• Pseudonym
    1.2k
    Well it's mostly quite clearly a heap of horseshit that doesn't even do justice to the science itself, but even more obviously no one likes to have their views dismissed on a priori bases.StreetlightX

    Except of course if one's view is that scientific investigation is the only meaningful way to form public theories about reality, in which case it seems quite de rigueur do dismiss them out of hand.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    At issue is not the formation of theories about objects of perception, but

    treating science as a source of values rather than as a method for ascertaining facts.Wayfarer
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    it's mostly quite clearly a heap of horseshit....StreetlightX

    Never hard to dog whistle an atheist on this forum. ;-)
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Except of course if one's view is that scientific investigation is the only meaningful way to form public theories about reality, in which case it seems quite de rigueur do dismiss them out of hand.Pseudonym

    Well sure, if one indefatigably thinks one point of view is correct, one will also think that one's point of view is indefatigably correct. I will grant you this tautology, because I grant it.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    then you’ve essentially declared in advance that anything other than your preferred approach won’t be considered.Wayfarer

    No, you're putting a future tense into a sentence which did not contain one. The claim is that no other method thus far can ascertain an answer to the questions tackled by philosophy, not that no method ever will.

    At issue is not the formation of theories about objects of perception, but

    treating science as a source of values rather than as a method for ascertaining facts. — Wayfarer
    Wayfarer

    Yes, I agree entirely, that is what is at issue. The idea that values might be facts and if they are scientific investigation could then ascertain them.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    The statement I quoted was this one:

    science does not have any comment on matters of quality, other than to say that no other approach can say anything meaningful on the matter either. — Pseudonym

    Which is plainly an instance of ‘scientism’. At issue is the fact that scientific analysis deals exclusively in what is quantifiable, what is measurable, what is objective. Questions of quality are of a different order to that.

    SO your response must be: how can you scientifically prove that they’re of a different order? What is the scientific evidence that questions of meaning and quality are of a different order to the quantitative?

    And that response so thoroughly misunderstands the issue that it is impossible to argue with. Not impossible to argue with, because it’s a good argument, but because it’s mistaken in a way that must surely resist any kind of reasoned refutation.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Never hard to dog whistle an atheist on this forum.Wayfarer

    Hey I'm on your side here!
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    Sorry, I might have reacted rashly, or misunderstood. :worry:
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    Questions of quality are of a different order to that.Wayfarer

    How are you proving or supporting this statement? More particularly, how are you doing so in so absolutely a conclusive way that the alternative viewpoint need not even be considered?

    SO your response must be: how can you scientifically prove that they’re of a different order? What is the scientific evidence that questions of meaning and quality are of a different order to the quantitative?Wayfarer

    It's not necessary to support the claim that they are of a different order. The claim is that if they are of a different order, then we have no method for answering the questions posed in those areas.

    Again, rather than actually lay out any argument you've just resorted to your default "you're so wrong I'm not going to even explain why".
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    More particularly, how are you doing so in so absolutely a conclusive way that the alternative viewpoint need not even be considered?Pseudonym

    Can’t. But what you’re proposing is simply verificationism. Again you’re basically arguing that all knowledge is empirical and then demanding empirical evidence as to why it isn’t.

    In any case, the difference between quantitative and qualitative judgements and statements ought to be self-evident.

    I do present arguments, but it can’t be helped if they’re not understood.

    It's not necessary to support the claim that they are of a different order. The claim is that if they are of a different order, then we have no method for answering the questions posed in those areas.Pseudonym

    Surely you must see that the second sentence contradicts the first one? In the first sentence, you say that ‘it’s not necessary to support the claim’, then in the second, you say ‘we have no method for supporting the claim’.

    In any case, yes, there many discussions of the problem of facts vs values. But as you’ve already declared that only science can ever hope to address such questions then, not a lot to discuss. You need to look at your spectacles instead of just through them.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    Again you’re basically arguing that all knowledge is empirical and then demanding empirical evidence as to why it isn’t.Wayfarer

    No, I'm arguing that the idea that all knowledge might be empirical is the best theory for making practical progress in answering the questions we which collectively want to answer about our existence. That's quite some distance from you insulting caricature. And no, I'm not demanding empirical evidence as to why it isn't, any evidence at all will do.

    The claim I'm making in defending Scientism is that there is not any conclusive evidence of any sort, that methods other than the use of empirical knowledge make useful progress in answering the questions we have about existence, nor that using empirical knowledge alone makes no progress at all. Therefore is is not reasonable to dismiss the theory that empirical knowledge is the only means of making progress on such questions.

    You might disagree with that conclusion, you might well present non-conclusive evidence in favour of your position, I have no problem with that, I'm not claiming it's a fait accompli, I just resent the idea that it's so wrong it can be dismissed out of hand.
  • Erik
    605
    I wonder if the methods of science are the only ones that count as empirical?

