Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 04, 2020 8:50 pm
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Sat Apr 04, 2020 2:53 am
It depends entirely on what you think philosophy is.
Is philosophy the kind of knowledge that is fundamental to all other knowledge or is it knowledge of turgid unfathomable mysteries with no practical purpose? Is philosophy the kind of knowledge that every human being must have to live or is it just the plaything of intellectuals?
Ah, yes: but there's a third and fourth alternatives.
It's true that at its worst, philosophy can just be a "plaything of intellectuals." Neither you nor I is interested in that, right? It's also true that it can be a thing plain folks can do...and indeed, as you say,
every human being not only must have a philosophy, but actually does have one,
Fair enough.
But these ordinary folks often also have, as Socrates pointed out, no more than an
unexamined "philosophy." That is, there are of course a kind of "reasoning" that governs their decisions, but they also remain almost entirely unclear about what it is that's driving them. As you say, it can be "implicit or implied," rather than conscious.
Then there are some who have a "common folk" level of philosophy, and also have examined it, and do know what it is. But the sophistication of their understanding may or not be very great -- like people who can say, "Well, I was raised Catholic," or "My dad was an Atheist," or "In our house, we celebrate Passover" or "Ramadan," or "We always vote Democrat," without having much depth of understanding of what any of that logically entails.
That is actually my point. Everyone has a philosophy, but almost no one has an explicit philosophy, and all those beliefs which are their philosophy, they have not arrived at by careful reason, but picked up along the way, from their parents, their peers, what they are taught in school, or church, or synagogue, or whatever is being promoted in popular media, or by any other self-identified, "authorities," whose word they simply accept, and almost all of it is wrong, which is why most people make such messes of their lives and support those things that result in the horrors of this world, like war and oppression.
Unlike advanced scientific and technical knowledge needed by those who must have it to perform their work in their specialized fields, like scientists, doctors, medical researchers, computer engineers, and designers, philosophy is knowledge required by
every individual human being to perform the business of living, no matter what other fields they may endeavor in.
While the sciences and technology fields have provided the kind of knowledge required by scientists and technologist to perform their work, those who require the kind of knowledge necessary to live their own lives as well as possible will not find it in any philosophy today. The primary reason is that philosophers have assumed, with almost universal agreement, that the purpose of philosophy is something other than what individual human beings require to make their own choices, but something else, like good of society, or humanity, or the future of mankind.
I think you are making that same mistake. Notice your language:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 04, 2020 8:50 pm
To date, the discipline of philosophy has not discovered even the most fundamental of philosophical principles of metaphysics, ontology, epistemology, logic, ethics, politics, or aesthetics
Oh, I think you'll have to admit this is excessive.
We may be stuck in things like ethics, but
we're very good at things like logic -- and even the postmodern critiques of logic invariably lapse into using the same strategies they assure you are impossible to trust, such as rational argumentation. So logic's almost something we can't HELP doing, at least informally.
Politics has certainly got more sophisticated and more fully theorized as time has gone by; and if
we've not yet discovered anything like Utopia,
we've certainly come as far as realizing some options are truly bad. Every such realization has its utility in instructing us not to be so foolish again, even when we are at pains not to hear that. Again, that's a sort of progress.
So there are thing still to debate. That does not remotely imply that no value has been found in the debate. You seem impatient with the process, and that's understandable...we'd all like some tidy conclusions very soon, thank you very much. But the reality is that
we may have to accept our progress in smaller bites. Better than making no philosophical advances at all.
I know that you use, "we," in the editorial sense of, "you and your reader," or, "all those interested in the same subject," which
we all use, but there is also that idea that, "what it's all about," is some, "we," that is society, or humanity, or mankind, or life on this planet. Like all knowledge, whether it is scientists, technologists, or us common folk, that knowledge has only one purpose, to be used by individuals to make their own individual choices. No collective thinks or makes choices, only individuals have the faculty of choice, and so-called collective choices are only the sum of all the individual choices in that collective. If every individual made the right choices, there would be no social problems to solve. So long as most individuals do not know how to make right choices, or why they should, there are no social solutions.
