Nick_A wrote: ↑Sun Apr 22, 2018 1:32 amGreta wants to apply the scientific method for philosophy
Not quite. I try to apply scientific(-ish) discipline to philosophical matters so as to avoid cul-de-sacs.
Time and again I see people on philosophy forums finding an idea they love that seems possible. Then they follow that track as if it was the
only possibility rather than
just one of them. The mistake is not always in the standard of their reasoning but the scope of that reasoning; they simply neglect to consider all possibilities, apparently for emotional reasons.
This dynamic is so common that it's clearly an easy mistake to make, so I am trying to not to make that error. I recognise times in the past when I have done so. While it's limiting to work through philosophical issues in what I think of as a "scientific straitjacket", it's at least as limiting to attempt philosophy without fairly strong scientific knowledge and understanding. There is also always the option of looking within and comparing notes with what one senses and observes "outside" without making a commitment to one's observations, rather just considering.
If we are to better understand reality,
all information would ideally be considered - be it within or outside, and no matter what the time period or culture. Throughout the world and history people undergoing experiences we cannot even imagine, and thus we can learn from them. This does
not mean giving inordinate attention or primacy to the ideas of one group of people (Arabs/Jews) at one time (the Iron Age) but including their ideas in the vast bodies of knowledge accumulated in human history - and it's only a very small part.
Thus, taking a monotheistic deity as an a priori fact rather than just one supposition is a disproportionate focus that logically stems from the long time cultural domination of Abrahamic believers: "History is always written by the winners".
There is cause to question the dominant cultures' assumed (and at times enforced) "truths". For instance, the God idea - that intelligence and awareness is omnipresent rather than emergent. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. How would we know if we lived within a larger intelligence, like cells in a body? Believers speak about "tapping into" the deity like a programmer who can code in machine language, but that may also be just the potentials of continually emerging and developing consciousness.
Nick_A wrote:However the experience of understanding comes through intuition or remembrance.
I'm going to let you in on a little secret: people who respect the scientific method also have intuition. We really do. We are actually human and not programmable AI and to be human is to have intuition. It is impossible not to have intuition although, as with everything, these things vary not only between individuals but during the course of a life.
The logical error here is your assuming that anyone who does not trust their intuitions implicitly and uncritically lacks intuition per se. Rather, disciplined thinkers take evidence seriously and try to balance the inside-out and the outside-in perspectives rather than giving complete primacy to themselves and their own minds and interests.
Why do we surrender like that, Nick? Why don't some of us defiantly stand up for our intuitions rather than submit to the minds of others?
For me, it's mainly because I, as an individual, can only experience a very tiny part of reality while the larger body of humanity experience so much more. There are over seven billion people, each saying based on their experience, "reality is like
this". Who to believe? The ancient Greeks and Islamic philosophers grappled with this question and largely decided that it was
critical for thinkers to question themselves and others rather than believe their preferences implicitly.
Nick_A wrote:]The value of the scientific method for philosophy is to isolate the question and open it to conscious contemplation. I try to share questions while Greta wants to argue superficial opinions.
I suggest that most observers would say the opposite.
The value of the scientific method for philosophy is to provide extra data, which rather helps when humanity currently has knowledge (and only scanty) about 5% of the universe's constituents. It would be nice to know a bit more before considering coming to any firm conclusions.