I agree, that is why ive attempted a distinction between all of that and academic philosophy. — DingoJones
I don't think academic vs non-academic is the place to put the boundary. Peter Singer is an academic, for example. There is a lot of woolly thinking outside the academe and a lot of sharp thinking inside it. — Cuthbert
But I have some sympathy with your complaint. I admit I graduated in 1979 with the thought - "Now Wittgenstein has proved the vacuousness of metaphysics I suppose that's the end of it." But still we debate whether the lump of clay and the statue are one thing or two. It's partly because the confusions arise from deep problems with our thought and language which will repeatedly resurface. I'm prepared to admit that it's partly a desire to play with ideas just because they are there. You put it more derogatorily but I don't entirely reject the complaint. — Cuthbert
We would say “what a joke, get your shit together geology" — DingoJones
says more about Pinker — DingoJones
I should have used some emojo’s I guess. — DingoJones
Hilarious how many major philosophical inquiries are pretty close to an even split despite being discussed and debated for centuries.
So academic philosophy is a complete joke. Roger that. — DingoJones
But I have some sympathy with your complaint. — Cuthbert
My take on this is that philosophical questions may well have been correctly answered already. But we don't have a way of settling the dispute easily. In science, the scientific method eventually compels dissenters, at least amongst scientists (not flat earthers). In philosophy, it's easier to maintain a dissenting position, as consulting the physical world rarely settles the dispute. — bert1
On the contrary, this is just to say that philosophy isn't science, and isn't supposed to be. However there can be rigor in the conceptual analysis, examination of inferences, clarifying concepts, mapping the theoretical possibilities (or interpretations of them). Philosophers can and should fix the sloppy thinking when they find it in other disciplines. — bert1
How can you call academic philosophy rigorous when the results of that “rigor” are inconclusive on so many major philosophical issues? — DingoJones
How do you know they have been correctly solved? — DingoJones
How can you call a result conclusive when there is an near even split about what the conclusion is?! — DingoJones
Depends what we mean by 'conclusive' I guess. I don't think it entails agreement. I can find something to conclusively be the case. But someone else might think I'm completely mistaken. — bert1
The experts have spent centuries or more and still can’t give us a reliable conclusion — DingoJones
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.