Logic may be defined as the branch of philosophy that reflects upon the nature of thinking, or more specifically reasoning, itself. — Harry Hindu
In this sense, religion and politics are bad philosophy. Science would be good philosophy. — Harry Hindu
believe David Chalmers wrote a book related to that called Constructing the World. He focuses on the idea of scrutability where you start off with a few basic assumptions and build up your metaphysics. — Marchesk
What makes for a good philosophy? — A Seagull
True statements. — creativesoul
Philosophy is the search for wisdom, which is the ability to discern superior from inferior answers to questions. A good philosophy is thus one that provides such an ability. — Pfhorrest
Logic.
Logic may be defined as the branch of philosophy that reflects upon the nature of thinking, or more specifically reasoning, itself. — Harry Hindu
How do you distinguish superior answers from inferior ones? — A Seagull
Do you consider that your answer to the question 'What makes a good philosophy' to be a superior one? — A Seagull
Logic may be defined as the branch of philosophy that reflects upon the nature of thinking, or more specifically reasoning, itself.
— Harry Hindu
Logic is concerned with the nature of reasoning, i.e., correct reasoning as opposed to incorrect reasoning. The nature of thinking is much broader in scope than logic. — Sam26
There can be good and bad reasoning within any subject, including science. You can't just say that science equals good philosophy. It depends on the subject matter, and the arguments that are put forth. — Sam26
I agree that logic is an essential part of a good philosophy, it specifies how inferences can be made.
But the philosophy of logic is not logic itself. So what is logic? — A Seagull
Logic cannot determine what is good philosophy or not, because logic is formal. It has no material concepts and philosophy typically does. It can never say anything about the validity of these concepts, it can at best trace whether the steps made in reasoning with these concepts are valid. However, that says nothing about the nature of the premises. A = A does not make a philosophy, no matter the relevance of the principle of identity. — Tobias
... while philosophy and mathematics share much in common in their application of logic, they differ in that mathematical proofs merely show that if certain axioms or definitions are taken as true, then certain conclusions follow, while philosophy both does that and asserts the truth of some axioms or definitions. So while mathematics says things of the form "if [premise] then [conclusion]", philosophy says things of the form "[premise], therefore [conclusion]". Mathematics explores the abstract relations of ideas to each other without concern for the applicability of any of those ideas to any more practical matters (although applications for them are nevertheless frequently found), but philosophy is directly concerned with the practical application of the abstractions it deals with. It is not enough to merely define axiomatically some concept of "existence", "knowledge", "mind", etc, and validly expound upon the implications of that concept; it also matters if that is the correct, practically applicable concept of "existence", "knowledge", "mind", etc, that is useful for the purposes to which we want to employ that concept.
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Philosophy uses the tools of mathematics and the arts, logic and rhetoric, to do the job of creating the tools of the physical and ethical sciences. It is the bridge between the more abstract disciplines and the more practical ones: as described above, an inquiry stops being science and starts being philosophy when instead of using some methods that appeal to specific contingent experiences, it begins questioning and justifying the use of such methods in a more abstract way; and that activity in turn ceases to be philosophy and becomes art or math instead when that abstraction ceases to be concerned with figuring out how to practically answer questions about what is real or what is moral, but turns instead to the structure or presentation of the ideas themselves. — The Codex Quaerentis: Metaphilosophy
Is there an over-riding means of evaluating which is better than the others? — A Seagull
Take undeniably true statements. Use them as a means to discriminate between different philosophies. — creativesoul
:cool: Likewise, Tobias!... Hence different routes to the question of ' good philosophy' have been tried, for instance the existential one taken by 180 Proof. (Nice to see you by the way!)
I myself take a historical approach and see philosophy as an elucidation of questions and concepts, opening up new ways of giving meaning to the world. — Tobias
What makes for a good philosophy? — A Seagull
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