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Author Topic:   On The Philosophy of, well, Philosophy
crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1488 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 61 of 307 (431341)
10-30-2007 3:00 PM
Reply to: Message 58 by Modulous
10-30-2007 12:12 PM


Well, we'd need to talk about epistemology to answer that question.
I don't see why. Remaining completely (and blissfully) ignorant of epistemology was never any impediment to my learning about the world around me. From my experience working with actual scientists I can inform you that the concerns of so-called "philosophy of science" are remote irrelevancies to the day-to-day work of scientists. Indeed the number of scientists I've ever met who give any thought to philosophy of science are few and far between.
Even a child, completely ignorant of all thought in the "field" of epistemology, is able to learn about the world around them simply by keeping an open mind and open eyes. So, obviously, tackling the sophistry of epistemology is not a prerequisite to learning about the natural world.
And still doesn't. We have no way of knowing which is right, materialism or constructivism or supernaturalism or whatever.
That's exactly my point. A field which can't settle even the most basic, fundamental questions of its discipline clearly lacks rigor and cannot meaningfully inform us about anything.
It's ridiculous. It would be like biologists being completely unable to arrive at any consensus about whether or not populations grow to the capacity of their environment. Physicists completely unable to determine whether or not objects had mass. Chemists completely unable to determine whether or not HCl was an acid or base.
Philosophy has no rigor. As a result, no philosophical model can be verified. No philosophical assertion can be defended except circularly. ("If you accept unknowable X as true, then Y must follow.")
On what basis can we accept that the real world exists so that it can be examined, described, and explained by science?
Call it the Samuel Johnson proof ("I refute it - thus!"), which of course was no philosophy at all but simply the obvious, empirical observation that, indeed, the world around us is what's real.
Of course, the fact that kicking rocks is what we're reduced to only confirms my view that philosophy can't provide answers to any questions. Johnson's "proof" not only refutes solipsism, it refutes philosophy altogether.
But you are equivocating the school of metaphysics with philosophy as a whole.
There is no "philosophy as a whole." Philosophy, of course, was originally all forms of thinking about things - mathematics/logic, empirical science, etc. As the rigorous fields were spun off into disciplines of their own right, philosophy came to represent only those things that, with no rigor, were of no use to those seeking real knowledge. Those things that could not answer questions, in other words.
Philosophy is a dumpster. If you think the be-all and -end-all of knowledge is to ask the question, then obviously philosophy has endless appeal to you. If you're someone who believes that answers are more useful, then you'll correctly see philosophy as a dumping ground for bullshit that sounds impressive until you stop and think about it.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 58 by Modulous, posted 10-30-2007 12:12 PM Modulous has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 63 by Modulous, posted 10-30-2007 3:55 PM crashfrog has replied
 Message 68 by Hyroglyphx, posted 10-30-2007 10:20 PM crashfrog has replied
 Message 86 by JavaMan, posted 10-31-2007 4:57 AM crashfrog has not replied

Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 62 of 307 (431348)
10-30-2007 3:20 PM
Reply to: Message 60 by crashfrog
10-30-2007 2:44 PM


For instance, why is "what is most important to human beings" a question of philosophy? It seems to me to be a question better suited to empirical methods,
But to answer why you think it is a question better suited to empirical methods, you need to justify your position using philosophy. You'd go for a bit of empiricism and rationalism no doubt, throwing verificationism in there for good measure as well as a few other philosophical concepts.
it's obvious that philosophy has no ability to answer any questions whatsoever
Correct. In fact, nothing has any ability to answer any questions. One needs to turn to philosophy in order to get started on asking any questions, and one might get answers that are meaningful or one might not.
It can, at best, be equally suited to answer answerless questions.
Bingo - that's philosophy right there. Well, at least some of it. Whether or not a question is answerless is a matter of philosophical debate, assuming it does not have an answer does that make it meaningless? Yet more philosophy. If decide they are answerable, how can we know when we have the correct answer? Philosophy. What do we do when we have what we think is the correct answer? Philosophy.
It's all philosophy, all the way down I'm afraid - and everything you think about what is true, or real or a way of knowing some information...all comes under philosophy.
Of course, you think that all philosophies but your own (more or less) are wrong, cannot answer questions, pose meaningless statements etc etc. However, you seem to make the mistake of thinking that you don't utilize philosophy yourself, since your way of thinking is right and everything else is silly meaningless philosophy.
Think about it, you attempted to show that "what is most important to human beings?" is not a philosophical question by demonstrating how your own philosophical worldview would conclude is the best way to answer the question. How can this not strike you as strange?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 60 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 2:44 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 64 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 6:56 PM Modulous has replied

Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 63 of 307 (431353)
10-30-2007 3:55 PM
Reply to: Message 61 by crashfrog
10-30-2007 3:00 PM


Does evidence help us gain knowledge? Well, we'd need to talk about epistemology to answer that question.
I don't see why.
It should be apparent, but the question is a question of epistemology. How does evidence help us gain knowledge? Can you answer it without engaging in epistemology?
Remaining completely (and blissfully) ignorant of epistemology was never any impediment to my learning about the world around me.
Obviously, and a more powerful example would be to look at animals that do likewise without any cultural exposure to epistemology.
From my experience working with actual scientists I can inform you that the concerns of so-called "philosophy of science" are remote irrelevancies to the day-to-day work of scientists.
And a good job it is too, they have more practical things to do with their grant money.
So, obviously, tackling the sophistry of epistemology is not a prerequisite to learning about the natural world.
I never said it was a prerequisite to learning about the natural world. I said talking about epistemology was required to answer the question "How does evidence help us gain knowledge?".
That's exactly my point. A field which can't settle even the most basic, fundamental questions of its discipline clearly lacks rigor and cannot meaningfully inform us about anything.
That's just silly. That's like saying that politics cannot decide policy and achieve political ends because there are many political parties. It's like saying that two scientists who disagree about what the evidence shows invalidates the field of science. Their disagreement, like it or not, could be a philosophical one. Take for example over at Talk Origins. One person thinks that there is enough evidence to call universal common descent a fact, another does not think there is enough evidence. This is a philosophical dispute about the nature and magnitude of required evidence before labelling something a fact.
'Philosophy' is not intended to inform you of anything. Logical Empiricism might inform you about verificationism and falsification. On the other hand, consequantialism might inform you of the most moral course of action to take.
You can't just say 'hmm, what does philosophy have to say on this subject?', you have to pick one.
It would be like biologists being completely unable to arrive at any consensus about whether or not populations grow to the capacity of their environment.
No - it would be like the 'gene-driven' school of evolution not being able to come to a consensus with the 'group theory' school of evolution or the 'individualistic' school of evolution and then concluding that this therefore invalidates the study of evolution. The 'gene-driven' school will never come to a consensus by definition...whether or not there are any members of this school when a consensus is arrived at.
Philosophy has no rigor.
Incorrect.
As a result, no philosophical model can be verified.
You are aware that verificationism cannot itself be verified, right? Added to this, some philosophical models demand that philosophical answers be verifiable or they are meaningless. Your philosophy, and my own, would seem to agree.
No philosophical assertion can be defended except circularly. ("If you accept unknowable X as true, then Y must follow.")
You are assuming that X is unknowable - which requires defining what it is to be knowable. A philosophical debate in its own right. If it is unknowable then we'd probably be dealing with some kind of metaphysical argument and I would reject it as meaningless - as would you. However, not all philosophies agree on what is knowable - which means different philosophies discuss lots of things, many of which other philosophies consider unknowable.
Call it the Samuel Johnson proof ("I refute it - thus!"), which of course was no philosophy at all but simply the obvious, empirical observation that, indeed, the world around us is what's real.
So, to you, experience (of the real) is the real. That would be the going along with the philosophy of empiricism, from wiki:
quote:
In philosophy generally, empiricism is a theory of knowledge emphasizing the role of experience, especially sensory perception, in the formation of ideas, while discounting the notion of innate ideas.
Turns out that Johnson was engaging in philosophy.
There is no "philosophy as a whole." Philosophy, of course, was originally all forms of thinking about things - mathematics/logic, empirical science, etc. As the rigorous fields were spun off into disciplines of their own right, philosophy came to represent only those things that, with no rigor, were of no use to those seeking real knowledge. Those things that could not answer questions, in other words.
Wow, there is no philosophy as a whole. Tell the world, they need to know, crashfrog has swept it all away - only metaphysics and other philosophies (such as those that don't include verificationism) he rejects now remain.
Sorry crashfrog, but what you said runs counter to everything I know so, since we are both fans of evidence, the dispute can be settled that way. Do you have any?
Edited by Modulous, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 61 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 3:00 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 65 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 7:11 PM Modulous has replied

crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1488 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 64 of 307 (431365)
10-30-2007 6:56 PM
Reply to: Message 62 by Modulous
10-30-2007 3:20 PM


