In my view it is characterized by attempts to oversimplify systems that science has shown to be complex, thereby characterized by a disregard for the boundaries of science and thereby unscientific. — Tzeentch
Consider a depressed person who could not be cured by pills, but was cured by a more holistic approach to their psychological well-being. — Tzeentch
Part 3, “Beyond the Mechanistic Worldview,” explores how our societies can supplement science—which needs serious reform to eliminate corruption, biases, flawed findings, and outright capture by powerful and monied interests—with both traditional and alternative ways of knowing and attaining meaning (community, spirituality, mastery of craft, etc.) and to further develop the humble and mystery-respecting frontiers of science as articulated by giants such as Einstein, Bohr, and Planck. — Leo Aprendi, Amazon Book Review of Psychology of Totalitarnism, Mattias Desmet
Apples and oranges. :roll:evolution (Richard Dawkins type emphasis) vs. Schopenhauer's idea of Will. — schopenhauer1
Apples andd oranges. :roll: — 180 Proof
The comparison you make is false, schop1, and confuses the issue much more than it clarifies as your post (the one I'd quoted) shows. — 180 Proof
No, this is an erroneous view of mechanistic worldview. The scientific community does not approve of this view. It's a view of a handful of philosophers, not science. It's even at odds with the discipline of science because it purports to reduce everything into formulaic existence.The mechanistic view (not just "science" in general.. but "scientism"), excludes everything but science as truth-bearing. That's how I interpreted it anyways..
So science vs. scientism.. It's similar to other debates I have seen on the forum. — schopenhauer1
It's a view of a handful of philosophers, not science. — L'éléphant
this view is the idea of evolution (Richard Dawkins type emphasis) — schopenhauer1
The OP doesn't equate "the mechanistic worldview" with "scientism" (at least, not explicitly as far as I can tell) and the OP frames this thread discussion, so my "drive-by" disnissal of your non sequitur apples to oranges comparison stands. (Btw, no "hypothetical persons" were made to suffer while writing the post ) :smirk: — 180 Proof
Btw, no "hypothetical persons" were made to suffer while writing the post — 180 Proof
the limits of the mechanistic worldview — Tzeentch
No, this is an erroneous view of mechanistic worldview. The scientific community does not approve of this view. It's a view of a handful of philosophers, not science. It's even at odds with the discipline of science because it purports to reduce everything into formulaic existence. — L'éléphant
The mechanistic worldview contains within it a promise of power. A promise of complete control over our reality. A promise of certainty - of complete understanding. — Tzeentch
Then you've gone the wrong path in this thread. Bowing out. Thanks.It seems a large part of western societies have come to view the world this way, whether they fully realize it or not. Perhaps it is precisely their lack of affinity with science that leads them down this path of wishful thinking. — Tzeentch
This is slightly off-topic, but I just read a book review in Philosophy Now magazine (issue 150), which reminded me of this thread. The name of the book is Organicity : Entropy or Evolution. Written by an Architect & Urban Planner, the book proposes an attitude of "organicity", to guide those involved in trying to deal with cultural entropy by aligning with the organic-systems-approach of Nature. This is not a new idea --- in the early 20th century, Frank Lloyd Wright called his design-with-nature approach "organic architecture" --- but the book uses some novel terminology. For instance, he labels Mechanistic Thinking (dominant & competitive) as "machinic" to contrast with "organic" (cooperative & mutual aid).I've studied this very issue for a long time. And as an ardent holist and organicist myself, the great irony has been to discover that life and mind – representing the highest levels of "organismic complexity" – came about by semiosis, or the ability to organise nature by employing the constraints of a mechanistic causality. — apokrisis
Ironically, the emergence of Life & Mind from the heuristics of evolution, is what resulted in Human Culture. And intentional artificial culture is now evolving much faster than the blind groping of the natural process. Anyway, I think the Simplistic Mechanistic products of techno-culture are merely the low-hanging fruit. We may have to climb the organic tree to get at the more functionally-organized systems. Systems Science is still waving a rattle in the cradle. So, there's hope that holistically-designed systems might eventually reach the sophistication of self-organized organisms that took billions of years to create. You might call it "alloyed organicism" :cool:And then life and mind become the mechanical addition to this base layer of "pure organicism". — apokrisis
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