I do not think the complete scientific method can exist without philosophy. I do not think a completely philosophical exploration can be complete without science. — Philosophim
There is a huge gulf between physics and materialism. Physics describes how matter behaves; materialism is the desire to acquire wealth and comfort. How did isms get mixed up with science in the first place? — Vera Mont
So, it appears that you, like me, see the two disciplines connected within a bi-conditional relationship. — ucarr
no science is ever done purely a priori, and no philosophy is ever done purely a posteriori;
— Mww
Do you think it's also true when we switch the position of the two disciplines in the above statement? — ucarr
I suppose I'm saying science and philosophy are two sub-divisions, or specializations operating under one over-arching category. — ucarr
If a philosopher is not first a scientist, then they need to always maintain a direct line to someone who is. — ucarr
I think the relationship between scientific truth and philosophical truth is bi-conditional. — ucarr
philosophy differs from science merely in the determination and application of rules.
— Mww
I think this difference, when the two disciplines dialog constructively, for my reasons above, shrinks to a near vanishing point. — ucarr
I do not think the complete scientific method can exist without philosophy — Philosophim
There is a huge gulf between physics and materialism. — Vera Mont
The philosopher doesn’t need a scientific consult if he is theorizing in, or merely speculating on, that which cannot at all be legislated by natural law. Or, in the interest of fairness, why would he? — Mww
Science is science of x.
Except philosophy, which is the science of science or the science of scientiIzing. So philosophy is inherently self-reflective taking as its subject, the subject. — Fire Ologist
Is every category of philosophy a type of metaphysics? — ucarr
Agreed. But that philosophy should be provided by the scientists. — jgill
Are you answering "yes" to the question:
Is every category of philosophy a type of metaphysics? — ucarr
….a philosopher arrives at some logically valid statements…. — ucarr
….neuroscience discovers through long-term testing…. — ucarr
….it can work through unlimited higher orders of categorical thinking… — ucarr
….after reaching higher order X of categorical thinking…. — ucarr
If science discovers a posteriori the facts of nature, then does it follow that science, being the source of empirical truth, equates itself with materialism? — ucarr
No — 180 Proof
Isevery[any] category of science a type of materialism? — ucarr
No — 180 Proof
Does philosophy hold aloof from science within an academic fortress of abstract math and logic? — ucarr
I don't understand this question. — 180 Proof
How would the scientist test the philosopher’s logically valid statements, the subject and predicate of which are merely abstract conceptions? At bottom would be Aristotle’s laws of thought, in which it is clear A = A would be impossible to test with deductive certainty. — Mww
In the following sense, yes. Philosophizing is a reflective, meta activity. The earth formed and out of the waters animals diversified, and human beings thought. Somewhere in there was a moment where philosophy was new. At that moment, there was the thing (earth, waters diversifying animals, etc), and now the meta thing held or dispersed by a human. Philosophizing is humans being meta with things. — Fire Ologist
...Philosophizing is a reflective, meta activity... — Fire Ologist
If abstract thought is connected to the brain, then the limitations inherent in the material_physical dimensions of the brain: cells, synapses, electric current, gravity etc. exert controlling limits on what the content of abstract thought can be. — ucarr
To exalt the mind's perception of reality beyond limitations of the brain amounts to driving the express lane to fallacy without knowing it. — ucarr
If the human can think whatever he wants — Mww
The brain informs of all our knowledge, but doesn’t give us even an inkling of the knowledge of how it informs of the knowledge we have. — Mww
Because we don’t know enough of how the brain works, by what warrant can we say we’ve over-reached the brain’s capacity for knowing things? — Mww
We're over-reaching when we imagine a fleshy mass of connected hemispheres has a scope of imagination beyond what protein-based matter has the capacity to conceive. — ucarr
Agreed. But that philosophy should be provided by the scientists. — jgill
Any bumper sticker you can provide for why? It seems odd to me. Like saying hydrologists need provide the engineering know-how for hydro-dams. — AmadeusD
Yet, for all intents and purposes, that is exactly what appears to be the case. — Mww
...the ideas of science and scientific models may rest on philosophy assumptions and even physics, as 'hard science' may rest on the metaphysical imagination. In particular, quantum physics breaks down the basics of hardcore materialistic approaches of scientific models, leading to scientific ideas and, even paradigms... — Jack Cummins
Now I can ask you what is the relationship between imagination and metaphysics? — ucarr
Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world, stimulating progress, giving birth to evolution. — Albert Einstein, What Life Means to Einstein (1924)
The imagination of protein-based sentience — ucarr
I wonder if you'e thinking philosophy is always an instance of Chinese boxes? — ucarr
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.