What do you mean by everyday conduct of science? You are probably not yielding results because it is so broad. Are you talking about the environmental impact of technology? — TimeLine
why is the world the way it is?
Now, I don't see how science could ever explain this. — darthbarracuda
Yes, I believe it is the backbone of philosophy, but knowledge can be gained apart from using just logic. — Sam26
I say argument is the backbone because one of the key features of philosophy is analyzing beliefs that are put forward as arguments — Sam26
The goal is truth, and yes the wisdom you gain from discovery, but you have to do it well to gain wisdom — Sam26
One doesn't gain wisdom apart from gaining knowledge. — Sam26
I didn't say that was all there was to philosophy, but that it's a very important part of philosophy. — Sam26
So thinking well in philosophy requires the ability to analyze and form good arguments, this, it seems to me, is the backbone of philosophy. — Sam26
Horses for courses. Sharks think better than humans when it comes to doing the calculations for swimming and eating fish in the ocean.
But they do not know how to start a computer — charleton
Two humans. One quickly finds the answer to a problem (such as a maths one) whose solution is irrefutable; the other never finds the solution. — charleton
The same pair of people being quizzed on a matter of emotional intelligence the result might find the maths failure can find the solution whilst the maths whizz fails even to understand the emotional problem. — charleton
After some very superficial study of philosophy and religion I had the feeling that faith was nothing more than A=belief without evidence. Position A is, from all angles, completely irrational and so, clearly, anti-philosophical. — TheMadFool
Don’t understand your beef. There are better and worse tennis players, pianists, writers, artists, scientists - not everyone has the same degree of skill in thinking and writing, and understanding of philosophy. — Wayfarer
That's a pretty common theme not exclusive to some philosophers who criticise social structures for creating psychological distress. Im sure many socialist and Marxist psychologists and social theorists should come to mind.
Hence my last post. Has this focus on creating an ideal society been futile and instead we should just focus on the individual and their beliefs about and in relation to society? — Posty McPostface
Perhaps, mental health simply be understood as practicing good moral behavior and conduct or just living ethically? — Posty McPostface
Is it even possible to find work that we love(ie the work that eventually becomes our life, the work, infront of which work/life balance is BS)
Or is it the other way around, i.e we begin something and that eventually becomes the thing that we love/passion? — krishnamurti
I think that Realism underlies the scientific method. The idea that whatever is amenable to empirical testing is actually there and exists. Also that the solutions that science proposes to the problems it encounters are couched in terms of this reality.
There is, of course, a risk of descending into circularity, but I think it safe to say that now (not so during the time of Newton) science has in fact honed in on the idea of the physical, and has adopted that metaphysics. — tom
Without addressing your questions in much detail, let me just ask: have you never had the feeling that you are talking to someone who is more intelligent than you? — jamalrob
It makes sense to say it because thinking is a general skill. To say someone thinks better is to make a general statement, which is appropriate when we're talking about a general skill. It's true that thinking combines different styles and motivations, and some may be better at logical development than intuitive or imaginative leaps, but to say someone is a better thinker in general is probably most often just to say that they are better at all of those things, and that their thinking skills can be applied widely. — jamalrob
Saying that some people think better than other people do is a truism. It's like saying "Good food is better than bad food."
I think it's obvious that some people think better than I do (they are just smarter than me, more insightful, logical, etc.) and it's obviously that I think better than some people too. Some people are better looking, have bigger dicks, make better pie crust, are stronger, healthier, etc. than other people.
WISDOMfromPO-MO, are you aware -- if not, allow me -- that 50% of the population is below average? — Bitter Crank
As humans we pride ourselves on being intelligent. Intelligence is a defining feature of being human. — TheMadFool
Are there other possibilities? — anonymous66
That's not the lib/prog view, whatever that could be. — Akanthinos
If anything could constitute The Lib/Prog view is that, in weird terms, self-objectification is a form of empowerement, in the sense that the commodification of a subject's performance, if the choice and dynamics of this commodification remains mostly in the hands of the subject, is a form of liberation. Baudrillard put this in very eloquent words in The system of objects. — Akanthinos
Well I just think that is completely backwards. It pains me to side with conservatives on anything, but in this matter I do. Actually I am highly suspicious of the 'politics of identity' and the fact that sexual pleasure has now been declared a civil right, but I had better shut up before I get myself banned. — Wayfarer
I think on the contrary a great deal of sexual misconduct is stimulated (I won’t use the word ‘inspired’) by pornography. This depicts women as eager participants in all types of fantasised sexual acts including many that would have been universally regarded as perverted only a couple of generations ago. Quite a few of those accused insist that their victims were willing participants, and I think for sure the onus must be on the aggressor to prove that this was the case. But I think the question could be asked, do the enormous numbers of women who do participate in porn media actually encourage the very behaviours that these aggressors exhibit?
