Looking at other such "debates" from that angle, this match recurs, I'd say: Biblical literalists presumably imagine the Earth as more or less unchanging, except for the effects of The Flood and catastrophism of that ilk; science says it changes both globally (temperature-wise, first and foremost) and locally (plate tectonics, and so forth). Flat-Earthers imagine it at rest, under a celestial dome; science says it spins and wobbles its way along a multitude of superimposed orbits. Steady-Staters imagine the universe as homogeneous and isotropic in time as well as in space; science says Big Bang. — onomatomanic
I think there is an interesting logical jump here which may require some scrutiny first. While in biology the result of the scientific method can be characterized as 'dynamic', the scientific method itself is actually not necessarily 'dynamic' at all. It can be considered very conservative, even 'static' in some aspects since it usually prefers to take the proven as basis, and always reaches into unproven with keeping the utmost respect to the 'proven
Philosophy and science form an inseparable whole. I don't know the word for that whole (naturalism?) but the both shape each other and to have a good understanding you need both. On their own they are empty talk. — Verdi
So, what would you people say is the most moral course of action in this situation? Where should she go? — Amalac
Any philosophy, be it eastern or western, is the love for talking about the specific knowledge contained in a specific knowledge system, be it science, the knowledge of the eight-fold way, the knowledge of nature and gods in the universe in a magical outlook, the knowledge of astrology, homeopathic knowledge, etc. You get the picture. — Verdi
Then science, under the influence of the very idea that there is a difference between knowing and the talking about it, like the idea got hold that there is an independent reality about which things can only be known approximately, like Plato's realm of an independent realm of mathematics. The stuff known likewise separated from the subjective talk about it. — Verdi
The philosophy of science is the talking about scientific knowledge, and it is this scientific knowledge that western philosophy is talking about. But science is a large area, an philosophy is talking about political knowledge. Philosophy of the mind is talking about the knowledge of the mind. Philosophy of math, physics, the law, economy, theology, history, language, philosophy about any subject taught at the academia, being taught at a separate faculty. Western philosophy is philosophy of science. Showing love for scientific wisdom, as is the usually ascribed meaning. The subject matter being science.
In short, western philosophy is a Grreek invention to separate the knowledge from the talking about it. A separation being present in western thought only. — Verdi
In any case, both are required to do science as we now do it and philosophy too. — Manuel
Rights should only be accorded to beings to whom the concept is meaningful. But this is not to say that all beings should not be treated humanely. — Wayfarer
I'm not sure I understand. If you were to say the world is related to how we think about it, then that's fine. If we are thinking about ourselves the world is of secondary importance at best. — Manuel
I'd argue then when a scientific experiment reaches the theorum phase it is philosophy, for this and that together create 'it'(pronoun). — Varde
The philosophy of science is simple. Science tries to capture the natural world. By means of gaining knowledge about it. By examining the stuff that constitutes it. — Verdi
Once science and philosophy were not separated. Knowledge and talking about it were one and the same. In our time, I think philosophy should be more than just talking about science. — Verdi
And on and on. The philosophy of science includes the scientific methodology, which is just a quasi-scientific attempt to frame the whole scientific enterprise in the quasi-scientific language of The Methodology. As if the human enterprise, erratically, non-rationally, non-programmed, or even maybe randomly, evolves. Scientists try crazingly to stick to this method, but that's merely empty verbiage. — Verdi
There's a time and a place to get more into the details of the umbrella terms that are "true" and "false" in the context of logic.... but I don't think it's worth wading into at this particular juncture. Another avenue for a good thread perhaps? — Artemis
Ok. So what do you think that definitive delineation is? — Artemis
You've brought up "presuppositions," which is Collingwood's term for the content of metaphysics. Actually, he says "absolute presuppositions." I've shied away from using his terms because I was afraid it would send us off in a direction different from where I wanted to head. I'm glad you did though and I have no problem with using them more if it will help.
I think the way you've described it is consistent with my understanding of how metaphysics works. I think you're example - "Reality is a state of affairs which can be understood and accurately described" - is a good example of an absolute presupposition. As for science, I've thought that it's metaphysical foundation is related to physicalism, realism, and materialism at least. I'm not sure the implications of applying any of those three, or something else, to science. — T Clark
Well, to be honest, I didn't read the OP. Only the title. It asked about the difference between science and philosophy. I gave a direct answer: science is knowledge, philosophy is talking about it. — Verdi
Once science and philosophy were not separated. Knowledge and talking about it were one and the same. In our time, I think philosophy should be more than just talking about science. — Verdi
If you are interested in this issue, you might look into Christopher Stone's "Should Trees Have Standing." — James Riley
Is F=ma true? — Banno
Aren't the presuppositions of science (which go into making such a statement) comprised of metaphysical positions - e.g., that reality is a state of affairs which can be understood and accurately described? And wouldn't physicalism be the metaphysical foundation of science? — Tom Storm
That's a tough one. That would be the case if the self "T Clark" is a metaphysical entity. — Manuel
It seems to me that selves are epistemological entities related to how we think about ourselves and not necessarily an aspect of the world. — Manuel
I had a bunch written up, but then I realized, we're more or less quibbling over semantics. You said before that a claim about a non-existent thing is meaningless, I say it's false. Tomayto, tomahto, because false simply means not true, and meaningless would mean not true as well. Same dif. — Artemis
But that leads us to what Banno and I were addressing earlier: where something veers into science versus philosophy versus literal and figurative belly-aching is more content-specific than anything else, and even there more overlap exists than one might initially assume. — Artemis
In what sense is "The earth revolves around the sun" a metaphysical statement.