    I'm thinking for instance of Heidegger's phenomenological investigation (his "existential analytic") into the basic structures of human existence (Dasein) - and Being more generally - as being highly empirical if not scientific in the traditional sense.

    But I'm admittedly out of my element here and will just throw that out there as a possibility for others to consider.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    Someone posted it here before, but it is a perfect illustration of Scientism:Kitty

    Really? That's your idea of a "perfect" illustration of someone's philosophical position, some facetious attempt to childishly ridicule your opponents by mixing up their comments rather than responding to them seriously?

    Second thought, actually that is a perfect illustration of the use of the term Scientism. The use of pejorative, often facetious rhetoric to avoid having to actually argue a point.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    That's quite some distance from you insulting caricaturePseudonym

    No, it’s no distance at all - you’re arguing exactly what I say you are arguing, and if you take it as an insult then it’s your problem.

    I'm not demanding empirical evidence as to why it isn't, any evidence at all will do.Pseudonym

    OK - you’re stipulating any scientific evidence:

    science does not have any comment on matters of quality, other than to say that no other approach can say anything meaningful on the matter either — Pseudonym


    I just resent the idea that it's so wrong it can be dismissed out of hand.Pseudonym

    I’m dismissing it because you yourself are stipulating, in advance, the only kinds of arguments that you are prepared to consider.

    Scientism is the view that ‘all that can be known, can be known by means of science’ (which is a quote from Coppleson, History of Philosophy, chapter on Positivism.) So that’s the view that you’re here to promote, and then being ‘insulted’ when it’s argued against. And yet, I’m the party who is continually being accused of ‘dismissing your position without argument’. See if you can extend your intellectual repertoire to ‘irony’ ;-)
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k


    I wonder if the methods of science are the only ones that count as empirical?

    I'm thinking for instance of Heidegger's phenomenological investigation (his "existential analytic") into the basic structures of human existence (Dasein) - and Being more generally - as being highly empirical if not scientific in the traditional sense.
    Erik

    I think that Heideggar's existential analytic is scientific. He talks specifically about a hermeneutic approach (implying that there is only an 'approaching' to the truth, not a finding of it) and he talks about it being ceaselessly open to revision.

    If there is a priori knowledge, then such an investigation as Heideggar advocates would be one way to find it scientifically. Of course, other ways would be neuroscience, psychology, evolution etc.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    OK - you’re stipulating any scientific evidence:Wayfarer

    No, any evidence.

    I haven't heard any evidence at all yet that proves conclusively that non-empirical methods of knowledge acquisition actually produce useful results, nor that empirical methods alone must inevitably fail to do so. Therefore, the theory that empirical methods will produce the most useful results is a valid theory and remains so until you can provide conclusive evidence to the contrary.

    I’m dismissing it because you yourself are stipulating, in advance, the only kinds of arguments that you are prepared to consider.Wayfarer

    The statement you quote specifies 'questions of quality', not all questions. If you're saying that how useful a theory is or whether it can obtain all that can be known, is a matter of quality, ie a subjective judgement, then why are you dismissing others who think that positivism is useful and obtains all that can be known? Surely that's just their personal feeling and you've no more reason to argue with them about it than you would argue about someone's favourite colour.

    If, on the other hand, you're saying that how useful a theory is is an objective judgement, that you could in some way demonstrate to me how useful a theory is (in the way you could not possibly demonstrate to me how good your favourite colour is), then I expect you to be able to carry out that demonstration.

    This is a constant theme of these philosophical arguments. When it comes to who is allowed to speak on the matter, philosophy is all manner of objective "Sam Harris doesn't know what he's talking about", "Laurence Krauss is a bad philosopher", but when asked to actually defend it's claims, philosophy becomes subjective, evidence is not required, it's all about feeling and persuasion. But a minute ago there was something to actually know (something Sam Harris evidently didn't), and something to be right about or good at (something Laurence Krauss evidently wasn't).

    Either Philosophical statements can be objectively judged, in which case science has a proven record of making excellent predictions about objective judgements, or it is subjective, in which case there is no justification for making statements about who is 'good' at philosophy, nor who 'knows' what they're talking about. There is nothing to be 'good' at, nor anything to actually 'know'.
  • Erik
    605

    I like the way you pitched that and it makes sense to me. Something like hermeneutic phenomenology complementing investigations of other "regional" sciences rather than being set up as an either/or scenario. I definitely find that approach congenial.

    I'm not so sure, however, if the "existentials" he lays out - being-in-the-world, being-with, etc. - would be accepted as properly scientific since they represent ways of being (so to speak) rather than physical properties.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    I haven't heard any evidence....Pseudonym

    You won’t consider any arguments.