You are right, "Politics has certainly got more sophisticated," and much more dangerous and oppressive. But politics in philosophy assumes its purpose is to discover how a society should be organized, or I should say, "run," because all of politics has been reduced to discussions of which form government is the right kind, without the mquestion ever being asked, is an agency of force the right way to achieve correct relationships between individuals. All of political philosophy is wrong because it assumes such an agency is required.
And who decided, "Utopia," was the objective of philosophy. That is one of the primary assumptions of philosophy that has destroyed it, and every ideology, political theory, and movement that has come out of the view that the ultimate purpose is to make society or the world what one would like it to be have been the source of the most oppressive and disastrous societies in history.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 04, 2020 8:50 pm
I know there are a hundred different schools of philosophy that all have their own accepted answers to such questions, but that is exactly what is wrong with philosophy. When knowledge in any field is truly discovered and identified, there are not endless conflicting versions of that knowledge. There are not forty different schools of chemistry, eleven theories of physics, twenty different theories of anatomy, of eight theories of electricity. There are just chemistry, physics, anatomy, and electric theory. I know, in advance areas of these sciences there are still questions that are being explored, but the fields themselves have the answers to their basic questions, while philosophy has not even established what the questions are it needs to answer.
I would say it has. As you point out, at the very least it's been able to divide into particular specialities, some of which you list above. That shows an understanding of domain. But to expect philosophy to "snap to it" and deliver on schedule like, say chemistry experiments, would be to misunderstand what we're dealing with. Ideas are not like material properties; they are not subject to simple experimentation. Testing them takes a lot longer, and yields more equivocal results. But that's what happens when you're dealing with ideas, not materials.
There are:
--
Three hundred different philosophies
--
One hundred eighty nine schools of philosophy
--
Sixty five branches of philosophy, including such abominations as, animal rights, bioethics, environmental ethics, philosophy of artificial intelligence, African philosophy, [no explanation why there is no Cuban, South American, Guatemalan or Martian philosophy] feminist philosophy [listed twice], libertarianism, culinary philosophy, and philosophy of sanitary engineering (garbage collecting). [The last two are my additions. Philosophy has sure come a long way, Baby!]
It seems to me, after 2600 years of philosophy dominated by the same premises during which human oppression has become increasingly vicious and wars become more horrible it might occur to someone that the dominant philosophies of the world are wrong. In one form or another every philosophy to date is a denial of the reality of material existence (beginning with Plato) and a denial that true knowledge is possible (culminated in Hume and Kant). Philosophy is the only field that denies the possibility of doing what it purports to do.
After 2600 years, can you name one improvement in the human condition that is a product of philosophy. Before identifying the limits of science one needs to examine philosophy for its "successes." Here are some of the products of philosophy: Marxism, in all it's variations made possible by the philosophy of Kant, especially as interpreted by Hegel. Altruism, socialism, and humanism, from the philosophy of Hume, "improved," by Comte. The Prussian forced educational system (obscenely called free education) from Kant, through Hegel, and formulated by Fichte. Another thread of corrupt philosophical ideas begins with Hume, through, Kant and Hegel to Cultural Marxism (the Frankfurt School) on the one hand and Critical Theory on the other which are the roots of multiculturalism, political correctness, post modernism, and the nihilistic versions of relativism that dominate today's culture.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 04, 2020 8:50 pm
What's important is that it's not actually materials that make this world go around, so to speak. Physics can teach us how to build an atom bomb. It can't tell us if we should do it, or if it's right for us to use it on somebody, or which political interest the bomb should serve, if any. It just shows us what we can do. Likewise, medicine can prolong our lives, but can't tell us what we ought to do with them to have a "good" life. Or engineering can be used to build skyscrapers or scaffolds; and engineering itself has no opinion about which it must be, so long as both work.
We still need deeper thought for some things. And deeper though calls upon us to be more precise in our terms.
