Tricky
Briefly immortal
I think one must distinguish between philosophy, as in the way you decide what to believe, and philosophy, as in boring classes that study what a bunch of old wankers had to say about the nature of reality.
How so? Where in the recent history of science does this reshaping start to show up? As far as I can see science continues to progress in just the same way it has done for the last couple of centuries.His work helped to reshape scientific inquiry.
I agree. The philosophy of science is probably the only philosophy that is self evident. While idealism and dualism and solipsism and all those other "isms" require a lot of thought and introspection, the philosophy of "evidencism" (to coin a phrase) is obvious even in lower animals. It is nothing more than "learning from experience". Popper didn't invent that.How so? Where in the recent history of science does this reshaping start to show up? As far as I can see science continues to progress in just the same way it has done for the last couple of centuries.
First off I'm not sure why what you find unenlightening has to do with anything. Like I said, I can respect your opinion but it is not of much importance to me and I'm not sure why it should be of importance to anyone else?To put it another way, what's he ever produced that's of any practical significance? I've read some of his writing on the mind and I found it completely unenlightening.
Based on this quote I would have to say that you miss the point of philosophy. The point about the table is to understand that a table isn't just a table. It was a philosopher that first realized that a table wasn't simply a table but instead was composed of smaller units of matter. The point about the table is to get us to step outside of our macro world and view the micro or view the universe from a different perspective. Your instructor wasn't trying to get you to find a demarcation. He was trying to get you to take your blinders off and change your perspective.I may have quoted this before, but I recall the creator of "8-bit Theater" saying something along the lines of "I had to deal with this stuff all the time. I recall a professor saying "Take this table. Remove one atom at a time. When does it stop being a table?". I said "When it falls over"." A lot of the stuff philosophers go on about aren't real problems. All it shows is that our language is "fuzzy" on certain details. A table is one of those raised surfaces you can put things on with lots of room under it. You can lop off as much as you need but it really only stops being a table when it can't do that. When does a hill become a mountain? I think they made a silly movie about that once. It's meaningless where that dividing line is, like deciding if Pluto is a planet. The two words were arbitrary to begin with. The dividing line can be likewise arbitrary. And, here's a thinker, why can't the two definitions overlap? Like, in this zone both hill and mountain are accurate terms to use.
I'm sorry, I think one of the biggest mistakes is to assume that scientific or philosophical inquiry must first have worth. Pursuit of knowledge is its own reward and I think we would be poor indeed to only seek to learn that which we first can justify as worthy.However, sometimes some very clear stuff is basically finally laid out. I see no problem with someone ironing out what the difference between science and just making random assumptions is. It's helpful at least in telling the difference between endeavors of worth and those that are useless.
You are judging Ann by just a couple of propositions. I suppose that we could do the same with Tesla. He had some spurious ideas. That would be ad hominem though. Tesla's bad ideas don't invalidate his good ones. I don't get the desire to completely dismiss philosophical inquiry based solely on cherry picked examples?I will say this. Rand is an example of problems I have with a lot of philosophy. Her "Since we exist as creatures, we should live and that's a moral desire". I have no idea how she gets from one to the next. So what if we are one way? That's where she jumps from the "A is A" train to the "A SHOULD BE A and never try to be B" train. The latter seems a silly thing to say (things become other things all the time), but that's basically what Rand is trying to state. It's close to a form of fatalism if you ask me. Also, there's that one thing where she basically begs the question as to whether or not we should even bother valuing our own happiness.
Hey Cosmo, I've never been an objectivist and I find objectivism to be woo. I admire Rand for many reasons that I have to keep explaining so I guess I'll have to start a small web page to explain myself. I like to find insights to human behavior and human understanding. I find it fascinating. Rand was a compeling woman in a time when women were not so easily compelling. I think she offered some insights into human behavior that were counter to the paradigms of the time. She contributed to our thinking and considerations of human social dynamics much the same way that Dostoevsky, Orwell and Lenin did if for no other reason than she got us to consider her arguments. She was influential.The more I read this site, the more I find its title to be misleading. The footnote at the bottom of the home page (The content of this website is primarily based on Ayn Rand's philosophy, Objectivism.) really means what it says. This site is essentially an endorsement of and an argument for Objectivism. Perhaps nowhere is this clearer than in the "Misbegotten Notions" subsection, which criticizes other philosophical theories and attempts to defend Objectivism. Altruism, Environmentalism, Vegetarianism (?), and Determinism, among others, are all criticized. This website is far more concerned with the importance of Objectivism than of philosophy.
On another note, Randfan, I've just realized that my criticism of Objectivism (or, at least, of this website) may be at odds with your beliefs if your username is at all indicative of them. I want to be quite clear, then, that I do not mean to offend and I apologize if I have.
Nominated!I may have quoted this before, but I recall the creator of "8-bit Theater" saying something along the lines of "I had to deal with this stuff all the time. I recall a professor saying "Take this table. Remove one atom at a time. When does it stop being a table?". I said "When it falls over"." A lot of the stuff philosophers go on about aren't real problems. All it shows is that our language is "fuzzy" on certain details. A table is one of those raised surfaces you can put things on with lots of room under it. You can lop off as much as you need but it really only stops being a table when it can't do that. When does a hill become a mountain? I think they made a silly movie about that once. It's meaningless where that dividing line is, like deciding if Pluto is a planet. The two words were arbitrary to begin with. The dividing line can be likewise arbitrary. And, here's a thinker, why can't the two definitions overlap? Like, in this zone both hill and mountain are accurate terms to use.