    Lazy Google on Heidegger and Scientism:

    Heidegger is not opposed to science per se insofar as he does not reject the human project of understanding nature. The most well-known basis for dismissing him as simply “anti-science” is the claim he makes repeatedly in Was Heisst Denken? that “science does not think” (WD, 4/8, et passim). But he also says often in this text that “most thought-provoking of all is that we are still not thinking” (WD, 2/4, et passim). His objection is not so much to science as to scientism, that is, the preclusion of other ways of thinking by the representational thinking of the sciences, and the marginalization, displacement, and devaluation of other methodologies and bodies of knowledge by the scientific standard of objectivity that has become epistemologically dominant in modernity.

    ...For Heidegger....this kind of scientism is the root of nihilism: a blind faith in science (like blind faith in God) means that people can all sink into the tiny worldviews of their immediate perceptual lives in the belief that someone or something else will take care of questions of value (moral meaning) at the same time as whatever-it-is satisfies material, teleological ends 1.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    I'm not so sure, however, if the "existentials" he lays out - being-in-the-world, being-with, etc. - would be accepted as properly scientific since they represent ways of being (so to speak) rather than physical properties.Erik

    I think the 'scientific' element comes from the fact that Heideggar expected some refinement or revision. That (to me) entails that there must be a 'wrong' interpretation, in order for that interpretation, to be rejected by Dasein in favour of it's later revision. Presumably then, this 'wrongness' is measurable.

    Now it might be that the 'wrongness' is entirely subjective, what 'feels' wrong, but then if that's the case, then Heideggar has said nothing more than "whatever feels right, is right" which I think is about as useful as a chocolate teapot.

    If, however, the 'wrongness' can be judged partly by observations of others, then we have something vaguely scientific. Refine those observations to make them more accurate, make models which fit your observations, test those models experimentally and you have social psychology.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    You won’t consider any arguments/Wayfarer

    What arguments?

    Lazy Google on Heidegger and Scientism:

    Heidegger is not opposed to science per se insofar as he does not reject the human project of understanding nature. The most well-known basis for dismissing him as simply “anti-science” is the claim he makes repeatedly in Was Heisst Denken? that “science does not think” (WD, 4/8, et passim). But he also says often in this text that “most thought-provoking of all is that we are still not thinking” (WD, 2/4, et passim). His objection is not so much to science as to scientism, that is, the preclusion of other ways of thinking by the representational thinking of the sciences, and the marginalization, displacement, and devaluation of other methodologies and bodies of knowledge by the scientific standard of objectivity that has become epistemologically dominant in modernity.

    ...For Heidegger....this kind of scientism is the root of nihilism: a blind faith in science (like blind faith in God) means that people can all sink into the tiny worldviews of their immediate perceptual lives in the belief that someone or something else will take care of questions of value (moral meaning) at the same time as whatever-it-is satisfies material, teleological ends 1.
    Wayfarer

    Yes, I can't stand Heideggar myself, but I'm a deconstructionist (in the literary sense) about philosophical texts. It's more important to me to look at what can be usefully taken from them than it is to understand what the author actually intended to say.
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    Why is it that when scientists make arguments against certain philosophical approaches they "pontificate", yet when people like Heidegger write what many consider to be meaningless nonsense, they are great thinkers?Pseudonym
    I haven't said anything about Heidegger. I don't really understand him, but I am open to the idea that there is something very interesting there. If one day I get the time to read him seriously, I might find out.

    As to scientists pontificating, the reason I'm happy to use such a term is partly that they are unremarkable scientists, like Krauss or Hawking. Most really great scientists, like Einstein, Heisenberg, Bohm and Newton, realised the significance of philosophy and how it was complementary to science, and made that known in their public comments. I only know of one great scientist that has said silly, dismissive things about philosophy, and he hasn't been mentioned in this thread yet, so I won't mention him (and in any case the thing he said was much less dogmatic and generalising than the sort of thing Hawking or Krauss have said).
  • Harry Hindu
    5.1k
    I understand that such a position exists, but it is not proven to be the case, its a meta-ethical position, a matter for debate, and has been for thousands of years.

