Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
06-15-2003, 03:08 PM | #81 |
Contributor
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
|
Take a moment to talk to Joel via PM, Michael. I don't care if i'm annihiliated here or if i "win" a debate; i intentionally take up minority positions because they're so much more challenging.
That's fine, Hugo. I didn't much care either, until you suddenly decided that personal insults were in order. "headbanger," indeed. In this case i do think realism is shaky, but i would assert it anyway just to give a discussion more sides (how many irrealists or anti-realists are there here? I can think of two, perhaps...). I reference Laudan because his paper is interesting for anyone who has never considered such things and because it's easier to locate than the stuff i have in my library; whether i agree with him or not is moot (i don't). Consequently, i'm unimpressed by your quote. Thanks. I'll try not to quote papers you reference in the future. I "see the problem"; i don't agree that the failure of philosophy in solving a problem implies anything about its disutility (as you are no doubt aware); <shrug> If you can look at 2,500 years of failure, and not see failure.....Philosophy is moderately good at generating questions; it is hopeless at providing answers, at least where the questions intersect reality. and i would oppose you in any case because we all learn more that way. Am i trolling, or walking a fine line betwixt those dark regions and proper debate? You be the judge... You're not trolling, and I was looking forward to some fine talk. Perhaps we should return to the topic of Christianity and science. Vorkosigan |
06-15-2003, 03:32 PM | #82 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Buggered if I know
Posts: 12,410
|
Quote:
Quote:
As a blanket statement, this seems very biased. Natural science is best at empiricism, and comes often a cropper as soon as metaphysical or human-psychological questions come into play. To dismiss philosophy like that could simply be seen as not understanding philosophy, let alone its history. On one hand, you have the entire philosophical development of logic and logical processes, such as the humble syllogism; OTOH, philosphy exists not to necessarily answer questions, but to create them. And science exists, in essence to discover more empirical facts. Therefore to fault philosophy for not being natural science misses the point. Additionally, many of the questions that philosophy poses are unanswerable; e.g. metaphysics. My old prof of medical ethics once picked me up on this; he said I was paying too much attention to developing cluster-bomb arguments, and too little attention to developing further interesting avenues of questions. And since he specialised in medicine, a discipline still very much influenced by vague factors not yet adequately described by natural science (the question, for example, of what is at start mentally healthy or not is not a natural science question --- it is a philosophical question, and only afer that has been decided does natural science then stat and detail the types of mental ill-health), then he was very right indeed in his criticism. |
||
06-15-2003, 11:40 PM | #83 | |||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Self-banned in 2005
Posts: 1,344
|
Quote:
I won't send you back to the posts to review your work. Let's move on: Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
None of these questions require a debate as to whether or not the various alternatives are sound, as far as i am concerned. Please feel free to say otherwise, but explaining yourself in so doing. What say you? |
|||||
06-16-2003, 04:26 AM | #84 | ||||||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Back into the groove. I'll deftly sidestep the Holbling/Vork dispute and go back to Joel's last reply to me.
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
The ideas that survive are the ones that are useful and politically acceptable regardless of any metaphysical connection to the real world. This much should be clear by now. Quote:
You need to read alot more about Al Ghazali, judging by your comment. I merely use him as an example but his influence among Moslems was far more prevalent that in the West. Ockham seems to me more influenced by his ideas than Aquinas, who certainly rejected many of his central points. Quote:
Quakers are usually Christians and I understand Pennock is one too. Likewise, JJ Burnell, who is a senior professor of astonomy, is the chair of the Friends in the UK. I'm a neo-Darwinist so don't assume that believing fully in evolution is less than Christian. I'm rather fond of Iran too. Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
||||||
06-16-2003, 09:17 AM | #85 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Self-banned in 2005
Posts: 1,344
|
As an aside...
Quote:
|
|
06-17-2003, 04:42 AM | #86 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Vork must have meant Greek rather than Roman. The idea of natural law being reliable and consistant because it comes from a reliable/good/consistant power is certainly found all over the place. Plato certainly seems to follow this idea but you'll find it in the pre-socratics too. The point, though, is that it was never acceptabled by all, uncontroversial or axiomatic to most thinkers. We get this false skewed impression of Greek thought being so rational because its the rational stuff Christians preserved for us.
However, in the Middle Ages we had an entire higher education system where the law creating god was accepted as axiomtic by all. Christianity laid down certain assumptions that happened to correspond with the ones that allowed modern science to begin. I would agree that realism was another such assumption that we might want to think about. BTW, now that the Bible board is also about all religious history, I'll probably be found back there. Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
06-17-2003, 10:41 PM | #87 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Singapore
Posts: 2,875
|
Ok, I just got back, and will respond in time. Hugo, you can't ask us to drop SSK when you brought up Shapin and then expect us not to criticise their methodology. Bede, I'll try to get a response in the next few days.
Joel |
06-17-2003, 11:20 PM | #88 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Self-banned in 2005
Posts: 1,344
|
*sigh*
I brought up Shapin initially because he - like other scholars in the history of science - no longer considers the conflict hypothesis tenable. I then went on to comment that he makes some remarks in his The Scientific Revolution that very much agree with Vork. Only when i challenged the latter to defend the implicit presupposition of progress inherent in this thread did SSK come up. |
06-18-2003, 03:35 AM | #89 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Singapore
Posts: 2,875
|
Hello Hugo,
Remember this question addressed to me? Quote:
Joel |
|
06-18-2003, 04:34 AM | #90 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Self-banned in 2005
Posts: 1,344
|
I remember. If you're going to criticise Shapin and thereby his conclusion that the conflict hypothesis is no longer tenable, then by all means we'll discuss SSK here. If not, i think it's a topic for another thread. On the other hand, perhaps you could explain why the assumption of progress is valid?
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|