You yourself are saying science(knowledge) is seperate from philosophy (wisdom).
Without philosophy means without love of wisdom...
Anything not guided by the love of wisdom is guided by something else, no?
Tell me how science can seperate itself from philosophy without being foolish?
Trying to understand nature without first understanding yourself (or in conjunction with) could be THE definition of unwise, on par with trying to gain the whole world but losing one's own soul.
"I was only doing my job!" — Yohan
Again ALL scientific hypotheses are Metaphysics. Mathematics are NOT science. Its a tool based(that science uses) on an accurate language of logic that has the same role like human language in Philosophy. — Nickolasgaspar
(SEP)Platonism about mathematics (or mathematical platonism) is the metaphysical view that there are abstract mathematical objects whose existence is independent of us and our language, thought, and practices
Philosophy is universal phenomenological ontology — Xtrix
So even tools can be metaphysical. — jgill
Metaphysical views ....are metaphysics — Nickolasgaspar
-so this statement raises on important question....what went wrong with you?lolThinking is an activity that human beings do. — Xtrix
It might be. I can recall people struggling with such concepts. The important question is...are such ontological speculations meaningful. Can we arrive to meaningful and wise conclusions?Philosophy is universal phenomenological ontology. — Xtrix
-let me get this straight now.... the term Nature derives from the Greek physis(φυση)lol????Questioning relegated to the causal relations in nature is natural philosophy. Its ontological foundations are just that: natural. “Natura” derives from the Greek: phusis — Xtrix
-Dude stop saying unfounded deepities. You can not do philosophy without having basic empirical observations to start with . First we interact empirically with your environment, we form our philosophical questions and hypotheses and we look back at nature for additional information that could provide answers and validate some of our hypothesis.Before we take a look at nature — which is one aspect of being — we are doing philosophy. Science is derived from ontology. — Xtrix
-Those are steps of the Philosophical method, and all major branches of Philosophy are included!I see your icon only lists physics as a part of philosophy. Are you saying all the other branches of science are spin-offs? Or is this icon from the distant past? — jgill
let me get this straight now.... the term Nature derives from the Greek physis(φυση)lol???? — Nickolasgaspar
First we interact empirically with your environment — Nickolasgaspar
You can NOT have science without philosophy and philosophy without science. — Nickolasgaspar
:lol:Yes, it does. Natura is the Latin translation of phusis. — Xtrix
Questioning relegated to the causal relations in nature is natural philosophy. Its ontological foundations are just that: natural. “Natura” derives from the Greek: phusis — Xtrix
First we interact empirically with your environment — Nickolasgaspar
No. First we are. — Xtrix
That is a factually wrong statement. We first start as "stupid" babies, kids and youngsters and by accumulating facts about the world thus feeding our philosophical narrative. Put your ducks straight mate.Before we take a look at nature — which is one aspect of being — we are doing philosophy. Science is derived from ontology. — Nickolasgaspar
Well you can but then you can only be able to produce pseudo philosophy.Yes, you can. — Xtrix
translated in Greek — Nickolasgaspar
That is a factually wrong statement. — Nickolasgaspar
Questioning relegated to the causal relations in nature is natural philosophy. Its ontological foundations are just that: natural. “Natura” derives from the Greek: phusis — Xtrix
There are no “facts” involved. So this statement is just stupid. — Xtrix
-Yes I know you don't have a clue. lolLook - you have no idea — Xtrix
- This is your expert opinion as a translator? lolI doubt if one person on this forum takes you seriously. A normal person would look at this feedback and perhaps reflect…but self-deluded liars like you apparently can’t. — Xtrix
I think that what you're saying was already well known thousands of years ago, and was even discussed by Plato in his Cratylus dialogue.
And all this elaboration on speech and meaning were already discussed very sensibly by Locke, Reid, Priestley and others.
Was there more added later on? Very much so. Quite a lot.
I think you simplify analytic philosophy. People like Nagel, Haack, Tallis, McGinn and a few others are very, very good.
But, to each there own. — Manuel
I'm not a post-modernist or deeply read in Derrida, but I find myself agreeing for the most part. For me it seems that the anti-foundationalist conclusions of po-mo are an inevitable consequence of a process that began in earnest (perhaps) with the enlightenment project. We have peeled away the layers of the onion and found that there are only layers and ultimately nothing at the core. While this represents a freedom of sorts, it terrifies and outrages those who insist on foundations. Humans seem hard-wired for this, we navigate via certainty. The challenge for us all is how to reinvent ourselves in relation to this conception. My prediction in the short term is that the culture wars will lead us back into flailing 'certainties' and ever escalating cant. — Tom Storm
-You can never say that an objective set of observations can or cant mirror nature accurately!
You are using an argument from ignorance fallacy as an excuse to dismiss our only credible and objective source of knowledge and sneak in pseudo philosophical speculations as competitive ontological frameworks.