— T Clark
It's a statement about the state or nature of an aspect of reality. — Artemis
The earth revolves around the sun.
OR
The earth is the center of the universe.
Both are (as Banno points out) content-wise scientific. One is false, the other true. They still are metaphysical truth claims. — Artemis
Truth claims can be made about non-existent things: Unicorns are pink. Harry Potter is a wizard. God is almighty. They can simply be false by nature of referencing non-existent things. — Artemis
No. I think of interpretations of "QT" & "cosmological data" as theoretical, not just conceptual. — 180 Proof
Never heard of one that actually disputes the cogito. — Artemis
it's a truth claim. It's either true or false. — Artemis
Philosophy and science both make metaphysical claims. They differ in focus, but not in kind. — Artemis
The cogito is, as far as I am aware, the most indisputable truth there is. That was Descartes whole point. — Artemis
The other is trying to make sense of objective, non-constructed reality and ourselves (not as constructs, but as objectively existing observers) therein. — Artemis
As far as I can discern them, the basic difference between philosophy and science is the latter concerns defeasible reasoning towards the best explanations / predictive models (cognitivity re: theorems, theories ~ propositions) whereas the former concerns reflective reasoning towards better, more probitive, questions / conceptual interpretations (noncognitivity re: ideas ~ suppositions). In other words, scientists strive to know nature (presence) and philosophers seek to understand reality (absence). — 180 Proof
In more common terms philosophy is more concerned with the validity of questions and science is more concerned with answering questions. — I like sushi
I think, therefore I am. — Artemis
P.s. As for the coherence theory of truth... well, I give you the correspondence theory of truth:
The correspondence theory, in contrast, states that the truth conditions of propositions are not (in general) propositions, but rather objective features of the world. (From the Stanford Philosophy Encyclopedia) — Artemis
So, in what sense do you accept metaphysical claims. I have some idea of what that would look like — TheMadFool
Metaphysical claims can't be true or false, you say. — TheMadFool
Scientific antirealism is the view that science should refrain from making metaphysical claims, it being possible that metaphysical claims are true or false. — TheMadFool
you reject metaphysical claims — TheMadFool
scientific antirealism holds that truth is not what science is about. — TheMadFool
What's so different between saying "God exists" is neither true nor false and believing "God exists" isn't what's important? — TheMadFool
Oh cause you said morals deal with values not fact. So, I countered it with a response. — Caldwell
For one thing, Schopenhauer's argument for morals cites suffering as a condition of humanity. I'd say, he is using a fact that there is suffering. — Caldwell
The values are vigorously argued, — Caldwell
A valid argument is what's common among these disciplines. — Caldwell
They make use of facts to support their arguments. — Caldwell
You're espousing scientific antirealism - that science doesn't/shouldn't resort to making metaphysical claims which would be the case if scientists say that scientific theories are true i.e. for example a theory about quarks means that quarks actually exist. — TheMadFool
Why is there a subdiscipline of philosophy where Metaphysics and Epistemology grouped together? — Shawn
Science gives true or false answers? I thought the pop wisdom was that scientific statements were never true, only probable. Or falsifiable. — Banno
I think part of my contention you touch on when you wrestle with excluding Logic and Phil of Math (or Phil of any Science) from your list of philosophical subdisciplines. I'll stick to talking about Logic though, because I know it better than the others. — Artemis
Logic is the foundation for the other subdisciplines. You can't do the others without knowing Logic. Even if you dislike Logic and think some of it is wrong or whatever, you have to use the rules of Logic to get anywhere analytically. — Artemis
The rest of philosophy deals with facts and truth in varying degrees. I think it would be more helpful to think of it less as "either/or" and more as "both/and." Philosophy deals with, for example, values AND truth claims. Metaphysics deals generally more with claims that either are or aren't true, and Ethics less so. — Artemis
There's also the part that philosophy draws on data from the world to make claims. Ethics could, to some degree, make subject-less claims I suppose. ... But for the most part it's making value claims about the real world based on data that is either true or false. — Artemis
"The correct answer to what is the capital of France is Paris"
The correct way to study cancer is using science."
'Correct' plays a different role in both of these ideas.
And they are provisional - If you are studying people's 'lived experience' of cancer, the answer might be different. — Tom Storm
Why this question? — Tom Storm
This is not intended as a criticism or animadversion, but what's the point of elevating utility if there isn't a demonstrable correct way to arrive there relative to the issue at hand? — Tom Storm
