The point implies a sort of definitive answer (must be). Is that at all the case with such a field investigation and accumulation of knowledge... various investigations and various knowledge, as in plural?
It would appear to me that philosophy touches on far too many investigations and is in the pursuit of too many fields of knowledge to ever settle on a single point to it all. Philosophy is set of multi use tools and applied in many a different context; thus establishing a single purpose seems a bit off. — Mayor of Simpleton
Science touches on countless investigations, from physics to biology to chemistry and the specialized fields. The point of science is to settle our curiosities about the world and make accurate predictions of the world.
So what about philosophy?
My take is that intellectual masturbation is less an activity, but more an accusation of those engaging in philosophy who feel either bored, disinterested or left out of the debate. — Mayor of Simpleton
True. I don't find the philosophy of language to be very interesting at the current moment, for example. In fact I find it boring as hell.
Astronomy could be seen as intellectual masturbation, and yet most people including myself find it at least curiously interesting. So I guess one person's sleeping pill is another person's caffeine.
Are you sure you mean conclusions or do you mean consensus? — Mayor of Simpleton
Yes, that is what I meant. Last time I checked, the scientific consensus for global warming was 97+%. The philosophical consensus for the nature of time, for example,...mixed and it always will be.
Do philosophers gain any new knowledge? Does a philosophical theory count as knowledge? Or is it just unprovable speculation? This is the biggest point I'm getting at here. If there is no way of verifying something, then why assert it? Why even try if it is futile? Has philosophy given us
any knowledge? Is there
any consensus on
anything?
It doesn't make any sense, to me, to formulate complex arguments, debate and critique and assert and attempt to get to the "truth" if it is impossible to get to it. It's completely worthless.
Yes, ethics and political philosophy can help us in the real world, I will give you that. But metaphysics? How the hell do we verify if a theory in metaphysics is correct? We can't! It's absurd!
All it can give us is a warm little feeling of "I
think this is the way the universe is" but nothing more. The only confirmation we are going to get from a normative ethical position is "well, this makes sense
to me..." There's never going to be an E=MC^2 of philosophy. There's not even going to be an agreement on what the definition of a word is.
Philosophy is the love of knowledge — Mayor of Simpleton
I used to think this of philosophy as well. I used to think philosophy was an underrated thing that held countless intellectual secrets. I thought by reading philosophy I would gain knowledge about the world and be wise, know the fundamentals of the universe and become like a guru almost.
And this doesn't make any sense now. From my perspective, philosophy is just a mis-mash of disagreements and confusion.
Why isn't science part of the "love of knowledge"? Surely science has given far more than philosophy has.
Sorry for the rant, but I'm bitter after getting pissed on by other people on a separate forum.
Thanks for the reply.
EDIT: To add one more thing: what are you expecting to get out of philosophy?