You say the sciences are not sub-disciplines of philosophy. (Something about a narrow versus broad sense?) I say they are. — NKBJ
Matter exists, but the mathematics underneath seem more fundamental. — noAxioms
humans are logical — Devans99
These religions claim life after death. So life after death experiences do offer a way to assess the claims of conventional religion. — Devans99
But emotions are due to glands and chemicals in our brain/bodies. These things are investigable with science. We could correlate the patterns of music to the biological changes that take place. — Devans99
Religion and spirituality? — Pattern-chaser
Is basically a quest to answer the question 'what happens when we die?'. Possibly investigable empirically via 'Near Death Experiences'. — Devans99
"Music and art?" — Pattern-chaser
Music and art are mathematical. See for example the Golden Ratio. — Devans99
Questions like 'is there a God?', 'is space infinite?' we can collect empirical evidence for. — Devans99
I believe morality can be accounted for logically but that another discussion. IMO everything is susceptible to logical and thus scientific/philosophical investigation. — Devans99
We can have an abstract philosophical argument, say space is discrete, but that argument will not find general acceptance unless there is empirical evidence to back it up. This is the heart of the scientific method and philosophy must abide by it where possible in order to still be relevant. — Devans99
I think the problem is the general public have belief in the scientific method; if any philosophy does not follow the scientific method then it is regarded (by the general public) as unsound. — Devans99
↪Pattern-chaser
OK, how about:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_methodology — Devans99
That seems better! :smile: I'll read it shortly. Thanks. :up: — Pattern-chaser
Scientific method? Would we look in a cookery book to find out how to service a car engine? Would philosophical method not be more appropriate? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
From the source above:
'Among the activities often identified as characteristic of science are systematic observation and experimentation, inductive and deductive reasoning, and the formation and testing of hypotheses and theories'
In philosophy, we are light on observation and experimentation, but the rest of it sounds like the ticket... — Devans99
In philosophy, we are light on observation and experimentation, but the rest of it sounds like the ticket... — Devans99
The tried and true method of the ancients is dialogue. And that's what we have here! — NKBJ
[My underlining.]A common view among philosophers is that philosophy is distinguished by the ways that philosophers follow in addressing philosophical questions. There is not just one method that philosophers use to answer philosophical questions. — Wikipedia on Philosophical methodology
↪Pattern-chaser
OK, how about:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_methodology — Devans99
There is not on Wikipedia for it. I guess our method is based on:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-method/ — Devans99
As a philosopher, I don’t believe there something unique called “philosophical inquiry.” There are only different questions that dictate different methods of investigation and they are either good methods or bad methods as defined by science, math, or logic. These standards are applicable to all investigations, not just philosophical ones. — Heidi Savage, PhD Philosophy, University of Maryland
philosophy has demanding standards about the method of persuasion it prefers to use. It requires that something be persuasive for rational, logical, or otherwise evidence based reasons — VagabondSpectre
But darn... the obnoxious things always grab the attention. — 0 thru 9
Do unicorns exist? Cuz I know what those are. Please spare me any “unicorns exist in our minds” silliness, unless you are a fool you know very well thats not what we mean. — DingoJones
noun
▸ your attitude to life or to other people
▸ the attitude of people in a group
▸ your mood, or your attitude
▸ an enthusiastic or determined attitude
▸ the general or real meaning of something
▸ the part of a person that many people believe continues to exist after death
▸ a dead person who comes back into the world
▸ an imaginary creature with special powers
▸ a strong alcoholic drink such as whiskey or brandy
▸ alcohol used as a fuel or used by doctors for making things very clean
▸ a fundamental emotional and activating principle determining one's character
▸ any incorporeal supernatural being that can become visible (or audible) to human beings
▸ the vital principle or animating force within living things
▸ the general atmosphere of a place or situation and the effect that it has on people
▸ an inclination or tendency of a certain kind
▸ the state of a person's emotions (especially with regard to pleasure or dejection) ("He was in good spirits")
▸ animation and energy in action or expression
▸ the intended meaning of a communication
verb
▸to take someone or something away suddenly but without being noticed
▸infuse with spirit ("The company spirited him up") — Various online dictionaries
Like what can you do? — Maureen
Hey good luck, and welcome to the club of the overwhelmed. — Bitter Crank
What is the meaning of them and what should they do to fulfill that? This question is important since it guides everyone's everyday behavior. — Chris Liu
I don't buy into any kind of mind/body dualism. The mind is a part of the body. — NKBJ
If by "objective" you actually mean "absolute" or "100% certain" knowledge, then yes. But philosophers (academic and otherwise) don't always or all insist on that narrow definition. — NKBJ
The question is what anyone is "spying" that they're calling "spirit"? — Terrapin Station
"Are there unknown things in the universe?"
"Very likely."
"What can we say about them?"
"They are things and they are unknown to us."
"Anything else?"
"They're.....not any of the things we do know about, and they're not not things."
"Huh."
"Yup, huh." — NKBJ
I, unlike you, have no problem with simply ignoring people with different sensibilities. — DingoJones