You mean like denying that any real knowledge is possible, that everything is uncertain, or that there is no real objective truth. Philosophy today consists of competing skeptic hypotheses denying literally every thing:
There is no volition. Human behavior is determines by physical laws, or, evolutionary characteristics imbedded in their DNA, or chemicals in the brain, or by one's cultural and environmental influences, or by feelings, sentiments and desires, or instinct, or the subconscious, or, a sinful nature--anything, but definitely no one's conscious choice.
Knowledge is not possible. The perceived world is not the real world, and the real world cannot be perceived. Truth is no the identification of what is objective so, but there are six varieties of truth none of which pertain to existence. Words do not stand for concepts which identify (mean) actual existents, concepts only mean their definitions that do not have to realate in any way to reality. Knowledge is nothing more than statistical likelihood and absolute nothing is certain.
Objective reasoning is not possible. Reason (logic) is not a rational process of non-contradictory identification and integration, logic is the mere manipulation of symbols which are not even symbols of anything. Knowledge is not about objective reality, and must include other imaginary realities and other possible universes, as though philosophy is now written by Jules Vern, H. G. Wells, or Lewis Carroll.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 04, 2020 8:50 pm
There is nothing wrong with technical language. After all I use terms which are seldom if ever used outside the field of philosophy all the time. I use all the terms for the sub-categories of philosophy: metaphysics, ontology, epistemology, logic, ethics, politics, and aesthetics, but I not use them as though they were some kind of esoteric concepts for what cannot be explained perfectly well in terms that anyone can understand.
Nor should anyone. But you should use more precise terms whenever you're speaking to anyone who's a) capable of them, because to talk down to them is an insult, and b) working with you on a sophisticated problem, where precision really makes a difference, no?
Of course. The problem with most of terms invented by philosophers is not their precision, but the very opposite. They are mostly floating abstractions constructed from other poorly defined concepts that once accepted become further confused the longer they are used. What does, "realism," mean in philosophy?
Here is one good example: the so-called concept of
falsifiability. In the first place philosophers who have not achieved anything have no business dictating how scientists, who have been eminently successful, how to do their jobs. That is exactly what Karl Popper's concept of falsifiability was supposed to do. The idea is no entirely mistaken, though in application is a backward way of explaining something, and has not become the basis of a total corruption of the scientific method, which, fortunately most scientists completely ignore.
The first mistake is the assumption that all science, or most of it, is a matter of forming hypotheses in an attempt to explain physical phenomena, but that aspect of science only pertains to relationships between phenomena that are difficult to identify. Most of science is simply recognizing and identify physical phenomena. When a phenomenon has been identified but not clearly explained, based on what is known about the phenomena, a hypothesis that seems most likely to explain it can be formulated and tested. Karl Popper made the point that any hypothesis for which no test can be devised to prove the hypothesis false, if it is false, is not a valid hypothesis. That much of falsifiability is correct.
Unfortunately that idea led to the absurd idea that
any scientific hypothesis and resultant experimental design must be inherently falsifiable. [
NOTE: That mistake is based on the more basic mistake that science proceeds by means of induction.]
Even without that explanation, falsification is a mistaken notion for two reasons. 1. If a test can be devised to prove a hypothesis false, if it is false, if that test is made and it fails, it proves the hypothesis is correct. If the hypothesis was not correct, the test would have passed. That should be obvious, because, 2. if a hypothesis is correct, it cannot be proved incorrect. Only a mistake could prove a hypothesis that is correct, incorrect. A correct hypothesis cannot be falsified.
If you hear or read such nonsense as is widely stated today, "science cannot prove anything is true, it can only prove things are false," it came from Popper. It was never Popper's intention to undercut science, I'm sure, but that has been the unfortunate result of his work. I ought to be one of his first supporters. He did, after all, identify one aspect of all that is called science (or even sound reason), such as psychology, evolution, cosmology, theology, sociology, and much of philosophy that is wrong: if any hypothesis cannot be tested in any repeatable way with results observable by any human being, it is probably false and certainly nothing more than conjecture.
Hence, all of what passes as philosophy today.