Science, for the most part, is actually quite boring and the occasional interesting discovery that bubbles to the surface does so surrounded by the mundane. — darthbarracuda
I don't see the necessity of pitching philosphy and science in an antagonistic relationship, and if anything the strange animus towards science in the OP seems more like 'little discipline syndrome' than anything else. I also think what reigns in the public is not 'jealously' of philosophy so much as sheer mis- or non-understanding. Philosophy remains largely opaque as to what exactly it 'is' to alot of people, who for the most part encounter it only ever as bumper-sticker quotes to append to those Sunset-inspiration posters. — StreetlightX
For my part I'm more and more inclined to see philosophy as something like a second-order sense-making enterprise: that is, philosophy examines how we make sense of the world - it makes sense of our sense-making (hence 'second-order'). Another important function of philosophy is to propose new ways of sense-making: we should understand the world like so, instead of like so. 'Sense', I think, being perhaps the most important question of philosophy, underlying even that of truth; thus the question of truth - 'what is truth'? - ought to be understood to ask not after this or that truth, but the very meaning and sense of truth itself. — StreetlightX
I am not antagonistic to science - I am antagonistic to the philosophically-illiterate scientists of today. They are brazenly arrogant and have little understanding about anything they're talking about. — darthbarracuda
For instance I think Cartesian dualism is not tenable, but it's fine to let someone follow that path and defend Cartesian dualism. Whereas in science it's less flexible - perhaps because scientific theories are easier to formulate given the restricted subject matter. — darthbarracuda
Who do you have in mind exactly? And how much is this simply just a fact about what the public wants to buy?
The best-sellers are probably those that take the triumphalist reductionist tone you may be objecting to. And the same will then apply to philosophical best-sellers, like anything Dennett writes. — apokrisis
Another point is that you already seem convinced that naturalism can't explain stuff like morality and aesthetics. I find that to be the unsophisticated philosophical view - left-over 1800s romanticism and theology. — apokrisis
When science is working at the edge of things, the spirit is "can this new idea be crazy enough?" Science can afford to speculate wildly because experiment sorts it out. It is at the other end of things that the discipline kicks in. — apokrisis
Yes, "triumphalist" is a good way of putting it.[/quote
But still, who are you talking about. The usual suspects like Krauss and Dawkins?
And isn't best sellerdom a consequence of a public taste for triumphalist science (matched by the triumphalism batting for the other side) rather than because science itself is philosophically unsophisticated?
quote="darthbarracuda;102228"]"The more conventional opinion gets fixated on the antithesis of truth and falsity, the more it tends to expect a given philosophical system to be either accepted or contradicted; and hence it finds only acceptance or rejection. It does not comprehend the diversity of philosophical systems as the progressive unfolding of truth, but rather sees in it simple disagreements." — darthbarracuda
The problem, as I see it, is that they are given an audience to speculate, which makes their wild speculation come across as more grounded than they really are. Additionally, they get embolded by this new fame and start making stupid metaphysical claims - see Lawrence Krauss declaring the universe can come from nothing (but only if we re-define something as actually nothing). — darthbarracuda
While I agree "the public" has lost its understanding of philosophy, it is informed by the pop-scientists who continue to label themselves as "rationalists" and who erect a false dichotomy and misunderstanding of science and philosophy. — darthbarracuda
My point, I think, still stands though: that the questions philosophy tackles are by and large the most interesting and difficult questions, and that many other things get their interest by being relevant to some philosophical questions. I am not antagonistic to science - I am antagonistic to the philosophically-illiterate scientists of today. They are brazenly arrogant and have little understanding about anything they're talking about.
Are you familiar with A. W. Moore, and his book The Evolution of Modern Metaphysics: Making Sense of Things? Moore sees metaphysics as the broadest way of making sense of things, including making sense of sense (which we see as effectively started by Kant)
I believe that's a projection of your own ressentiment towards unsophisticated scientists, who make money and get the attention of the public while you, deep thinker and philosopher, who answers existence's hardest puzzles with such elegance and care, the most you can do is chat with five other thorough thinkers on the -currently- greatest online philosophy forum. Oh, I'm feeling so very nietzschean this morning! — Πετροκότσυφας
As far as public perception goes though, conflict and black-and-white line drawing are alot more fun, so it's unsurprising that Dawkins and others find such an audience. Again, just best to not play into it. — StreetlightX
No but thanks for the rec! My primary inspirations for this view are precisely Wittgenstein and Deleuze, so it's awesome seeing something that takes both for it's approach as well. — StreetlightX
The impression I have is that people think science is where you go to get all the answers and philosophy is some weird mystical shit, an anachronism or something. — darthbarracuda
Science, for the most part, is actually quite boring and the occasional interesting discovery that bubbles to the surface does so surrounded by the mundane. In fact most of the interesting scientific discoveries are interesting because they are philosophically relevant. The theory of evolution is hugely relevant to how we perceive ourselves. The size of the universe puts our significance into doubt. But the atomic mass of a carbon atom? The structure of a liver cell in cows? The chemical composition of martian soil? — darthbarracuda
REAL philosophy is for lions and giants. — szardosszemagad
People remember famous scientists more than famous philosophers because the famous scientists are the ones that changed our lives and how we think about ourselves more than any philosopher.I believe it to be true that these pop-scientists have realized after thirty years that they picked the wrong field and wish they had as much fun as the philosophers do. Thus they go through a process of ressentiment and accuse philosophy as accomplishing nothing and being worthless, while simultaneously attempting to steal philosophy's questions. It's all very profitable, too. The fact is, however, that philosophical questions resist answering due to their high complexity. In other words, philosophy is hard and only for grown ups. — darthbarracuda
This sounds like you are describing science. Making sense of our sense-making is cognition - a scientific discipline. There is also evolutionary psychology. Science has been encroaching on philosophical questions, just as it has encroached on religious questions, and is addressing these problems better than philosophy or religion ever could.philosophy examines how we make sense of the world - it makes sense of our sense-making (hence 'second-order'). Another important function of philosophy is to propose new ways of sense-making: we should understand the world like so, instead of like so. 'Sense', I think, being perhaps the most important question of philosophy, underlying even that of truth; thus the question of truth - 'what is truth'? - ought to be understood to ask not after this or that truth, but the very meaning and sense of truth itself. — StreetlightX
I see philosophy, when I talk of giants and lions, as pure, unforgiving, cruel logic applied. People are scared to think that there is a real world of ideals out there. They are scared to thing that there is no real world out there at all. They are scared to think that there is or there is not a categorical imperative of morality. They are scared to think that there is a real possiblity that there is a god out there or that there isn't. People are scared of their ordinary thoughts that they have taken for granted for years or for decades proven to be fallacies and/or self-contradictory statements. People are scared to ponder whether they are merely atuomatons, or that they actually don't have a free will at all. They are scared to realize that the world does not operate on a {good deed -- reward} basis at all times.
Those who are not scared of, and furthermore propagate and discover how logic applied to life can turn our entire weltaschauung upside-down, are the giants and the lions. — szardosszemagad
The theory of evolution is hugely relevant to how we perceive ourselves. — darthbarracuda
The size of the universe puts our significance into doubt. — darthbarracuda
philosophy examines how we make sense of the world — StreetlightX
Science is only inflexible in demanding the constraint of measurable testing. — apokrisis
It's about asking questions. — Wosret
(*) [referencing Chaucer] This one only as an age-old and renewable torture device for young students. — szardosszemagad
Experience, though noon auctoritee
Were in this world, is right ynogh for me — Wife of Bath
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