Originally posted by C Elegans
Hm, do you view philosophy of science as part of science or part of philosophy? Personally I think both Kuhn and Popper has played an important role for modern science, both the way we work and the way we think.
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It was my impression that they did not have a lot of influence on science but you and Curdis would know more about this than me.
Originally posted by C Elegans
@Tom and Curdis: Interesting discussion, I'm following you but I know too little to be able to participate. May I ask you a couple of questions, based on what little I know about the subject - prior to my psychology/neuroscience education, I took philosophy 1 year, I've been to art school one year and I took astrophysics 1 semester, that's it, and that's a long time ago so forgive me if my questions are irrelevant or off.
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Ohh be all means - don't let ignorance stop you - as Curdis says it doesn’t stop him.
Originally posted by C Elegans
Existentialism I always thought was a narrow field and more or less exclusively still debated in France. Did it perhaps have an impact on modern philosophy that I haven't been taught since the uni where I took philosophy focus mainly on other fields?
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It is still marginal in the western analytical tradition.
Originally posted by C Elegans
The quantum theory and philosophy: Why is the quantum theory more involved in, or more connected to, philosophy than other theories? Or isn't it?
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Quantum theory raises interesting questions about lots of things.
But the problem of free will is not one of them as any professional philosopher knows. Indeed one doen’t need to reflect long to see that the issue of randomness can’t influence free will in any way.
Some have speculated that quantum theory might be a way of explaining consciousness but as far as I know that is just unfounded speculation.
Originally posted by C Elegans
I've heard some people say that philosophy took a deep dive after Wittgenstein, what do you think about this claim?
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Originally posted by Curdis
After Wittgenstein?
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LOL
As you can probably see from my earlier replies I think that that is wrong. There are philosophers that have taken the attitude that Wittgenstein's later philosophy is pretty much the final word on just about any philosophical problem. There can be no doubting that Wittgenstein was one of the greatest philosophers of the last century, perhaps the greatest, but I think that certain philosophers are not critical enough of Wittgenstein's work. But then I would say that since I believe that Wittgenstein was wrong in a number of arrears. I think that his most important work was not his positive theories but the problems that he identified. One major problem is unfortunately that Wittgenstein is notoriously hard to understand - both because of the nature of what he was writing about but also because of his way of writing. This is something he acknowledged and something that is of great regret to anyone that have to study him.
Originally posted by Curdis
I am of the opinion that Post-Modern is being used often to say 'I believe that this is actually a modernist position but would be associated with stuff I don't like if I were to say so, so I'll say Post-Modern instead'.
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I don't understand this. Post-modernism is usually seen as a denial of modernism.
Originally posted by Curdis
Well it's not been much of a discussion from my end.
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yes... I did notice that.
Originally posted by Curdis
If pressed it would be my position that there has been too much fragmentation and specialisation in philosophy in the last 102 years for any of the individual advances to be considered relatively significant.
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No you are simply wrong again. The same specialisation has taken place in science and has contributed greatly to progress in both fields.
Originally posted by Curdis
1. In this case you can not expect philosophy to be seen as relevent to many people.
2. I fail to see how this way of relevence:
a. can not be used to label all things as relevent (All things can be seen as meeting this), or
b. escapes the issue of perceived relevence altogether (If I am unaware of it, I can not have percieved it, so how can it's
relevence to me be judged?) - So it is clearly not a useful way to discuss relevence.
3. I fail to see the connection to relevence based purely on an issue of tense. What is relevent now can not be directly equated to what is relevent in an individual's past or an individual's future. You would need to establish an actual relationship. All things are, under this way of relevence, potentially relevant.
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I was making a list (not complete) of how the expression ‘relevant’ could be used in this context.
1. Part of philosophy is question about life, how to live etc. While people don't discuss it - such questions are relevant and important to them.
2. I think you are wrong. Relevance can indeed be used in this sense. If I have a guardian angle that helps me through life, that angle is relevant to me and my life even if I don’t know about my angle.
3. No you misunderstand me. If I have a brother I don't know about it might well be said to be relevant to me. So this is a question of whether people would actually agree that philosophy is important to them. Now if asked many people would probably say that philosophy is not relevant to them.
I had three points. 1. Parts of philosophy is important to people even if they don't identify it with philosophy, such as questions about life and how to live it. 2. Philosophy has influenced world history and therefore the state of affairs in the world and that is certainly relevant. 3. There are arrears of philosophy like ethics and political philosophy that if people knew more about them they would (and they certainly should) think them relevant. See Taxes and government thread for how political philosophy is relevant to people. There have also been discussions about philosophy of religion and ethics in sym.
Originally posted by Curdis
I also acknowledged philosophy as being (at least originally) the overarching intellectual dicipline (damning by faint praise?).
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Just about any attempt to gain new knowledge used to be called philosophy. That is not what we mean by the expression ‘philosophy’ today. What you are saying is neither here nor there.
Originally posted by Curdis
If you are truly interested in the (from a physicist's view point) reasons why there is no threat to the fundamentals of Quantum Theory (Which we will have to define at some stage) then this is where I am probably best qualified to comment
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I would like to discuss that but I don't have time this week. Then I will show of my ignorance.

I didn't really bounce Eeyore. I had a cough, and I happened to be behind Eeyore, and I said "Grrrr-oppp-ptschschschz."
Tigger