You study a discipline using guided thinking. The viewpoint is already prepared for you.How would you describe the academic pursuit of philosophy — Shawn
If you are arguing that we're returning to religious based reasoning, your concern would be of a re-enchantment, where we are devolving back into a theocratically and mythologically based epistemology for understanding basic facts of day to day existence. I really don't see mass scale movement in that regard. — Hanover
Yes! We want to smell the earth not hide behind the theory of numbers and symbols.Because people started to long again for the unshakable truths of the Aristotelian order. — Tobias
The cyclicists actually have a refined notion of cycles. And it has nothing to do with resurgent. A phenomenon of cycle has a beginning not yet mature as to have claws -- but rather, an awesome growth that's full of goodness. Like science. But shall we admit we prefer the linear framework of activities, humanity, or civilization? I am actually undecided.Here we have the old notion of all cultural phenomena being "cyclical", as if they were resurgent beings. My opinion is that this represents a fallacy of misperception, albeit one fairly common within society...what one might call a "social legend", an example of "pop philosophy" tinged with superstition. One might say that the perception of "cycles of cultural phenomena" is no more than phenomenological! — Michael Zwingli
I'm beginning to feel like an apologist for the cycle theorists. But here goes. They actually predict the opposite of what you're saying. They don't foresee a limitation. And that's where the danger lies they say.This, based upon the notion of "cyclicality", appears a fallacious expectation. I would think that the future limitations upon scientific discovery will be the cause of technological limitation, rather than cyclical "decay". Scientific inquiry rests upon the foundation of technology; scientists can only inveestigate what advances in technology will allow. As technological advancement speeds or slows, so scientific inquiry. — Michael Zwingli
Maybe "worry" is unfit here. I will backtrack a bit. Let's go ahead and say, no one is worried. Spengler is not worried, for sure. I think your statement above misses the point. The decline theory of science acknowledges all that! Unlimited technological advancement and financial gain. There's nothing that you can think of in a maximizing fashion that they haven't already articulated.The bottom line: there's way too much money to be made as a result of scientific inquiry for us to be worrying about it's future, at least here in the west. When all is said and done, "the bottom line" is, indeed, "the bottom line". To tell the truth, society may eventually (soon?) have to "push back" against science in the area of technological innovation, particularly in order to protect our individual privacy in an age characterized by the monetization of information. — Michael Zwingli
Yup. I think he truly thinks it is organically growing.Spengler seems to draw an analogy between biological organisms and civilizations (cultures), treating the latter as a superorganism and, he reasons, just like biological organisms e.g. a human goes through multiple stages of development ultimately terminating in death, cultures/civilizations too undergo a similar multi-stage evolution. — TheMadFool
And of course, the academic world can easily be made extremely bureaucratic and not have the least interest to do actual science, but replace it with pseudoscience. — ssu
Be quiet, Proof!
:chin: — 180 Proof
This is a concern that is true, yet at least not anti-science.National boundaries are suffocating science. — Shawn
The anti-science stuff is used as a weapon since anybody can say that a study is biased or ideological or whatever. And it's not difficult to find a graph that shows whatever correlation you like. — Manuel
See now you're getting it.Well if science got us into it, it's only science than can get us out of it. Plus a major change in attitude. — Wayfarer
Reinvent. Saying this is on par with saying it's cyclical. Because the nature of narrative is the same. Does science really reinvent itself?I don't see this at all. Imo science has been on the rise for 8000 years now. It has to repeatedly reinvent itself. At times it may have become stagnant, sometimes there were rapid breakthroughs - but that's just in the nature of science. — Hermeticus
Again, saying science is a concept is similar to saying it is organic. The narrative -- pay attention to the narrative. Since you cannot go to a lab and actually experiment on "concept", just like Spengler cannot experiment on organic cycles of activity, your narrative is just as good as Spenglers.What do you mean by that? Science is a concept. A framework for building knowledge. You can "defeat" scientists, people who advocate science - but the concept itself is untouchable. — Hermeticus
Oh I have a better understanding of decay -- but that's how cyclical thought thinks of what happens when science decayed -- what replaces it? You don't think other beliefs can become dominant? Look, think again. Just because we have computers and wireless technology it doesn't mean we've solved that issue. Funny thing is, we as believers of science don't have to worry about outside forces. The argument goes that the power and authority of scientific knowledge will eventually cause its own demise. Science cannot be attacked from the outside. It can only be ruined from within.Is that what you understand as decay then? Again, I don't see that at all. Worship, belief without justification and blind indoctrination existed before science and have been declining as the scientific method evolved. — Hermeticus
I can refer you to @I love Chom-choms post as this is a good suggestion.By what measure could there be a ‘maximum achievement’? Would could the ‘maximum achievement’ of science be? — Wayfarer
While there may be a limit to the knowledge in the world that someday we might learn everything in the cosmos, which I would say is the most impressive reach of scientific knowledge. I am sure that we are nowhere near close to that ceiling. — I love Chom-choms
Our good science before its maximum achievement. I agree. My first post addresses the time way after your description.Science’ is not an ideology nor a belief system. It’s a method of exploration, testing and validation of ideas and also a framework within which discoveries are shared and progressed inter-generationally. The OP situates science as a kind of ideology or belief system, which it isn’t. — Wayfarer