But to answer why you think it is a question better suited to empirical methods, you need to justify your position using philosophy.
If we're simply going to reduce to this back-and-forth - where every means of addressing a certain question gets absorbed into "philosophy" when I try to pose alternatives - then you're only making my point for me.
If everything can be philosophy, then there's no such thing as philosophy.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 62 by Modulous, posted 10-30-2007 3:20 PM Modulous has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 77 by anglagard, posted 10-31-2007 1:55 AM crashfrog has replied
 Message 84 by Modulous, posted 10-31-2007 3:16 AM crashfrog has not replied

crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1488 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 65 of 307 (431368)
10-30-2007 7:11 PM
Reply to: Message 63 by Modulous
10-30-2007 3:55 PM


Can you answer it without engaging in epistemology?
I can answer it by gaining some evidence, and seeing if my knowledge is accordingly extended.
I said talking about epistemology was required to answer the question "How does evidence help us gain knowledge?".
Why is that question meaningful or relevant to the gaining of knowledge? Particularly if epistemology gives us no tools to actually answer it?
It's like saying that two scientists who disagree about what the evidence shows invalidates the field of science.
But the scientists have access to tools that, eventually, will settle their dispute. Science provides a framework to settle questions and disputes.
That's why the only modern proponents of geocentricism are the insane and the ignorant - science has settled the dispute.
What disputes has philosophy ever settled? None, as far as we can tell. Philosophy does not provide a means of discerning true positions from false ones, because it has no rigor. The best it can seem to do is to tell us when conclusions come logically from premises - and therefore which arguments are well-formed - but that's largely an exercise of logic, which is properly considered mathematics and not philosophy, and that doesn't help us distinguish which arguments that come logically from their premises are based on true premises.
In philosophy, that's always left as an exercise to the reader.
Their disagreement, like it or not, could be a philosophical one.
If everything is philosophy then nothing is. You're just proving my point. Why are philosophers so intent on taking the credit for other people's work?
How strange it must be to be a philosopher walking down the street, seeing people - the baker, the bricklayer, the typesetter - engaged in activities that philosophers have been told they made possible. What a sense of one's own importance one must have when one believes that the entire scope of human endeavor owes its existence to one's graduate thesis!
How preening and arrogant.
You are aware that verificationism cannot itself be verified, right?
Not philosophically, no, which is my entire point. Philosophy simply can't even detect the obvious rightness of empiricism. It's so useless it can't even detect what everyone, even children, know - seeing is believing.
Tell the world, they need to know, crashfrog has swept it all away - only metaphysics and other philosophies (such as those that don't include verificationism) he rejects now remain.
I doubt the Dean is going to close the Philosophy department just because I don't see any intellectual merit in the field. For one thing, they'd have to close down Theology and Economics, next.
And anyway, graduate students do need to get laid. The study of philosophy has always had merit in that application. So by all means, let people continue to dirty themselves in the Philosodumpster. I'm simply not willing to pretend that they're doing anything useful.
Sorry crashfrog, but what you said runs counter to everything I know so, since we are both fans of evidence, the dispute can be settled that way. Do you have any?
Only what I've presented so far. As I gain more, I'll let you know.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 63 by Modulous, posted 10-30-2007 3:55 PM Modulous has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 80 by anglagard, posted 10-31-2007 2:12 AM crashfrog has replied
 Message 85 by Modulous, posted 10-31-2007 4:43 AM crashfrog has replied

Archer Opteryx
Member (Idle past 3619 days)
Posts: 1811
From: East Asia
Joined: 08-16-2006


