What exactly is philosophy, in the sense of your words? What is it that philosophy demands of us? Is there a body of knowledge on philosophical inquiry, or on how philosophy is, or should be, practised? Is it written down anywhere? I've looked on the interweb, and surprised myself: I can't find anything along these lines. So can you, or anyone else, offer a better link than I have been able to find? — Pattern-chaser
As a philosopher, I don’t believe there something unique called “philosophical inquiry.” There are only different questions that dictate different methods of investigation and they are either good methods or bad methods as defined by science, math, or logic. These standards are applicable to all investigations, not just philosophical ones. — Heidi Savage, PhD Philosophy, University of Maryland
↪Pattern-chaser
OK, how about:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_methodology — Devans99
There is not on Wikipedia for it. I guess our method is based on:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-method/ — Devans99
[My underlining.]A common view among philosophers is that philosophy is distinguished by the ways that philosophers follow in addressing philosophical questions. There is not just one method that philosophers use to answer philosophical questions. — Wikipedia on Philosophical methodology
Scientific method? Would we look in a cookery book to find out how to service a car engine? Would philosophical method not be more appropriate? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
The tried and true method of the ancients is dialogue. And that's what we have here! — NKBJ
Scientific method? Would we look in a cookery book to find out how to service a car engine? Would philosophical method not be more appropriate? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
From the source above:
'Among the activities often identified as characteristic of science are systematic observation and experimentation, inductive and deductive reasoning, and the formation and testing of hypotheses and theories'
In philosophy, we are light on observation and experimentation, but the rest of it sounds like the ticket... — Devans99
In philosophy, we are light on observation and experimentation, but the rest of it sounds like the ticket... — Devans99
Inductive reasoning is not clearly accepted within science, never mind outside of it. Generalising from the particular is dodgy, if not downright wrong — Pattern-chaser
On the contrary, the fit seems poor, at best. — Pattern-chaser
↪Pattern-chaser
OK, how about:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_methodology — Devans99
That seems better! :smile: I'll read it shortly. Thanks. :up: — Pattern-chaser
I wrote this in another thread, but it occurs to me that it might be a worthwhile topic for discussion here. Are there guidelines - or something similar - that have been discussed and described already? I'm not asking for your opinions here, useful and interesting though I'm sure they are, I'm wondering if there is an equivalent to all the dictionaries that define "philosophy", that describes how philosophical inquiry is, or should be, carried out?
Or is it, as I suspect, that this has never been written down? Have philosophers just assumed that they and their colleagues instinctively know how to go about philosophical inquiry? — Pattern-chaser
I think the problem is the general public have belief in the scientific method; if any philosophy does not follow the scientific method then it is regarded (by the general public) as unsound. — Devans99
Science and philosophy are no longer the same (if they ever where), and standards which apply to one do not necessarily apply to the other. — Pattern-chaser
I don't see a credible argument for adopting scientific practices within philosophy. — Pattern-chaser
Philosophy could not, for example, consider the morality of Islamophobia or anti-semitism if it operated by the scientific method. — Pattern-chaser
We can have an abstract philosophical argument, say space is discrete, but that argument will not find general acceptance unless there is empirical evidence to back it up. This is the heart of the scientific method and philosophy must abide by it where possible in order to still be relevant. — Devans99
I believe morality can be accounted for logically but that another discussion. IMO everything is susceptible to logical and thus scientific/philosophical investigation. — Devans99
Questions like 'is there a God?', 'is space infinite?' we can collect empirical evidence for. — Devans99
Politics — Pattern-chaser
Music and art? — Pattern-chaser
Religion and spirituality? — Pattern-chaser
Katie Price (as a media phenomenon, not a person)? — Pattern-chaser
You know of empirical evidence for (or against) the existence of God? — Pattern-chaser
"Music and art?" — Pattern-chaser
Music and art are mathematical. See for example the Golden Ratio. — Devans99
The emotional appreciation (if I might call it that) of art/music is wholly invisible to science — Pattern-chaser
It's as if you have proposed to investigate Monet's oil paintings by analysing the composition of his paints — Pattern-chaser
Religion and spirituality? — Pattern-chaser
Is basically a quest to answer the question 'what happens when we die?'. Possibly investigable empirically via 'Near Death Experiences'. — Devans99
But emotions are due to glands and chemicals in our brain/bodies. These things are investigable with science. We could correlate the patterns of music to the biological changes that take place. — Devans99
These religions claim life after death. So life after death experiences do offer a way to assess the claims of conventional religion. — Devans99
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