Again I am not saying that our observations are absolute true or the picture we receive is 100% accurate. I only pointing out that we can not evaluate the accuracy of our observation so we are forced to work with what we got (pragmatic necessity) either they agree with our metaphysical worldviews or not! On the other hand idealistic and supernatural claims fall outside our Cataleptic Impressions and our methods of observation so we have zero objective information about these speculations. — Nickolasgaspar
I don't read Tyson. He is too poetic for my taste and diluted in epistemology. Again phenomenology has many varieties. Some are philosophical but many are pseudo philosophical. This is the problem with Philosophy. Under the same umbrella term its possible to found good and bad Philosophy!
My statement "whatever it means" was my response to the claim "consciousness being fundamental".
ITs was not a cheep blow. I used that statement because consciousness in Neuroscience has a specific definition and pseudo philosophy/supernaturalism definitions are pretty vague.
What verify in science is in direct conflict with the proclaimed "role" of consciousness by pseudo philosophical views. — Nickolasgaspar
-What I personally think is irrelevant. In science we establish Sufficiency and Necessity between a causal mechanism and the effect by verifying Strong Correlations between a process and a phenomenon. So to explain this process in terms of your example.....an Environmental or organic stimuli (a drowning child or a pebble or a fish breaking the surface of the water etc) produces connections in the brain (surface ripples ) that in turn enables the emergence of mental conscious state with a specific conscious content( wave, bubbles, foam, distorted reflections etc). — Nickolasgaspar
Again you are making an argument from ignorance (because we can not disprove that there is an addition level of reality responsible for mental states we can dismiss or ignore Neuroscience's epistemology without evidence against it and without any evidence for the suggested idea)!
This is NOT how the burden of proof works. This is not how we identify a Default position(Null Hypothesis) .
This is fallacious reasoning! We can not throw out of the window our objective observations and frameworks that make testable predictions (diagnose pathology) and real life technical applications (accurately read complex thoughts, surgery and medicinal protocols)...just because some believe a fallacious claim!
By definition the truth value of a fallacious claim is unknown so we are forced to dismiss it as pseudo metaphysics. — Nickolasgaspar
-I think I understand what you want to say. You are misusing the term "observation" and that creates a miscommunication. To set things straight , of course we can observe the act of believing and knowing by many methods. We can either compare brain scans in relation to specific stimuli, check blood profile , behavior etc.
What we can't observe is how others individuals subjectively experience those states. This is because it is a subjective experience!
Our goal is not to experience other peoples experiences!!!!! Its nonsensical to even suggest it! What w can do is to verify the processes responsible for the experience. We can do that with objective methods of investigation. — Nickolasgaspar
The "knowing of anythings" is the process of interacting with the world and composing objective descriptions about it. Knowledge is any claim that's objectively in agreement with current facts and carries Instrumental value. Everything gets in our brain by empirical interactions. If you have ever observed babies growing up, you will see that in their early years they know nothing about the world. By interacting with it and testing their assumptions (this is why they are prone to accidents lol) their small brains construct a mental model. This process is called Learning. We can see the changes in the brain and how learning things affect size and function. — Nickolasgaspar
The think is we are talking about the knowledge on a phenomenon that is studied by a Scientific discipline so "understanding philosophy" or better listening to pseudo philosophical ideas on the mind or consciousness is irrelevant.
When we need to learn things about the causal mechanisms of a biological phenomenon....we study science.
When we want to understand the implications in real life of this knowledge, its value and meaning for our lives...then we use philosophy.
WE NEVER use philosophy to assume magical ontologies that are Unnecessary, Insufficient and Unfalsifiable.
Its not like they are the products and conclusions of our observations!! Someone made up an magical realm and placed his idea in a safe place away from falsification without any epistemic foundations! — Nickolasgaspar
-"This is an epistemic relation, not a causal one."
-Correct....observing doesn't cause the event you observe....where exactly do you see a problem???
I don't get what problem do you see in an event (volcano) and an observer observing the event (which is a different event on its own).
Could you point out where the problem is???? — Nickolasgaspar
Mathematics are NOT science. Its a tool based(that science uses) on an accurate language of logic that has the same role like human language in Philosophy. — Nickolasgaspar
You can not do philosophy without having basic empirical observations to start with . First we interact empirically with your environment, we form our philosophical questions and hypotheses and we look back at nature for additional information that could provide answers and validate some of our hypothesis. — Nickolasgaspar
You can NOT have science without philosophy and philosophy without science — Nickolasgaspar
You're right to bow out of this conversation with your tail between your legs — Xtrix
You're right to bow out of this conversation with your tail between your legs — Xtrix — Agent Smith
But reading Kant does not yield zero information. That is, well, silly. Not that he's right about everything. Not the point. — Constance
Of course they have. If you talk about mind properties non contingent to natural processes or "post modern Theology" or accept unfalsifiable metaphysical statements as foundations for your philosophical views then both of my labels are justified in this conversation!You toss terms like "pseudo" and "supernaturalism" around like you think they have some place in this disagreement. — Constance
- Is it? Are they? Maybe you are right.To me it is just the presumption of condescension usually found among those who are limited in their reading. People in science generally are philosophically clueless, which is to be forgiven; after all, they don't read philosophy, or, if they do, it ends up being the philosophy of science.
