Freud's psychological theory revolves around sex — Agent Smith
Behaviorism - Walden Two - the grotesque result of an art aspiring to be a science. — ZzzoneiroCosm
That he was being "scientific" is my projection of what he was doing--even if it wasn't great science. — Bitter Crank
If you have read a lot of Freud, then you would know better than me. I have read about Freud, discussed him with an intellectual type who received psychoanalysis, and have read a little of his writing. Did he need to call it 'science' to consider it science? Do you think he was doing 'science'? — Bitter Crank
but also 'scientistic' in the sense of attempting to address all and any problems through the lens of what he understood as the objective sciences. Basically thoroughgoing positivism, in the Comtean sense. — Wayfarer
↪Joshs The social sciences--I'm including psychology--have a lamentably justified bad rep for half-baked research, sloppy methodology, unconfirmed results, and so — Bitter Crank
Can you tell me where I can read more about Freud's scientism or positivist attitude? — ZzzoneiroCosm
He had no inkling of anything like higher consciousness. — Wayfarer
But why is this the case? — Joshs
You know "the marshmallow experiment"? children are left alone with a marshmallow and instructed to not eat it (until some future point). If they wait 5 minutes, they will get two marshmallows." Some children can wait, some eat the single marshmallow forthwith,
The ability to wait 5 minutes supposedly predicts how well children will do in life, where delayed gratification is commonly practiced by successful (but chronically unsatisfied?) people. I don't know whether the marshmallow experiment proves anything or not, but it's the kind of easy to do, readily replicable experiment that comes to mind. — Bitter Crank
The third-person perspective currently in vogue needs to be embedded within a first-person perspective, which should be treated as primary. I’m far from alone in pointing this out. — Joshs
The psychologist, social scientist, wishing he needed the apparatus of a chemist, dehumanizes the subjects by making objects (it) of them. — Bitter Crank
So we're just sacks of chemistry. — Neil deGrasse Tyson
Long story short, if you want to understand your fellow humans, study them as fellow humans. — Bitter Crank
I've mentioned before that I read many of Freud's 'humanistic' essays as an undergraduate. Totem and Taboo, Civilization and its Discontents, and others of that genre. He was clearly brilliant - after all along with Marx and Darwin, one of the main intellectual influences of the early 20th Century - but also 'scientistic' in the sense of attempting to address all and any problems through the lens of what he understood as the objective sciences. Basically thoroughgoing positivism, in the Comtean sense. That was really why he broke with Jung, who had a vastly larger understanding of human nature and the human situation. — Wayfarer
I think this can't be right for the simple reason that for Freud's theories and therapeutic methodologies first-person accounts of experiences were all importan — Janus
The ability to wait 5 minutes supposedly predicts how well children will do in life, where delayed gratification is commonly practiced by successful (but chronically unsatisfied?) people. — Bitter Crank
The law of gravity doesn't care whether you're a saint or a sinner or a stone. — Agent Smith
A variation of the popular conservative mantra:
‘science doesn't care about your feelings’.
Or at least, that’s the story a certain era of science tells itself. An era just coming into being knows that valuative frameworks are the very basis of science — Joshs
That's like saying 'Old English grammar is "proto-Shakespearean?!"' :eyes:Its been stated that successful philosophy becomes the sciences. Philosophy is sort of like a proto-science who's ultimate goal is to destroy itself. — Philosophim
Whenever a question can be answered factually it's no longer philosophical and is translatable into a scientific hypothesis, or problem, to be 'solved' experimentally (which may be interpreted philosophically in terms of "what it means ..." ethically / aesthetically / ontologically, etc). Scientific theories, however, are approximate explanations of the world and are therefore fallable and reviseable / replaceable by better approximations. Philosophy isn't superceded by science any more than a mother is superceded by her children. — 180 Proof
In my understanding, explaining some physical transformation manifested as a testable mathematical model is indispensible for doing science whereas interpreting such explanatory models and what the outcomes of testing them 'imply' about some aspect of the world (and, perhaps, the human condition) is doing philosophy. — 180 Proof
Science or history provide explanations of e.g. matters of fact, whereas, for me, philosophy reflectively proposes existential, critical or speculative interpretations (i.e. clarifications) of scientific, historical, etc explanations. — 180 Proof
plus these old sketches & &Science informs (constrains-enables) philosophy, etc.
Philosophy interprets (problematizes) science, etc. — 180 Proof
Whenever a question can be answered factually it's no longer philosophical and is translatable into a scientific hypothesis, or problem, to be 'solved' experimentally (which may be interpreted philosophically in terms of "what it means ..." ethically / aesthetically / ontologically, etc). — 180 Proof
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