I get it that people who have grown up into or adopted a scientific disposition may be a bit uncomfortable with propositions that are not amenable to empirical confirmation. — Arne
How are you defining empirical evidence? — apokrisis
Isn't the rational method of philosophy just like the rational method of science in that one puts forward some reasonable general concept and then suggest that these kinds of particular consequences will serve as the truth-makers? — apokrisis
I suspect mostly the same as you. Amenable to some form measurement resulting from replicable procedures. — Arne
And unlike philosophy and with the possible exception of QA, the rational method of philosophy is not the only method of philosophy. Please see Thus Spake Zarathustra by F.W. Nietzsche. — Arne
I think Einstein is an excellent example of overlap. Though he was educated as a physicist, he was a philosopher. His theories did not derive from empirical evidence obtained from a laboratory. He worked in a patent office. Instead, his theories were derived in large part from his obsessive nature, his interest in physics, and his almost child-like imagination. And when he published those theories, they were met with very strong opinions of agreement or disagreement. But they were not met with demands for "proof." Instead, most of the ensuing empirical "proof" regarding his theories was provided by scientists who developed clever experiments for that very purpose. — Arne
He was very well aware of contemporary developments in science, — SophistiCat
I want to start an argument obviously. That is going to be hard if you won't disagree — apokrisis
↪Wayfarer
You nailed it. "Scientism" is the word. Thank you. :smile: — Arne
I'm not a proponent of Scientism, but I am a passionate defender of it's right to be considered just as valid a philosophical position as any other. — Pseudonym
the cry of "proof!" may well be levied in a philosophical argument, but what it often means is that the propositions has strayed into the territory of science — Pseudonym
Again, I wouldn't adopt this position myself, but I would defend it's right to be considered a valid position by the very token you're trying to use — Pseudonym
1. At no point did I say it was meaningless. Instead, the more reasonable interpretation of my argument is that a demand for empirical "proof" is less likely (perhaps significantly so) to be valid within the realm of philosophy than in the realm of science. Consequently, there is reason to suspect the demand may be less meaningful in one realm than in another. So your claim that I said a demand for proof is meaningless is at best an unreasonable interpretation of my position. — Arne
would it be unreasonable for me to suspect that you may be trying to make my position appear more extreme than it is? I sure hope you are not doing that. — Arne
Whereas arguing that "... it is a red herring and you know it" is a much more reasonable example of a counter argument? — Pseudonym
If you want to argue with what I say rather than what you say I am saying, feel free to do so. — Arne
So, if I understand this correctly, you're saying that some calls for proof may be less valid in philosophy than they would be in science. — Pseudonym
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