artists. This is why we don't answer back to emails from Nigerian Princes. This is why we hold receipts and reject claims that have economic implications for our well being. This is an essential quality of good evidence.!Why does the evidence have to be accessible to everyone? And how could we possibly know if something is accessible to everyone? Who is everyone?
Before there were people, there were no objective truths? — Yohan
I never could wrap my head around the claim that atheism is a lack of belief and therefore, these very same atheists go on to say, the onus probandi falls not on 'em. — Agent Smith
What is atheism, how shall we, in one statement, condense their viewpoint? It can't be "God doesn't exist. for the simple reason that that's a knowledge claim and ergo, needs to be proved. — Agent Smith
Also, is possible to apply a science to the subjective.
Eg some claim that there is a science to some therapies or self actualization techniques like meditation and yoga, or to improving ones skills, or the "science of success". As long as one can demonstrate an ability to predict an outcome of a technique many times, with peer review etc I think it should have the right to be called a science as well.
I am not fan of this modern trend of methodological naturalism claiming exclusive rights to the label of science. Of course, it is not MN which has made this claim, but MNists(and not all of them) — Yohan
MN only identify exclusive limitations in what we as empirical beings and our systematic methods can investigate.I am not fan of this modern trend of methodological naturalism claiming exclusive rights to the label of science. Of course, it is not MN which has made this claim, but MNists(and not all of them — Yohan
-because wheels don't work with staircases.....Our reasoning improves along with the available factsOriginality is not something I'm known for. Plus, why reinvent the wheel. Tried and tested theories are preferrable to novel ideas that haven't been vetted by experts/veterans, oui? — Agent Smith
-Atheism and certainty of claim...is like like saying the best way to cook burgers is with your freezer.As for atheism, the certainty of the claim makes me cringe, it doesn't sit well with the skeptic in me. — Agent Smith