I'm not a philosopher, I'm wondering is there a single philosophical question that has been 'answered' definitively for eternity? — Tom Storm
My perception of the nature of philosophy keeps changing. — jgill
I'm not clear whether you think that's a bad thing or a good thing — Ludwig V
The thought of being wrong in an interesting way has a charming appeal — jgill
The thought of being wrong in an interesting way has a charming appeal — jgill
It certainly stuck in my mind — Ludwig V
A professor well known for his contributions to logic once confided in me that he understood Gödel's famous argument, but didn't believe it. (!) That's a consolation for people like me who find logic very difficult. — Ludwig V
Years ago when I was still somewhat active in the research community I published a paper on an unexplored topic. — jgill
Gödel's results are reflected in only a very small number of research themes. — jgill
Those results, in my uneducated view, are pretty devastating for mathematics as we know it. Philosophers are probably more inclined to take his theorem seriously. — Ludwig V
-I hope not....except of course if we they are Naturalists(methodological).I was wondering if any academic philosophers visit this forum as I am interested in some content that can be provided by them. — Shawn
-That's so true! Since your mentioned Philosophy of Science( I love this category), are you familiar with Paul Hoyningen's work on the Philosophy of Science(Systematicity, the Nature of Science). If yes, could you share some thoughts on his ideas on Science not being something special but still enjoying such an epistemic success!I am somewhat saddened that the logic and philosophy of mathematics and philosophy of science categories never receive much attention or forum posts.
What can be done about that? — Shawn
In the other hand, Guest Speakers was a good idea to ask academic philosophers to join TPF and answers some questions. — javi2541997
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.