Methodological naturalism is the usual expression. And to recap, where I think that overshoots is when it is extended to grand claims about the nature of existence. I think it's very important to understand intellectual history and the forces that came into play through the Enlightenment, which is a big subject, but indispensable in my view. — Wayfarer
In respect of evolutionary biology, this has come to be seen as the kind of scientific rebuttal of religious creation myths. That's obviously true in some ways, but there are many open questions about the meaning of evolution, which actually converge with questions about the meaning of life. That is what I take the last paragraph of the OP to be getting at. — Wayfarer
1.So the mystery of the origin of life is very real.
2. Even if you could find an alternate mechanism for accurate chemical reproduction - what could give it its sense of direction before life had an in interest in preserving itself.
3. Whatever factor could apply to chemicals alone, to start giving an evolutionary direction in favour of life? — Gary Enfield
I have never heard the expression 'methodological realism' until now. Methodological naturalism is the usual expression. — Wayfarer
Methodological realism accepts the axiological view that truth is one of the essential aims of science. Following Popper and Levi, truthlikeness as the aim of science, combines the goals of truth and information. This chapter discusses the relations between truthlikeness and other epistemic utilities like explanatory power (Hempel), problem‐solving capacity (Laudan), and simplicity (Reichenbach). While rationality in science can be defined relative to the goals accepted within scientific communities at different times, a critical realist defines scientific progress in terms of increasing truthlikeness. It is argued that progress in this sense can be assessed, relative to empirical evidence, by the notion of expected verisimilitude. An abductive argument is formulated to defend realism as the best (and even the only) explanation of the empirical and practical success of science. — Ilkka Niiniluoto
‘Methodological naturalism’ excludes what can't be accounted for or conceived of in scientific (objective, quantifiable) terms. It is a perfectly sound methodological step. Philosophical naturalism goes further by saying that only those factors which can be considered scientifically are real. This is where scientific method tends towards 'scientism'. — Wayfarer
I don't disagree with most of what you say but I don't think it makes an impact on the efficacy of methodological realism as the only useful tool we have for determining the nature of our experience. — Tom Storm
It depends on what aspect of our experience you have in mind... — Joshs
...As far as the social sciences are concerned it is a different story, especially in psychology. Here we do have post-realist alternatives in hermeneutic, enactivist , constructivist, social constructionist, and phenomenological approaches. These accounts recognize that one can maintain naturalism while jettisoning realism. — Joshs
You will have to provide a simple example. If you're simply talking theory then this is largely inconsequential. — Tom Storm
However for me what matters is actually how people relate to their fellow creatures. The real test of a belief system is not how much 'metaphysics' or anti-realism it holds, but what it looks like in action in the world. — Tom Storm
They are important because the first says it is not possible to gain reliable knowledge outside of using this method. The second, which I do not accept, is that all which is extant is natural subject to natural laws. We would need to demonstrate this before making that claim. — Tom Storm
The default setting in the absence of any evidence of supernatural forces is surely naturalism? For all the bad press naturalism gets, (and you are right that science is concerned with what is objectively measurable - should it be concerned with the subjectively immeasurable?) it is the only known way to acquire reliable knowledge about the world. That said, i am a methodological naturalist not a philosophical naturalist. — Tom Storm
'In response to the charge that methodological naturalism in science logically requires the a priori adoption of a naturalistic metaphysics, I examine the question whether methodological naturalism entails philosophical (ontological or metaphysical) naturalism. I conclude that the relationship between methodological and philosophical naturalism, while not one of logical entailment, is the only reasonable metaphysical conclusion given (1) the demonstrated success of methodological naturalism, combined with (2) the massive amount of knowledge gained by it, (3) the lack of a method or epistemology for knowing the supernatural, and (4) the subsequent lack of evidence for the supernatural. The above factors together provide solid grounding for philosophical naturalism, while supernaturalism remains little more than a logical possibility.' — Barbara Forrest
Never done this before. I am not on any social media either. I just thought I would give this a fortnight to see whether I found it stimulating. I'm wondering if a forum distorts one's personality. You have quite unnatural conversations in concentrated increments in slow motion.