Now of course it could be said, that in this case, the women involved in pornography are consenting (and I’m sure that’s true in many cases, although there is probably some coercion involved also.) But as the behaviours being modelled are often the same in both porn media and harassment cases, with the variable being ‘consent’, then I think society ought to consider whether the ready availability of material depicting such acts might be a contributing factor. — Wayfarer
If you want to stop sexual harassment, change the power relationships. — T Clark
Like I said..... — Wayfarer
The idea that humans are like mechanisms of any kind is pushing the analogy too far — Wayfarer
So the whole analogy is that, just as a complex object like a watch must have a builder, so too must a complex world in which there are living things have one. — Wayfarer
He says that ‘a deity capable of engineering all the organized complexity in the world — Wayfarer
must already have been vastly complex in the first place ..." He calls this "postulating organized complexity without offering an explanation." — Wayfarer
However as numerous critics have pointed out, the classical understanding of deity is precisely not a complex being at all, but is utterly simple. — Wayfarer
Which is why I said, the underlying issue is really intentionality rather than design. — Wayfarer
The usual expression is ‘methodological naturalism’. — Wayfarer
It's probably more to do with the functions of the inner areas of the brain, such as the medulla oblongata. — believenothing
It's a joy only because it offers an alternative to the depressing notion that we exist by accident. It's comfy to think our bodies were made "with us in mind", as if it's all a great gift. It's kind of sad how people will froth at the mouth when they marvel at the cherry-picked beauty of a biological system. :-| — darthbarracuda
Being designed, in a loose sense, means that you were created for some purpose, or at the very least you are not an accident. Most theology would tell you that purpose is to worship/serve god. — ProbablyTrue
I don't think you're seeing the point, but then it's a really big issue. — Wayfarer
This shows a complete misunderstanding of people and their capabilities. There are people, maybe you are one, who can take charge of their own lives and build a place for themselves no matter what the conditions are. That's not true for most people. Most people just want to fit into a place where they can earn a good living and have a secure and satisfying job. That's not an unreasonable desire. As a manager, those people can be intelligent and competent coworkers. Not everyone is a dynamic entrepreneur. Most people aren't. If you are a manager, you wouldn't want them to be. Entrepreneurs don't make good employees. — T Clark
A good coach, manager, knows that the best team comes from bringing everyone along. Improving everyone. Maybe that's not true for professional or high power collegiate sports where you get to choose who plays, but for most, and for just about all in business, it is true. You're given who you have to work with and you make the best of it. That means getting the best out of everyone. — T Clark
Here's T Clark's formulation - In any enterprise; soccer team, engineering office; factory floor; hospital; McDonalds; 25 % of the people are competent, 25% are incompetent, and the middle 50% are more or less ok. I have seen a good manager or coach take the bottom 25% and make them ok; make the middle 50% better, provide support to get the best work out of the top 25%, and get them to all work together better to create an effective workforce. There aren't many managers or coaches who can do that. I guess that's because 25% of the managers and coaches are incompetent and 50% are just ok. — T Clark
it doesn't mean that we have no control over our minds. And, I didn't need to research philosophy to know that. It just requires being conscious ... stepping back and seeing that you're not your mind. — Aurora
Well, I don't have reams of data at my finger tips, either. But... Logic tells us, does it not, that if customers, workers, managers, and shareholders are all getting what they want, then the system has to be working. Customers want affordable and decent-quality goods; workers want reasonable labor loads and adequate pay managers want production to go smoothly and profitably; and shareholders want dividends and their assets to hold value.
If everyone in the economy is fucking up, fucking each other over, fucking off, and constantly lying, cheating, and stealing then no one is going to be satisfied: not the consumer, not the worker, not the manager, not the stockholder.
Most people are getting what they want. The economic system is big enough and complicated enough to allow for a certain low level of continuous failure. 35,000 people die in traffic accidents, true. But out of 320 million americans covering hundreds of billions miles a year on the roads, that is a low failure rate. Sure, there is waste, fraud, and abuse in every organization--whether it be the Cancer Society, Apple Computer, Exxon, or the Arkansas legislature. But, if the level of waste, fraud, and abuse is low and tolerable, we can live with it.
It takes an extremely efficient and vicious police state to eliminate all waste and fraud. I'd rather have some waste, fraud. and abuse and NO police state. As the recently disgraced Garrison Keillor said at the National Press Club a while back: — Bitter Crank
An intelligent human, to me, is one who is able to use his/her mind and come up with an original thought, regardless of whether the whole world would disagree with that thought ... i.e. not one whose mind uses him/her, not one who blindly plays out a script that everybody else in the world is following. — Aurora