    Are there people within "Scientism" who are actually claiming that science proves morality is objective, certainly Sam Harris hasn't claimed that (to my knowledge). His claim is that morality seems to be objective (a meta-ethical argument), and therefore, science can tell us what is moral. You might not agree, but I don't see what is wrong with the position such as to justify a pejorative use of the term. I just sounds like an old, well-travelled philosophical position to me.
    Pseudonym
    Like I said, science can tell us what morality is. Morality is the subjective perspective of another's influence on one's personal and group goals. Are you saying that science can tell us what is right or wrong? Aren't those value judgments? How can science make a value judgment? It makes observations and simply tries to explain those observations in a consistent way.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    As to scientists pontificating, the reason I'm happy to use such a term is partly that they are unremarkable scientists, like Krauss or Hawking.andrewk

    That seems like a really odd way of assessing the value of their contribution to the debate. I think both Kraus and Hawking, though unremarkable (I might disagree about Hawking) have both shown themselves, by their work, to be eminently capable of reaching ration conclusions and considering complex ideas. I don't see anything in their failure to produce groundbreaking physics that justifies dismissing their ideas as pontification. That quite a high bar you've set yourself. Are we only to talk about the ideas of those who have made earth-shattering advances in their field?

    Your justifications, however, are your own, of course. What's more pertinent to the question are the first two elements of my response which you have yet to answer.

    Claiming that science can investigate a range of problems typically covered by philosophy is not unreasonable simply by virtue of being a claim in the future tense, we make many such claims based on current knowledge.

    Ethical naturalism does indeed propose a method by which science can answer questions about a field typically covered by philosophy.

    So your contention that it's claims are wrong because no such answers have been forthcoming, and that a belief in the possibility of future answers is pointless because no method had been proposed, are both still wrong.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    Morality is the subjective perspective of another's influence on one's personal and group goals.Harry Hindu

    How do you know this?

    How can science make a value judgment? It makes observations and simply tries to explain those observations in a consistent way.Harry Hindu

    The 'how' is, like many theories, complicated and is not easily expressed in a short post, but I will do my best.

    Physicalism requires either determinism or randomness because there is no physical means by which free-will can make un-caused alterations to the physical universe without dualism.

    If there is no free-will then the matter of what a person 'ought' to do (the value judgement about behaviour) becomes irrelevant. There is only what a person will do.

    This way science can make predictions about what people will do in response to certain behaviours together with how they will feel.
  • Harry Hindu
    5.1k
    How do you know this?Pseudonym
    What is a moral dilemma, and why is it a dilemma?

    Let me ask you this: Did Sam Harris provide the name of the scientific field that studies what is right or wrong? What about any falsifiable theories of what is moral and immoral - did he provide any of that?
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k
    What is a moral dilemma, and why is it a dilemma?Harry Hindu

    In ethical naturalism, a moral dilemma is the rational weighing of two possible methods for achieving the 'right' outcome to see which is most 'right'. Our genetics, coupled with our environment produces the concept of what is 'right', so that can be considered a brute fact, scientific investigation can determine what course of action is most likely to bring it about.

    I'm not seeing what your problem is with this approach, you just keep reiterating that morality is subjective. Perhaps you could explain why you think it must be?

    Did Sam Harris provide the name of the scientific field that studies what is right or wrong?Harry Hindu

    No, meta-ethics is the name of the field which studies what is right or wrong. As far as I know the term was coined by GE Moore.

    What about any falsifiable theories on what if moral - did he provide any of that?Harry Hindu

    He would probably like to say he did, but personally I don't read anything very new in his work. It's really just some further justification for theories already put forward by philosophers like Williams and Foot.
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    Are we only to talk about the ideas of those who have made earth-shattering advances in their field?Pseudonym
    Certainly not. But with so many ideas around, we need to use some filter to decide which ideas to discuss. When we see somebody putting about an idea about a topic (philosophy) which they have not taken the time to investigate and of which they are patently ignorant, it fails the filter.
  • Pseudonym
    1.2k


    I sympathise with the desire to filter new ideas by some heuristic, and if that rules out unremarkable physicists who wish to contribute to philosophical questions then so be it.

    I'm really not sure though that philosophy is the sort of subject one could reasonably be asked to have 'investigated' prior to comment. The history of philosophy is so blindly aimless that to suggest there is some canon of work leading incrementally up to the positions held nowadays in some subject is stretching the point.
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    The history of philosophy is so blindly aimless that to suggest there is some canon of work leading incrementally up to the positions held nowadays in some subject is stretching the point.Pseudonym
    Yes, and so is the history of art, literature and most worthwhile human endeavours. Yet when celebrities that know little of art or literature say ignorant things about them, they are reported because they were said by a celebrity, then disregarded (I am reminded of when Elle MacPherson said she didn't think people should read books they haven't written themself). Nobody proposes to establish a research project to investigate the 'ideas' of the celebrity.

    The same is true when celebrities like Hawking say ignorant things about philosophy. The statements are noteworthy solely because of Hawking's celebrity. It has been noted, and now can be disregarded, being of as little value as Elle MacPherson's thought bubbles.
  • Caldwell
    1.3k
    The one we experience. Why would we have any cause to describe any other?Pseudonym

    But when you first experience anything, where did that come from? As a young child, what did you experience and how did you articulate it?
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.