Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2020 8:26 am
If philosophy is superior over science, what is it superior for? How do you measure this claimed "superiority" ?
By the comparative rarity of high level philosophy jobs, as opposed to the many dime-a-dozen low level "science" jobs heavily advertised and propagated by 6th grade reading level mass media as a sales mechanism, most not even updated from archaic little 19th century tidbits, and mainly for the purpose of selling consumerist trinkets like cell phones, washing machines, and video game consoles to people who religiously consume 6th grade reading level scientistic propaganda and nonsensicalities.
The only purposes the natural sciences serve are either an aesthetic one, akin to philosophy (which if they fail at, are therefore worthless), or simple pragmatics and pratical uses within specific industries and job sectors, which in that regard makes them no different than any other "skill", "work", or "applied sciences", such as plumbing and cable-Tv installation.
That's pretty ironic. Nobody important in the real world takes academia or philosophy seriously.
Nobody in the real world who doesn't take academia or philosophy seriously is remotely important, if you mean low-level industry "workmen" who cares, aside from a mostly fictious and irrelevant "science" or "engineering" title, which bares as little resemblance to an actual Newton or Einstein as a weekend golfer does to Tiger Woods or Arnold Palmer.
At the bare minimum, most of them are easily automated anyway, and for the sake of their wife and their wives' boyfriends' mutual sex lives, hopefully will be sooner, rather than later. (Thank God, or evolution if you prefer, likewise, for no-fault divorce laws).
If you were a scientist you wouldn't have to rely on anybody's propaganda
- the data is out there. Examint it yourself - draw your own conclusions. Think for yourself.
Yawn... what a silly false dichotomy; the propaganda you would be relying are would be Francis Bacon's archaic, 17th century philosophical axioms, based on fallacies such as "empiricism", "reductionism", "induction" (as opposed to de-duction and superior systems for the gaining of knowledge, such as the superiority of the anecdotal), and so on.
Thankfully none of the dated "natural sciences" will ever be a "pure science" in the sense that pure mathematics (as opposed to ugly, anti-intellectual "arithmetic" is anyway, much as the natural sciences themselves will likely go more or less extinct in the near future aside from whatever minority of economic industries still rely on them for pragmatic purposes; with computational and informational sciences likely being the new frontier for gaining meaningful knowledge and innovation.
Too bad most of those who call themselves 'philosophers' today (lovers of wisdom) don't know the first damn thing about data analysis. Apparently statistics/information theory is beneath philosophy.
That's for poorly coded robots and ugly people to do, I see no reason why a philosopher should taint himself with that archaism and mathematically inferiorly designed "methology", which will hopefully be automated by actual robots in the foreseeable future, who are less prone to groping younger women and delving far less than stellar sexual performance for the "wives" who are aesthetically deprived enough to actually mary an archaic old primate or rather shallow and superficial throwback (by the very definitions of it) like that to begin with.
You can't say "analysis" without saying "anal". Synthesis is arguably a far superior axiom than outdated analysis.