It seems that you're interested in science and not philosophy. Hard to get much more than that from your explanation. — Jackson
No, I can tell you scientists aren't interested in that. It's not the role of science to try to paint a bigger picture of the reality, that's philosophy.
For example, I came up to a biology professor who was "debating" the notion of an individual, then I tried to get a definition out of him, which he couldn't produce, because he said it's too "complex". And there isn't any research on how to define that term, why? Because it's useless for biologists to define an individual, the use of that term isn't really important in their work. Why do I care about defining what an individual is? Because I care about the bigger picture, the representation of the world, that is a philosophical essence to me. — Skalidris
Defining basic concepts is what the philosophy of science does. You seemed to reject this idea but I did not understand why. — Jackson
If you really have no idea what philosophers of science do then you need to find out. I mean, this is extremely elementary — Jackson
It would do away with Popper 's methodology! — Hillary
. That’s exactly the problem: philosophy is going to ignore more and more what cannot be grasped in an objective way. What cannot be grasped in an objective way is precisely subjectivity and everything related to it, like, for example, relativism, consciousness. With this “scientific drift” of philosophy, a dangerous mentality can become more and more a normal habit of thinkers: the mentality of thinking “what I cannot understand, what I cannot grasp, does not exist, or is not worthy of interest”. According to some philosophers, for example, Chalmers’ “hard problem of consciousness” does not exist, simply because it cannot be defined objectively. Similarly, consciousness is being explored by philosophy as a phenomenon whose ultimate answer is expected to be given by neuron sciences. More dramatically, the problem of subjectivity, which I mean, relativism, just does not exist. Relativism is considered only in the perspective of social relativism, that can be easily turned into an objective phenomenon. For example, morality is subjective, because different people in society think differently, but this social perspective makes philosophers think that, once we understood the social dependencies that cause different opinions, we have ultimately gained an objective final image of the question. Essentially, what happens is that the philosopher forgets and ignores their own subjective existence; subjectivity is the plurality of others’ opinions, forgetting that this is being thought inside the subjectivity of who is thinking of it.is a more objective window — Skalidris
Absolutely not, Popper is talking about science, about the method, about what qualifies as science, so this is philosophy of science, not a science-based philosophy. — Skalidris
And science is the only verified "human truth" we have. Science shows the road via knowledge. — dimosthenis9
I cannot think of a single thing from science that helps me understand the world. — Jackson
Philosophy's goal should be to contribute to the search of truth — dimosthenis9
It is when you are curious — dimosthenis9
Sometimes the truth can turn out to be a mass hallucination, while the real truth is dismissed because of that longing. — Hillary
Physics, e.g., is about "hows" rather than "whys". Philosophy can dabble in the later, but not the former. — jgill
But philosopher of science Joseph Rouse argues that science frequently does play the kind of role people tend to associate with philosophy. — Joshs
But philosopher of science Joseph Rouse argues that science frequently does play the kind of role people tend to associate with philosophy. — Joshs
Would a “science-based philosophy” be “better” than the contemporary philosophy? — Skalidris
I've read things by Bohr, Heisenberg, Schrodinger, and Sean Carroll that were philosophical and insightful. But most of science is as interesting as reading an accounting textbook. — Jackson
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