Based on this quote I would have to say that you miss the point of philosophy. The point about the table is to understand that a table isn't just a table. It was a philosopher that first realized that a table wasn't simply a table but instead was composed of smaller units of matter. The point about the table is to get us to step outside of our macro world and view the micro or view the universe from a different perspective. Your instructor wasn't trying to get you to find a demarcation. He was trying to get you to take your blinders off and change your perspective.
I think others here asking about worth sort of muddied the waters. That's not really my position. I'm just saying that it doesn't seem like a lot of it is uncovering ANY truth whatsoever, whether it would be of value or not. That table exercise is exactly the sort of thing I'm talking about. It gives me no great understanding of anything except that the professor doesn't know what the concept of a "definition" is. It's not some super specific thing that must include all sub-parts. It's really just a vague thing. If it can do what a table does, it's a table. When it can't do that, it isn't. That guy's answer of "when it falls down" is the best answer I've ever heard for such a philosophical question. Reminds me of the "if a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?" question. My answer? Yes, it does. If you define sound as vibrations, as sound is defined in this age, then it makes a sound. If that's labeled as just an assumption because you can't prove it, I might as well say you can't prove the tree or the forest was even there to begin with, making the question pointless.I'm sorry, I think one of the biggest mistakes is to assume that scientific or philosophical inquiry must first have worth. Pursuit of knowledge is its own reward and I think we would be poor indeed to only seek to learn that which we first can justify as worthy.
You are judging Ann by just a couple of propositions. I suppose that we could do the same with Tesla. He had some spurious ideas. That would be ad hominem though. Tesla's bad ideas don't invalidate his good ones. I don't get the desire to completely dismiss philosophical inquiry based solely on cherry picked examples?
Nominated!
Man, I spend so much time here trying to illustrate this principle of "overlapping definitions". This does it so beautifully.
Two more, Daniel Dennett.
"philosophy is important" bears no more weight than saying "love is important"
Besides, philosophy is one of those futile non-exact sciences where my opinion can very well bear the same weight as that of any famous philosopher.
It's a perception thing. You are correct about the definition of table. I can only say that you are failing to see (in this case) the trees for the forest. Clearly you understand that there is both a micro and macro world and to you everything works fine so long as we keep the two separate and clearly define our terms. Tables are tables and atoms are atoms. If I understand you correctly (I beg your forgiveness if I'm wrong) your understanding of the world is purely academic. You see the world based on the rote education you received. That's fine. People don't need to be able to think outside of the box to function in our world. They just need to be able to understand our world as it is explained.I was actually quoting someone else as regarding that professor. I wasn't the one that took that class. The point is that the table may be composed of smaller units of matter, but that's not what we are calling a "table". We're calling that thing you put things on. What it's made of is irrelevant. It could be made of dark matter or programmed into a game for all I care, so it doesn't matter how much is removed so long as it still fits the definition. What blinders need to be removed here? Nothing is enlightened by asking that sort of question, because a table isn't defined as "this amount of atoms". A table is a macroscopic definition for a macroscopic idea. Microscopic doesn't even play into it. That's incidental.
That was my take on the "falling tree" example also. How utterly ridiculous I thought.I think others here asking about worth sort of muddied the waters. That's not really my position. I'm just saying that it doesn't seem like a lot of it is uncovering ANY truth whatsoever, whether it would be of value or not. That table exercise is exactly the sort of thing I'm talking about. It gives me no great understanding of anything except that the professor doesn't know what the concept of a "definition" is. It's not some super specific thing that must include all sub-parts. It's really just a vague thing. If it can do what a table does, it's a table. When it can't do that, it isn't. That guy's answer of "when it falls down" is the best answer I've ever heard for such a philosophical question. Reminds me of the "if a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?" question. My answer? Yes, it does. If you define sound as vibrations, as sound is defined in this age, then it makes a sound. If that's labeled as just an assumption because you can't prove it, I might as well say you can't prove the tree or the forest was even there to begin with, making the question pointless.
I was watching a show about China and how Mao had collectivized the farms and Deng Xiaoping had reversed Mao because the collectivization was a complete failure. As the narrator said, "in communist systems workers pretended to work and the state pretended to pay them." When Deng allowed the workers to keep their profits productions rose dramatically. They did so because the needs of the individual are important to the individual and the unencumbered individual is capable of so much more than the encumbered one.Yeah, you're right. I'm only familiar with the things I've read she said though, and I'm judging those on their own merits. If she's said other things that were of great insight, then I'll judge them on their own merits. What sort of observations about human behavior did she make?
This makes me flinch (and I'm not just talking about the typo). What I meant was that society made it difficult for women to have a voice so that they could be compelling. My apologies if anyone took it differently.Rand was a compeling woman in a time when women were not so easily compelling.