C.P. Snow, a chemist by profession, wrote a famous book called "Two Cultures" in 1959 where he argued that the intellectual life had divided to the sciences and humanities, where the latter basically was the problem and had gotten lost and the sciences still had it in themselves the beautiful objectives. Yet in the end of his book, he purposed that science could perhaps be used to find solutions to current problems, like the Cold War.How could the science of philosophy spill down to make good statements about "political correctness"? Could even the philosophical institutions have good things to say about things like "political correctness", "global warming", "Trump" and stuff like that? Philosophy is the love of thinking and knowledge, so I guest philosophical research should give that kind of knowledge? Should there be philosophical engineers who brought the knowledge to the "real world"? — Ansiktsburk
Yes. But do understand that we want normative answers: how should we act that things would be better? It is a totally different question than what science replies to, the objective question: "what is the reality?". Science should not and cannot give us answers to normative questions. Politics is all about answering to normative questions. Politics simply cannot be answered by science, and people have known this at least since Voltaire made ridicule out of Leibniz with Dr. Pangloss.the First Science should be able to do better. — Ansiktsburk
. But do understand that we want normative answers: how should we act that things would be better? — ssu
That's the problem!I don't believe that there are any normative facts, so I'm not looking for normative answers from anything. — Terrapin Station
How could the science of philosophy spill down to make good statements about "political correctness"? — Ansiktsburk
In some dialogs he even comes to the conclusion that we cannot say. — Ansiktsburk
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