Message 66 of 307 (431403)
10-30-2007 9:34 PM
Reply to: Message 60 by crashfrog
10-30-2007 2:44 PM


crashfrog:
How soon they forget. Quoth you:
[Archer:] What is the nature of valid knowledge?
Which kind of knowledge is most useful?
What constitutes relevance?
What is most important to human beings?
All of these questions are philosophical questions.
My statement indeed. Which proves the point:
Archer:
I nowhere said that certain questions are 'best handled' by philosophy. I said certain questions are philosophy.
______
Edited by Archer Opterix, : html, brev.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 60 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 2:44 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 67 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 9:44 PM Archer Opteryx has not replied

crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1488 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 67 of 307 (431404)
10-30-2007 9:44 PM
Reply to: Message 66 by Archer Opteryx
10-30-2007 9:34 PM


Which proves the point:
I addressed this point. Can you respond to the rebuttal, please?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 66 by Archer Opteryx, posted 10-30-2007 9:34 PM Archer Opteryx has not replied

Hyroglyphx
Inactive Member


Message 68 of 307 (431408)
10-30-2007 10:20 PM
Reply to: Message 61 by crashfrog
10-30-2007 3:00 PM


The irony that just keeps on giving
Remaining completely (and blissfully) ignorant of epistemology was never any impediment to my learning about the world around me. From my experience working with actual scientists I can inform you that the concerns of so-called "philosophy of science" are remote irrelevancies to the day-to-day work of scientists.
Science is guided by the general "philosophy of science." You can't avoid it. You can't assert it without denying it, and you can't deny it without asserting it, thus giving you the circular reasoning spoken of by myself, Archer, Java, and Modulous.
I know what you are trying to say, along with Quetzal-- that philosophy is subjective, and can't ascertain concrete answers like empirical science can. I get that part up. And I agree with the statement up to a finite point. But to completely dismiss epistemics as a legitimate discipline is to dismiss the basis for even coming to science from a theoretical approach. Interpreting evidence often first derives from a philosophical notion as it cancels out possible variables a priori.
Even a child, completely ignorant of all thought in the "field" of epistemology, is able to learn about the world around them simply by keeping an open mind and open eyes. So, obviously, tackling the sophistry of epistemology is not a prerequisite to learning about the natural world.
I think perhaps the problem is that when we think of philosophy, we tend to associate these with some grand Aristotlean paradox, which, while being an aspect of philosophy, is not in and of itself the summation of philosophy. Children learn very early on about philosophy. Any truth claim made, or the very nature of what truth is, is philosophical. They are tackling epistemological questions before they can entertain scientific ones. What is true? What is false? What is truth? What are falsehoods? These come before the Pythagorean theorem or the aggregate air speed of an African swallow-- none of which, by the way, could be understood without that integral understanding of some basic philosophical points first.
That's exactly my point. A field which can't settle even the most basic, fundamental questions of its discipline clearly lacks rigor and cannot meaningfully inform us about anything.
Is meaning an aspect of mathematics, science, or empiricism in general?
It's ridiculous. It would be like biologists being completely unable to arrive at any consensus about whether or not populations grow to the capacity of their environment. Physicists completely unable to determine whether or not objects had mass. Chemists completely unable to determine whether or not HCl was an acid or base.
I think what might be even more ridiculous is you placing any of these higher up on the totem than, say, love.
Of course, the fact that kicking rocks is what we're reduced to only confirms my view that philosophy can't provide answers to any questions. Johnson's "proof" not only refutes solipsism, it refutes philosophy altogether.
Is that a scientific statement or a philosophical one? Better yet, what Johnson's statement a scientific statement or a philosophical one?
Philosophy, of course, was originally all forms of thinking about things - mathematics/logic, empirical science, etc. As the rigorous fields were spun off into disciplines of their own right, philosophy came to represent only those things that, with no rigor, were of no use to those seeking real knowledge.
Well, you're right. The word philosophy in Greek really just means the "love of knowledge." That's broad and all encompassing. But I agree with Mod that you seem to be attacking philosophy when perhaps you mean to really be bashing metaphysics.
Philosophy is a dumpster.
More scientific statements?
If you think the be-all and -end-all of knowledge is to ask the question, then obviously philosophy has endless appeal to you. If you're someone who believes that answers are more useful, then you'll correctly see philosophy as a dumping ground for bullshit that sounds impressive until you stop and think about it.
Crash, everything you have stated is philosophical. Everything! You really can't see the irony in all of this? You are nailing your own coffin shut. You can't even glean answers about science without having first dealt with the philosophical aspect.
Edited by Nemesis Juggernaut, : typo