Furthermore as Bertrand Russell noted way back in History of Western Philosophy, scientific method has no inherent moral compass. One could have, and some do have, ambitious scientific research programs to produce superbly efficient killing machines, machines which could kill enormous numbers of people, or even rid the world of people altogether. There’s no scientific reason that such programs ought not to be pursued. There are plenty of reasons not to pursue them, but science doesn’t necessarily provide them. — Wayfarer
And indeed, it doesn't. So where does it start or what will cause the eventual demise? From within the authority of science. That's where. Now, this is where, you philosophy members, should be able to explain the phenomenon of power, authority, and far-reaching.Another thing is that the scientific enterprise does not exist independently of "other phenomen[a] in the history of histories of human civilizations". — SophistiCat
Where is the evidence of science moving into the down phase of a cycle? — apokrisis
Your point - that science is cyclical - is just postulated out of nowhere. "[J]ust like any other phenomenon in the history of histories of human civilizations" - that's too broad and vague to even discuss. — SophistiCat
Fair point. My first post addressed the idea that length of time is not an indication of success.While there may be a limit to the knowledge in the world that someday we might learn everything in the cosmos, which I would say is the most impressive reach of scientific knowledge. I am sure that we are nowhere near close to that ceiling. — I love Chom-choms
And indeed, we shall reach the glorious era when our science is the most fruitful. And precisely because of this, the root of self-destruction begins, according to cyclical thought.I am not sure who but there was some guy who said that we know less that 1% of everything. So if there was a decay then it is far away. — I love Chom-choms
Not at all. That is not the decay we are talking about here. Worship, belief without justification, and blind indoctrination?On the contrary, by "descending into decay" you could mean that all the knowledge that we have will be lost, like a return to stone age, — I love Chom-choms
Good point, but you missed my first point again. I said "or".So yes, science will after some point gradually decay but how is that an anti-scientific statement. Its not like by saying that all civilizations die, you become anti-civilizationist. — I love Chom-choms
Are in favor of science and afraid it will succomb to "dark pressure"? — VincePee
Okay, good. Can you please address my first point then? Your point might help with my point #3.So there are various kinds of shit flying around. And maybe science isn’t in decline at all. Maybe it is the ability of politics to keep up with the pace of technological and social change that is the issue, — apokrisis
What do you mean by the darker reality than we are used to? — VincePee
The decay of science? Science never has been more advanced than in these days! — VincePee
For better or for worse, I might be one of those people who know what to think think but still doesn't. I don't know why that is. — TheMadFool
Take care... — Banno
I'm sorry that life is treating you this way. You are in good company here my friend :flower: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The person in love: Does fae need me?
... the person who's in love doubts (does fae need me?) — TheMadFool
The degree of goodwill for the other person. An infatuated person has little or no goodwill for the person they are infatuated with (down to lacking the most basic empathy for them). Whereas loving someone also includes having goodwill for them, wishing them well. — baker
Commitment. — Banno
And it's fucking....
Can you finish this sentence, or is it just too painful?
Either way, I am here for you even if it is just to sit beside you, having your back for awhile. :flower: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Not true. And this hurts somehow.women are always monkey branching to their next hypergamy — MikeListeral
Suppose that science have achieve immortality for humans (whatever the mean for this).
What would be philosophical consequence? — John Pingo
:starstruck: lolYou can get walking from legs but not legs from walking. Wtf. "Why is it a one-way street?" — 180 Proof
As some philosophers have always said in more ways than one, if everything looks good, then nothing is good.Or, third option: would you decide that you preferred your old life. That you enjoyed the challenges and dynamic that it had and that now everything comes too easily. You are bored with your new capacity And want to revert back to what you used to have? — Benj96
But this conversation is out of control, because there are no statistics about who will convince whom of what, or what novel idea will perhaps be born of our interaction. — unenlightened
The analogy to a physical machine is apt, though. As you noted, machines breakdown, and so do political structures. Machines can function like well-oiled, and so can societal systems. After a while, it is self-regulated.But if one lives in a machine and according to the machine, one lives a mechanical life - an oxymoronic non-life. But for all its potent impotence, it remains an anological construction and human relations are not mechanical relations except by performance. The scientific urge is to understand and control the world in mechanical terms, but there is nothing mechanical about understanding. The mechanical analogy is so pervasive, it sounds rather 'woo' to question it. But there is no evidence - gotta love the science-speak - that the world operates mechanically; on the contrary, there is much evidence that even machines do not: they breakdown precisely because they lack the caring relation to the world, as does thought. — unenlightened
Yes, I would cherish that person. Mainly because many of us, if not all, have questions that cannot be answered by buying material things, or making it big in the stock market, or even being a great innovator. I'm thinking of emotional pains of losing someone, for example. One does want to talk about the loss and the meaning of life, or the meaning of happiness. If one person can answer these questions, such as it is the truth, then I would cherish that person.Im talking about the existence of a single person who knows everything about everything, everyone and everywhere (correctly) — Benj96