We see more and more that science, mainly physics, has strayed into the realm of philosophy and though experiments — CallMeDirac
I don't even see any physicists with a glimmer of understanding of the philosophy of their own field. — magritte
Just for the heck of it, what do you suppose a philosophy of physics is? What does it look like? How does the thinking of a physicist differ from the thinking of a philosopher of physics? Can there even be such a thing? — tim wood
The question to @magritte, not to Google. At the moment, as often happens, we're off on a discussion without having any idea what the discussion is actually about. Perhaps you can oblige and give us a starting point. What exactly is - in your view - a philosophy of physics?what do you suppose — tim wood
There was never a firm partition between science and philosophy. As academic disciplines they only became distinct relatively recently. Natural science used to be called Natural Philosophy (hence Ph.D.), and this nomenclature was a true reflection of the state of scholarship, which knew no boundaries between what we today call "science" and "philosophy." — SophistiCat
I ask because I am pretty sure that physics and a philosophy of physics cannot be the same thing. I have a pretty good idea what philosophy is and what physics is, but no idea what is here meant by a philosophy of. And unless we find some good starting point at least, philosophy of physics seems to border on the oxymoronic. — tim wood
I disagree. Logic is a tool used by, not the thing itself.The first is that philosophy is a logical enterprise, — magritte
A distinction to be made between axioms and presuppositions. In a sense you build with axioms, you build upon presuppositions. These may well be worth thinking about - is that what you comprehend as a philosophy of physics?distinction being in their axiomatic choices. — magritte
The first is that philosophy is a logical enterprise, an application of some pure logic just as mathematics is. Like mathematics or other axiomatic systems, philosophy attempts to stay as simple as possible but not too simple and touches any other ground only as necessary to meet the demands of some arbitrary (strings, tiles, whatever) application domain. There are many possible mathematics and philosophies with the distinction being in their axiomatic choices. Thus, neither mathematics nor philosophy should be thought of or treated as monolithic.
If any of this makes any sense, then that is the rational for my answer to question 5. above. Theoretical physics is very different from observational physics. They are totally different games by philosophical standards. Knowing the formula for the flight of the bumblebee says nothing about why I was stung when I stuck my hand in there or how I should whack one. — magritte
We see more and more that science, mainly physics, has strayed into the realm of philosophy — CallMeDirac
The beauty and clearness of the dynamical theory, which asserts heat and light to be modes of motion, is at present obscured by two clouds.
Seeing this what is your opinion on the subject? — CallMeDirac
If any of you can explain how a knowledge of quantum mechanics or general relativity or string theory or quarks, or whatever the post-Einsteinian physicists and mathematicians discovered about the most extreme forms of elementary matter, has any real meaning for philosophy in its highest sense, which I take to mean knowledge of man, his peculiar character and the nature of his life, I would welcome it. — Todd Martin
to understand him we must recognize the scientific validity of such very real phenomena as fear and shame, trust and hope, love and hate; — Todd Martin
I am very astonished that the scientific picture of the real world around me is deficient. It gives a lot of factual information, puts all our experience in a magnificently consistent order, but it is ghastly silent about all and sundry that is really near to our heart, that really matters to us. It cannot tell us a word about red and blue, bitter and sweet, physical pain and physical delight; it knows nothing of beautiful and ugly, good or bad, God and eternity. Science sometimes pretends to answer questions in these domains, but the answers are very often so silly that we are not inclined to take them seriously. — Erwin Schrodinger, Nature and the Greeks
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