“This life’s dim windows of the soul, distorts the heavens from pole to pole, and goads you to believe a lie, when you see with and not through the eye.” -William Blake

This message is a reply to:
 Message 61 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 3:00 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 70 by crashfrog, posted 10-30-2007 10:33 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

Ben!
Member (Idle past 1420 days)
Posts: 1161
From: Hayward, CA
Joined: 10-14-2004


Message 69 of 307 (431409)
10-30-2007 10:24 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by Quetzal
10-24-2007 11:58 AM


Quetzal,
I really, really disdain philosophy. And I'm not religious myself, at least as far as I am aware.
With that said, the issue I have with your OP is this: questions which you may interpret as questions about truth; questions which religious people themselves believe are questions about truth: they are often not about truth at all! That's why we see the constant moving of goalposts, the convoluted responses to HARD DATA. Because it is not truth that is being sought.
That's why your lumping of religion and philosophy in your response seems very poor to me (even understanding that you were responding to a question where that was also the case). In religion, truth is often not sought. In philosophy, as a discipline (but not necessarily in practice) it is.
I can tolerate religion and understand it as simply a completely different approach to understanding than science. To me, philosophy is just a big lie. It's value lies not in truth, but in the same allegorical methods employed in fiction.
Ben

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by Quetzal, posted 10-24-2007 11:58 AM Quetzal has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 71 by Archer Opteryx, posted 10-30-2007 10:59 PM Ben! has replied

crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1488 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 70 of 307 (431411)
10-30-2007 10:33 PM
Reply to: Message 68 by Hyroglyphx
10-30-2007 10:20 PM


Re: The irony that just keeps on giving
Science is guided by the general "philosophy of science." You can't avoid it.
You can, though. Just about every scientist I've ever met is.
Don't you find that significant? That the concerns of "philosophy of science", supposedly so crucial to scientific inquiry, are in practice completely ignored and dismissed by nearly every practicing scientist?
You can't assert it without denying it, and you can't deny it without asserting it, thus giving you the circular reasoning spoken of by myself, Archer, Java, and Modulous.
If everything is philosophy, NJ, then nothing is. You're not proving anything except philosophy's own uselessness.
But to completely dismiss epistemics as a legitimate discipline is to dismiss the basis for even coming to science from a theoretical approach. Interpreting evidence often first derives from a philosophical notion as it cancels out possible variables a priori.
I don't have anything to add to how ridiculous this is except to say that there's few things more amusing than to watch people who have no experience with the sciences explain how it works.
These come before the Pythagorean theorem or the aggregate air speed of an African swallow-- none of which, by the way, could be understood without that integral understanding of some basic philosophical points first.
Except this is trivially disproven, NJ. People all over the world are ignoring philosophy and yet proving the Pythagorean theorem or learning about swallows.
They're called "schoolchildren." Think about it, NJ. Schoolkids prove the Pythagorean theorem in 9th grade (at least, at my school, although I might have been in accelerated math. I don't remember.) Yet almost nobody studies philosophy until they go off to college.
So it's safe to say that the nation's ninth-graders are pretty ignorant of all epistemological arguments; nonetheless, they're able to do something you claim can't be done without the contributions of philosophers.
It's the same old pattern. Philosophers salve their wounded pride by taking credit for the accomplishments of others. "Everything comes back to philosophy", they say, even though nothing does.
Crash, everything you have stated is philosophical. Everything!
If everything is philosophy, then nothing is. Obviously. You're not doing anything but proving my point the more you try to give philosophy the credit for my arguments.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 68 by Hyroglyphx, posted 10-30-2007 10:20 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

Archer Opteryx
Member (Idle past 3619 days)
Posts: 1811
From: East Asia
Joined: 08-16-2006