Nice to chat. — Tom Storm
That's a courageous thing to say. — Tom Storm
My own view is that people do not reflect often enough on two things. 1) on how much they really know about something and 2) how they are coming across. — Tom Storm
Quit trolling. If you have nothing to say about the topic, shut it. — jamalrob
At least until people like you insist on making it about the book, and derail the thread, and then point at your derailment as evidence to justify itself. — Pfhorrest
FWIW I checked with the admins before and they explicitly suggested doing threads like this (and I actually ran the writing thread in entirety past them first and got an enthusiastic go-ahead). — Pfhorrest
Perhaps a thread where each member selects a favourite post ( not their own )? — Pop
Perhaps you could create an amalgam of favourite quotes article ? — Pop
Sounds like Jung's notion of Synchronicity — Gnomon
Off the top of my head, I see philosophy as an educated guess taken further. — Braindead
Philosophy can appear dry because, some people simply prefer philosophy to be well defended, rather than a collection hazardous guesses. — Braindead
Has anyone ever had moments when they noticed a random topic and had that very topic come alive around them? What I mean is hearing about one inconsequential thing and then having that thing become popular for no related reason. — Braindead
Other times I have heard or thought about a certain thing that no one would normally talk about, only to have that very topic pop up repeatedly. — Braindead
This thread is not about my book, but my book is guided by the observation of those relationships. — Pfhorrest
I'll just comment that this kind of structure is basically what my book exists to illustrate, — Pfhorrest
I've had a look at your website and i like it. The 1000 word format sounds good. Ill submit something in the near future. — Pop
Indeed they have with mixed results. Sometimes going with the flow can bring inspiration. It was this little 'divertimento' that caused me to search for a definition of art :these threads have a life of their own — Pop
Yes, it sure has its marvellous moments; here's to more of the same. I was wondering more about how anyone would acknowledge any quotes made by participants in any writing project.The forum and the contributors, have been a wonderful help, I've placed a link to the thread on my website. — Pop
Aside from the theory, how do you do this in practice ?As an artist my main interest is to push the boundaries of art, — Pop
Hopefully diverting it towards an exploration of consciousness. — Pop
Academic acceptance / reinforcement would be helpful, but exposure is more important, — Pop
New! A “Teaching Units” page of links to select sets of essays has been developed to help create course modules on common topics in philosophy and ethics courses. We hope this is especially helpful for instructors transitioning to online learning.
If you like the 1000wordphilosophy project, why not just put a link in Resources section? What would be the point of attempting to reproduce the same thing here? — SophistiCat
I think you vastly overestimate our resources. — SophistiCat
personally I don't think we need to restrict articles to 1000 words. — jamalrob
between around 2000 and 5000 words is good, but that won't be strict: the first article, published two days ago, is over 6000 words, and I can imagine shorter pieces being sometimes suitable too. — jamalrob
These essays are introductions rather than argumentative articles. Each essay is as close to 1000 words (while never going over!) as the author can get it. — Amity
You mean in terms of the making the copyright clear? I imagine so. We'll need to look into it as we develop the article section, which has just recently been put back up. — Baden
We strive to publish essays that are radically concise, extremely clear, well-organized and inviting. Each serves as an ideal introduction to the problem, question, issue or figure. Essays should be clear and understandable to readers with little to no philosophical background. We hope the essays serve as a springboard for informed discussion and debate and a basis for further learning on the topics...
...If you are interested in developing ideal, high-impact materials for both teaching and public philosophy, then 1000-Word Philosophy is for you.
Our vision is of a philosophical journal tackling issues in academic philosophy, but one that is accessible to educated lay-people and sometimes relevant to topical concerns. — jamalrob
I prefer to think of it as the gift of the good, rather than God, particularly because the term “God” is so heavily baggaged. In this I have been inspired for many years by Plato and others, but especially Stephen David Ross — Statilius
I am attempting to get the below published. I would appreciate any comments. — Pop
Works of art that intentionally set out to teach or instruct, rarely, if ever, rise to the level of non-utilitarian works of art. — Statilius
Basically, it's the nurturing of nature. The good can circulate here. There is a giver and a receiver; always a measure. Otherwise how can you judge any 'level'...humans can teach others, as well as themselves, to actively think, reflect and produce works of varying quantity and quality. — Amity
Some of the functions of art are provided in the outline below. The different purposes of art may be grouped according to those that are non-motivated and those that are motivated (Lévi-Strauss).
The functions of art described above are not mutually exclusive, as many of them may overlap
The Goethe quote was found in Andrey Tarkovsky's "Sculpting in Time (p.47)." You might enjoy this book; — Statilius
I see all art/life as a gift--it is not my doing. It is something I can be happy about but not proud of — Statilius
Goethe said “the less accessible a work is to the intellect, the greater it is.” — Statilius
you chose the words for the title deliberately. Why those words and what meaning were you trying to convey ? — Amity
Even the poet does not know, cannot know, and is blessedly exempt from needing to know or explain, its multitude of meanings, its reverberations, its hints and intimations, its many faces and depths; that is for others to do — Statilius
Si, ma pourquoi ?
— Amity
Multilingual? — Sir2u
Just let it reverberate in you. If there was a single explanation it would not be poetry. If a poet could say it differently, he/she would do so. A poem is a whole world, enter it as you would the ocean. Let it surround you, let it reverberate in you. As with any good art, a poem should plow and harrow the soul. And there is no explanation for that. — Statilius
Falling, falling, he gives his consent." — Statilius
There has not been very much response to this idea, — Statilius
4. I will compile all entries and write a poem based on the input I receive.
5. I will then post the poem back to the site under this discussion heading. — Statilius