it is more likely because the technique simply doesn't inquire into things in an effective way or yield any results. — Snakes Alive
Compare the Jehova's witnesses saying the world did end in 1914, but what we meant by that was... This is a classic pattern of these practices that don't have any efficacy. — Snakes Alive
Part of the answer seems to me to be that efficacious reasoning in the above sense usually gets described, and is involved institutionally, with science, engineering and technology. — fdrake
what is it about philosophy as it is currently practiced that ensures it lacks efficacy? — fdrake
It attempts to inquire about 'anything' by a conversational method, and there's no reason at all that just talking about basic features of the world should yield any insight into them. — Snakes Alive
I'm sympathetic to the idea that the Socratic method invariably involves itself in linguistic confusions, too, but I guess that's a separate hypothesis. — Snakes Alive
It attempts to inquire about 'anything' by a conversational method, and there's no reason at all that just talking about basic features of the world should yield any insight into them. — Snakes Alive
So philosophy doesn't get at how things are. This failure doesn't derive from insufficient similarity to the natural sciences or engineering/technology. — fdrake
You're right, there's no necessary reason why any inquiry in any style should yield substantive/efficacious insights. — fdrake
Philosophy does not, and it's not unique in this regard (neither does New Age, for example), but it is also its own historically contingent thing, defective for its own historically contingent reasons. — Snakes Alive
The point is that philosophy doesn't really inquire – it mimes inquiry through a kind of conversational ritual that mimics the courtroom, but without witnesses, evidence, or point. — Snakes Alive
3) "Everything else came from philosophy" – Historically, the natural sciences / engineering / having sex / hair trimming / etc. came from philosophy. — Snakes Alive
Defective as compared to what? — fdrake
Besides the lack of historical justification you're using to make a historical claim, — fdrake
to the extent that styles of reasoning are commonplace and shared, the courtroom is those shared norms of reasoning; expectations of behavioural conduct and belief propagation given a starting point. In that regard, the only difference philosophy has from reasoning simpliciter when understood as a historical tradition (we do have to learn how to reason after all) is a mild constraint on topics of interest (just enough so that philosophy doesn't become something which is not philosophy) and a historical particularity. — fdrake
or understanding something as a folk tradition for philosophical purposes, won't make sense outside of a philosophical context. — fdrake
(2) Something which is a historical fact: natural philosophy did produce efficacious results (in the specified sense of providing a predictive and instrumental understanding of nature). — fdrake
Surely you can see the contradiction. — fdrake
Do you want to go into the history, then? — Snakes Alive
So your argument is that natural philosophy = science = philosophy? That's not how words work, I'm afraid! — Snakes Alive
Your line of attack, you see, was to catch me in a contradiction, without historical evidence – but how, one might think, can this be possible? How can I be shown to be in error on a historical matter, with no appeal to history? If we look back through the conversation, we find the answer – your 'argument' turns on an equivocation, and you slipped from 'philosophy' to 'natural philosophy,' which is an old-timey word for science. — Snakes Alive
and you slipped from 'philosophy' to 'natural philosophy,' which is an old-timey word for science. — Snakes Alive
Sure! I'd like to see what you've written on it. — fdrake
I'm not responding to the rest of the post – can't I just leave it as an exercise for you as to why it doesn't work? [Again, deductive arguments that don't involve historical facts can't make historical claims.] — Snakes Alive
(1) Natural philosophy was philosophy.
(2) Natural philosophy was efficacious. — fdrake
(4) Philosophy has not changed in any relevant respect since Ancient Greece (what I understand as one of your claims). — fdrake
(5) Philosophy was not efficacious in Ancient Greece (what I understand as part of your characterisation of philosophy) — fdrake
I don't write on it, since I'm just a layman that thinks about this as a hobby (I 'believed in' philosophy when I was younger, got a degree in it, and later slowly came to my present views on it), but I wouldn't mind discussing it. I'm interested in the history of how philosophy arose, and think the Greek rhetorical tradition (as traced through the quasi-legendary Corax of Syracuse, in his bid to school landowners to defend their claims from Syracusan tyrants) is an interesting place to start. I also think people ought to know more about the sophists and their contribution, and I think a historical survey comparing the Greek legal tradition to the earliest philosophical dialogues could prove fruitful (to see how the actual rhetorical techniques are employed similarly or dissimilarly in each case). — Snakes Alive
deductive arguments that don't involve historical facts can't make historical claims — Snakes Alive
It's just a definitional issue. If you want to talk about history, do so. — Snakes Alive
(1) Natural philosophy was philosophy. — fdrake
(1) Newton's work is not considered a work of philosophy generally, so if popular classification matters, this should tell us something; — Snakes Alive
]Rule 1: We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances.
Rule 2: Therefore to the same natural effects we must, as far as possible, assign the same causes.
Rule 3: The qualities of bodies, which admit neither intensification nor remission of degrees, and which are found to belong to all bodies within the reach of our experiments, are to be esteemed the universal qualities of all bodies whatsoever.
Rule 4: In experimental philosophy we are to look upon propositions inferred by general induction from phenomena as accurately or very nearly true, not withstanding any contrary hypothesis that may be imagined, till such time as other phenomena occur, by which they may either be made more accurate, or liable to exceptions. — Newton
(2) The methods of that work have nothing to with philosophy as traditionally practiced; — Snakes Alive
(3) In philosophy programs, the work is not typically assigned or read by philosophy students, whose training would not equip them with the skills to read and understand it anyway (since philosophers do not learn the principles of mathematics or mechanical motion that would make them conversant in 17th c. physics, or any era of physics). — Snakes Alive
Note the same for Descartes – his philosophy, what is read by philosophers and taught in philosophy programs, actually is fairly well cordoned off from his scientific work, which is not read in philosophy departments (nor is his geometry), and which philosophy students would not be able to understand, since their disciplinary training doesn't teach them any mathematics either. — Snakes Alive
You need to stop that. — Snakes Alive
Another way to say this: It's possible that most of what's going on in this thread is well within[/] the folk tradition. — csalisbury
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