So, the basic idea is that science has two components:
— Agent Smith
If you are interested about the components of Science or its nature in general the following lecture is the best you can find.
Systematicity: The Nature of Science
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYK7uhQ_QCk — Nickolasgaspar
I am criticizing people's efforts to seek validity by trying to place their superstitions under the umbrella of status called Philosophy — Nickolasgaspar
You will need to be more specific or else I will be forced to conclude that you are talking about a different topic.It's a fact that lots of classic battles are still raging under the tent of philosophy.
To take one side is to think the other is wrong or at least less rational/convincing. — jas0n
-those are irrelevant topics to the points I make.Assuming that there is one right answer to questions like 'what is science?' or 'what is meaning?' (which may itself be superstition), you're going to have people on the wrong side of an issue who are nevertheless making a case for their position while incorporating criticism. — jas0n
No I am pointing out that the standards of basic logic should apply in all intellectual endeavors, plus the goal of Philosophy (wisdom) and the method defined by Aristotle demand those high standards.As far as I can tell, you are trying to apply scientific standards to philosophy, without realizing that such an application needs to be justified. — jas0n
Principles and axioms may be unfalsifiable but their value is validated every time we use them. Popper's rule of thumb has demonstrated its value since we are aware of our empirical limitations in providing proofs . Trying to find evidence that can falsify a claim is the best tool we have and real Pragmatic Necessity.For instance, Popper's demarcation is not something that can be falsified. Is it therefore superstition? — jas0n
lets nott pretend that Logic and axioms are in the same ball park with superstitious claims. If only you could produce the results we have by using the empirical rules of logic. Yes logic is empirically shaped and guided.Is it therefore superstition? — jas0n
-Those are not even close. Not being able to prove i.e. logical absolutes is not the same with assumed agents or made up concepts. The logical absolutes are verified every time we use them and even if we can not prove them in a mathematical degree of certainty they are instrumentally and epistemically valuable.Hardly. It's an attempt to articulate what it means to try to not be superstitious. It's a suggested convention. 'Hey guys...maybe this is a way to be less stupid and wrong.' It's a part of philosophy. Alternative conceptions of science are also a part of philosophy. — jas0n
-What you seem to belief is irrelevant. What is philosophy is or isn't is something demarcated by the actual goal of the intellectual process.You seem to want to use 'Philosophy' for 'my current opinions' or 'the philosophy I like.' That's an aggressive and confusing approach that will interfere with productive conversation. — jas0n
Is it good to accept a model that is in agreement with facts about reality.i.e Those who ignored the truth claim about gravity and tried to "fly" are a good answer to your question.s truth only good as a means to get power? Or good in itself? Is it pretty ? Why do we care? — jas0n
What's the difference between philosophy and pseudo-philosophy? I suspect I do it myself. If it works, why not? Feed two birds with one scone. — Agent Smith
I forgot to address your point.
You stated that " I don't mind people using philosophy as a psychological crutch, to validate their own thoughts and feelings."
-The issue is that when claims are designed to validate thoughts and feelings they are no longer philosophical , by definition (etymology and goal of the method).
Philosophy's goal is wisdom. Wisdom can only be achieved through logic and Knowledge.
Logic and knowledge do not have a good track with feelings and comforting thoughts....
I don't deny we all do it.....I only point out that philosophy has nothing to do with that.
You can call it superstitious excuses or religious ideologies but Philosophy is an exercise in frustration. The comforting feeling of understanding things is only a side effect not the main goal of Philosophy...or better it shouldn't be.. (well we can argue its the main motivation behind our efforts). — Nickolasgaspar
So you're of the view that most of what's on this forum is pseudo-philosophy? — Agent Smith
-yes. Many of the old philosophical ideas enjoy a free ride because of the name of their authors.I haven't actually studied the threads on here but from a drive-by they're mostly on positions of other well-known philosophers. That can't be pseudo-philosophy, oui? — Agent Smith
- My point is that Science constantly feeds our epistemology and discards those frameworks that do not meet our logical criteria while Philosophy is dead on its tracks in many topics mainly by allowing old "relics" to co exist with real philosophy.Perhaps you mean to point out how we've misunderstood the works of these philosophers, but then misunderstanding is, for me at least, a stage one must pass through towards full comprehension, ja? — Agent Smith
misunderstanding is...a stage one must pass through towards full comprehension, — Agent Smith
:up:... pseudo-philosophy is part and parcel of true/genuine philosophy... — Agent Smith
-I don't want to be absolute but at least most if not all of the OP and the comments I have checked do not meat the philosophical standards.(zero epistemic evaluation or support of the assumptions used in the hypothesis) — Nickolasgaspar
• Tenure-Chasing Supplants Substantive Contributions
• Confusion between Philosophizing & Chronicling
• Insular Obscurity / Inaccessibility (to outsiders)
• Obsession with Language too much over Solving Real-World Problems
• Idealism vs. Realism and Reductionism
• Too Many Miniproblems & Fashionable Academic Games
• Poor Enforcement of Validity / Methodology
• Unsystematic (vs. System Building & Ensuring Findings are Worldview Coherent)
• Detachment from Intellectual Engines of Modern Civilization (science, technology, and real-world ideologies that affect mass human thought and action)
• Ivory Tower Syndrome (not talking to experts in other departments and getting knowledge and questions to explore from them or helping them) — Nickolasgaspar
Well science and philosophy are joined by default. When we have data we call it science , when we don't have data we call it philosophy.Some say that philosophy and psychology are joined at the hip. — Agent Smith
And maybe one never quite achieves full comprehension ? Then what would we do? Sounds like death. — jas0n
Marketing of above:Mario Bunge critique — Nickolasgaspar
Is philosophy dead? Some philosophers have declared it to be so, and judging by some of the mental acrobatics now fashionable in postmodernist circles a reasonable person might have to agree. Though recognizing the moribund state of current academic philosophy, Mario Bunge feels that this is a crisis from which the discipline can and will recover.