Message 71 of 307 (431413)
10-30-2007 10:59 PM
Reply to: Message 69 by Ben!
10-30-2007 10:24 PM


I really, really disdain philosophy.
Noted.
That's why we see the constant moving of goalposts, the convoluted responses to HARD DATA. Because it is not truth that is being sought.
You imply here that 'hard data' and 'truth' matter to you.
Why?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 69 by Ben!, posted 10-30-2007 10:24 PM Ben! has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 73 by Ben!, posted 10-30-2007 11:36 PM Archer Opteryx has replied

iceage 
Suspended Member (Idle past 5936 days)
Posts: 1024
From: Pacific Northwest
Joined: 09-08-2003


Message 72 of 307 (431415)
10-30-2007 11:18 PM
Reply to: Message 52 by Archer Opteryx
10-30-2007 7:56 AM


Re: Hume's Dilemma
Archer writes:
That's a big shift in focus. You are saying that philosophy in general is not suspect at all (as we were told in the OP). The culprit is just 'divinity' or 'school metaphysics.'
Ok maybe that was a bait and switch. It was late and i did not read all the prerequisite posts.
Recently I heard someone describe Philosophers as intellectual plumbers that patch leaks in scientific reasoning, logic and assumptions. I can go with that.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 52 by Archer Opteryx, posted 10-30-2007 7:56 AM Archer Opteryx has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 74 by Archer Opteryx, posted 10-31-2007 12:24 AM iceage has not replied

Ben!
Member (Idle past 1420 days)
Posts: 1161
From: Hayward, CA
Joined: 10-14-2004


Message 73 of 307 (431418)
10-30-2007 11:36 PM
Reply to: Message 71 by Archer Opteryx
10-30-2007 10:59 PM


Hi Archer Opertix.
You imply here that 'hard data' and 'truth' matter to you.
Why?
I'm happy to answer the question, but afraid that doing so might pull the thread off-topic. I hope it will suffice to say that my enduring respect for religion comes from the fact that I don't have a principled answer to this question.
If you're looking for more, feel free to email me or try & help me understand how the question relates to the topic, so that I can answer in a way that will promote addressing Quetzal's original questions.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 71 by Archer Opteryx, posted 10-30-2007 10:59 PM Archer Opteryx has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 75 by Archer Opteryx, posted 10-31-2007 12:46 AM Ben! has replied

Archer Opteryx
Member (Idle past 3619 days)
Posts: 1811
From: East Asia
Joined: 08-16-2006


Message 74 of 307 (431420)
10-31-2007 12:24 AM
Reply to: Message 72 by iceage
10-30-2007 11:18 PM


Re: Hume's Dilemma
Would you be willing, iceage, to write an OP for a new thread? I think it would be great if you started as you did above, using precise terms and quoting Hume. We could then discuss the (necessarily philosophical) question I think Quetzal wanted to explore: the role of empiricism in epistomology.
It would be nice to see that idea take wing. This thread is serving a different, and sadder, need. It has become a primer for bird watchers who don't think they do any of that high-falutin' ornithology stuff.

Archer
All species are transitional.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 72 by iceage, posted 10-30-2007 11:18 PM iceage has not replied

Archer Opteryx
Member (Idle past 3619 days)
Posts: 1811
From: East Asia
Joined: 08-16-2006


Message 75 of 307 (431423)
10-31-2007 12:46 AM
Reply to: Message 73 by Ben!
10-30-2007 11:36 PM


I asked why 'hard data' and 'truth' matter.
Ben:
I'm happy to answer the question, but afraid that doing so might pull the thread off-topic.
It would not pull the thread off-topic. What it would do is contradict your statement that you disdain philosophy.
But you have already done that, so we're good.
You say you are 'happy' to address the question of why data and truth matter.
Philosophy deals with, among other things, the question of why data and truth matter. It deals with the question of what they are.
So as soon as you say you are happy and willing to discuss this question, you show you do not disdain philosophy at all. You enjoy it.
Welcome to the Acropolis, Mr Philo.

Archer
All species are transitional.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 73 by Ben!, posted 10-30-2007 11:36 PM Ben! has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 76 by Ben!, posted 10-31-2007 1:13 AM Archer Opteryx has replied
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