Generally, when I ask someone with your predilections, they really haven't read anything. — Constance
"Personally?? The idea here is that a CT scan is not a mirror of the mind in the truest sense of what a mirror is. We can talk like this, but this is a metaphor at work here."
-Brain scans detects and records function while a mirror reflects an image. We know that Mirrors don't even display the light correctly, due to imperfections(distortions) and the fact that they flip images.
So the mirror is a bad metaphor.
In fMRI scans we are not interested in accuracy or reflecting light. We are tracking the role of every area of the brain and their connections. We can test any specific mental state by disturbing specific functions and connections allowing us to establish necessity and sufficiency of a function for a specific mental state.
-". In the matter at hand, imagine you had a CT scan of something, but you were told you had to dismiss all familiar possibilities for its interpretation. So much for interpretation. But then, you do have what is there before you to be taken not as something impossibly beyond the phenomenon itself, but simply AS itself. That is where we are. — Constance
-In science we don't arbitrary declare causality.We test and verify causality by building a case on the accumulation of Strong Correlation between Necessary mechanisms by proving them sufficiency in the process.. If you want to declare the epistemic relation to be a causal one, then you will have a lot of explaining to do. For one thing, the very notion of causality itself would have to be causally accounted for. — Constance
.The idea here is not to deny what science does, nor its conclusions nor its theorizing. It is to say something really quite simple and without argument: all science has to say rests with what lies before the perceiving intelligence. This is, if you will, a horizon of intuition. Nobody disagrees with this. The most devoted analytic philosopher understands that phenomenology cannot be refuted, only ignored by people why prefer to think of other things. Who cares? You may thematize the world as you please as long as the world has those themes there for the inquiry. — Constance
Not to ignore neuroscience's epistemology. To realize that this epistemology is based upon something more foundational: intuitive givenness. Science is left alone since no one is denying its claims. It is a different world of inquiry altogether.
If you are looking for evidence, and you want to be a good neuroscientist, consider how you would you would translate neurological events into events that are not neurological. There is no assumed ignorance. Just do it. If I asked you to do this in any other case of identifiable connectivity, you wouldl be appalled at the presumption that one could make a scientific claim with out this connection in place. So, just make it. If you cannot, and you can't, you may continue on in your fashion. But you would be thoroughly disabused about the foundational validity of your claims.
Or you can exercise your curiosity and ask questions like, how is it that ideas and object are related? I cannot apprehend an object apart from the understanding, so is it that objects cannot be considered as a "stand alone" presence? What does stand alone even mean at the basic level of inquiry? And on and on.
Pseudo metaphysics? Yes, I despise this sort of thing. I am interested in authentic metaphysics. — Constance
-No my problem is thoughts that ignore that their starting point should always be epistemically supported, free of fallacies and they shouldn't assume what they need to prove.I do suspect your problem is that you don't have a capacity to think beyond the models provided the science text. — Constance
Observe the thought, the experience rising within. Observe that YOU are in a believing state. To observe this is an obvious and simple matter. You have beliefs and you know this. So, there you are believing the sun is out or the cat is sleeping, and conviction is, say, upon you. Now ask, how is it this belief state has verification? That is, clearly you believe and trust your belief, but what is this trust grounded upon? It is purely an intuitive presence of belief that determines this, but because this is given without a justificatory grounding, then it sits there, indeterminate, believing, but at its basis, indeterminate. Of course, you can say, this indeterminacy is the best we can do. We do not live in the mind of God, and so all knowledge claims are like this. And I say, brilliant. This is our indeterminacy. — Constance
The more time you spend trying to see this, the more you understand that this condition is not remote from our existence. It is only remote FROM the pov of the presumption of knowing, which is pervasive in all things, like passing the salt and taking a bus. This philosophical perspective is THE perspective: a suspension of the "pass the salt" affairs in order to examine things at a level where presumption itself can be interrogated. Philosophy asks, what is belief? — Constance
This is just evasion. Or you really can't understand the question. Empirical interactions? But this is exactly what is being questioned. You can't say, oh well, these are just the way of it. Is this how science works?? Is a cloud just a cloud, with no care given to its anatomical analysis? — Constance
-No, Magic is a sign of a claim that attempts to describe a phenomenon based on an assumption without including the describing a of mechanism that obeys known rules of reality.Quite the opposite. What is magical are unexamined assumptions. You are fond of the world magical. This is a sure sign of a dogmatic personality. — Constance
. There is therapy for this; it is called reading outside what dictates your thoughts. It is not magic your fear. It is the unknown, the disconnect from the ready grasp, the letting go of certainty and familiarity, this frightens you. Understandable. It is disquieting to learn that the world is, at the basic level, alien to your ability to know. — Constance
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