:up:I want to know if there's ghost in a house. I can't know unless I go inside that house. Whether there's ultimate comprehension or not, one is forced to attempt it. — Agent Smith
My role is irrelevant.I think I'm seeing your role in the drama. You are a debunker and a reformer, yes? Are you 100% sure you are qualified? Do you consider Ayn Rand a great philosopher? — jas0n
Maybe a sampling bias. You seem very much interested in metaphysics which is, from what I can tell, yet to mature philosophically like, for instance, epistemology or ethics. We're still in explore mode, haven't yet found a place to set up base if you know what I mean. — Agent Smith
I commend you for your ability to realize that there is a real issue in our philosophy! Ιts something that most people have problems comprehending the rules or straight up deny them.However, these are textbook cases of missing the forest for the trees or being so absorbed in a task that one, at some point along the way, forgets what one was doing. This doesn't come as a surprise to me at all. We need to use post-its. It's a jungle out there. Too easy to get lost. Nonetheless, your post is on point. Time to do something about it! — Agent Smith
Beware postmodernist circles ! Don't read the books yourself. That'd be difficult. Buy an easier book that assures you that you aren't missing anything, that it's all a conspiracy. Whole industry of this stuff. Less interesting than the authors they attack, all saying the same thing, hoping common sense and yesterday's thinking is plenty. For practical life, it probably is. But they want to perform the intellectual too, and this kind of book offers a short cut. The starter kit is a bag of six words. Maybe all beginnings are at least as humble. — jas0n
Why is that...do you have a "got you" point that you use in there?It's unfortunate that you didn't participate in the Popper thread. — jas0n
I don't know what that means and how it is relevant to the problems I point out.Basic observation statements are not so basic after all. — jas0n
You've just evangelized for your own narrow concept of it, and that's why I called it your role. — jas0n
-the problem is that you don't know what a ghost is, you don't have the address of the house, you don't have the keys to get in...and you assume it is hunted.I want to know if there's ghost in a house. I can't know unless I go inside that house. Whether there's ultimate comprehension or not, one is forced to attempt it. — Agent Smith
Philosophy not only fails to experience the success of science, but it reprocesses old dead end ideas again and again. — Nickolasgaspar
.I want to know if there's ghost in a house. I can't know unless I go inside that house. Whether there's ultimate comprehension or not, one is forced to attempt it. — Agent Smith
-You are feeling sour because of the facts I put on the table. — Nickolasgaspar
Do you have any real arguments that could justify epistemically unfounded principles in Philosophy....like Supernaturalistic ones?
how can you tie conclusions based on supernatural assumption to wisdom, knowledge and logic.???? — Nickolasgaspar
well there you have it, by dismissing valid critique you allow pseudo philosophy in the philosophical realm. — Nickolasgaspar
You can not have wise claims without epistemic support. — Nickolasgaspar
You have hardly provided any facts, just recycled deepities about the sorry state of philosophy. — jas0n
-So you can't offer an answer. You are not the only one. Your obsession with magical thinking is what pollutes our philosophy....not mine.That seems to be all you have, this obsession with the supernatural. Philosophy is dominated by atheists. I'm an atheist. This forum also seems to lean atheist/agnostic. For many people the whole supernatural issue is so settled that it's not even interesting. — jas0n
-ad hominem. We are talking on how we can produce wise claims...not knowledge.Your biggest gripe about philosophers? That they didn't become scientists or engineers instead. — jas0n
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