Ansiktsburk wrote:Philosophy is the first science. In the sense, first in the process of exploring new areas of knowledge. The problem for philosophy is that people like nice little truths. When you are in the beginning of any kind of project you need to have an open mind. You brainstorm, you explore some routes, of which some leads astray. That´s no problem, in that phase.
Then, when you find the way to go you might find your way to a pretty nice truth. And if the path is successful, you might not need the brainstorming, the philosophy any longer - for that area.
People might roll their eyes when they here about the black and yellow bile that was supposed to be inside a human, but it was the current best thinking. When someone later came up with the grisly idea to dig up human bodies and put your scalpellas into the decaying flesh, that was simply a better path to walk. When you read Plato's dialogues, you are not exactly (not me, at least) thinking abot how stupid they were, the guys were brilliant with the knowledge about the world they had. The guys did the intital brainstorming, that sadly was hampered by religion for a millenia or so, but later refined by Bacon, Gallilei, Boyle, Newton and those good philosophers.
In good order, things that can be best explored by natural science has been delivered to the guys who sat obeyingly in the math classes in school and calculated. All very well, Philosophy has fulfilled it's task there to a large extent (even though, as I see it, a scientist is doing philosophy when he/she comes up with the hyphothesis for which they are later going to do eperiments. And philosophy is still an important path in finding the right directions for science to go forward. )
But there is so much more. Politics, Gender questions, morals, love, all the things in the human life. There is no equations for that, even if brain research is doing good things as the execution phases of those projects. It's an open field for the philosophy.
Hobbes Choice - I think it's enough to read something like On Denoting and the History of western philosophy will give you a good enough picture. And you will find that even that forefather of the movement of trying to cut the penis of the philosophy was as biased as anyone else. The world is a tricky place to figure out.
Dude. That third sentence.
I can't even distinguish between philosophy and self-cultivation anymore. They are one. Nothing is more wise than self-cultivation.