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No, I gotta disagree that philosophy is testable via the study of neuronal changes.
I mean, one can test if the neurons change (or whatever changes take place in the brain when one changes philosophical viewpoints), but philosophical issues - what is the meaning of life? Is execution of dangerous criminals acceptable? - can NEVER be determined by testing.
I mean, if that were true, then there would be objective proof that executions are okay (at least in some cases). But there are always going to be people who will disagree. So the idea of it being okay to execute criminals is not an objective thing, and it never will be. Purely philosophical issues are not testable and thus do not have any part in the real world. They only have an effect in peoples' minds.
But once a person uses a philosophical idea as a basis for actions, it ceases to be something that has no effect in the real world. Because any such action must have consideration about the real world consequences.
Are you saying that we cannot know it is true that either God exists or he does not exist?Thus, no demonstratably true knowledge about the real world comes solely from philosophy. That's my point.
Are you saying that we cannot know it is true that either God exists or he does not exist?
I thought that our point was that all truths had to be testable.
What counts as purely philosophical? There are some statemtnets of philosophy like "either the external universe is really physical or not" which seem philosophical to me, but which you might say don't count because logic is based on observation, or the concept of the physical comes from science. I think in that case you need to defend the position that the use of logic etc is not "pure philosophy", because prime facie you could be redefining philosophy as you go along so as to exclude some of what is generally treated as philosophy by experts in the field.We can test it. We can take any "truth" that is arrived at by a purely philosophical means and see if it is reflected in reality.
From your perspective, there are two worlds. The one inside your head, where you think, and the one outside, where your body and everyone else is.
One is a mental world, the other is physical. If you think something, it does not change the physical world. You have to act on it before it does. Your thoughts have no consequence in the physical world, but actions do. That is the basis of what I am saying.
Philosophy is subjective, and confined compeltely to the mental world. And it is different for each person. As long as philosophical ideas are confined there, they can not influence the world. But as soon as someone acts on them, they cease to be purely philosophical. There are other issues regarding those actions, not just philosophical issues. And it is these extra issues that are created when philosophy is used as the basis/justifications for actions that have an impact in the real world.
But a thought by itself cannot change the world by itself. It needs more.
What counts as purely philosophical? There are some statemtnets of philosophy like "either the external universe is really physical or not" which seem philosophical to me, but which you might say don't count because logic is based on observation, or the concept of the physical comes from science. I think in that case you need to defend the position that the use of logic etc is not "pure philosophy", because prime facie you could be redefining philosophy as you go along so as to exclude some of what is generally treated as philosophy by experts in the field.
Sorry, I will respond to this really late.
Human decisions are to philosophy as physics is to mathematics.
Mathematics alone do nothing of value, just like philosophy alone does nothing of value. That doesn't mean it is useless, as it can be a tool in something useful.
What do you mean by the "real world"? Certainly physicalism, and naturalism, and other metaphysical systems, claim to relate to the real world. They might not verifiable (or testable or demonstrable), but that does not mean that are nonsensical or meaningless. That was the mistake of Logical Positivism, for instance when Schlick said: "The meaning of a proposition is the method of its verification". Wittgenstein by apparently helped correct that error explaining the the meaning of a term was in it's use rather than a positive referent "pictured" by it. I don't see why a statement ought not be regraded as truth apt (because nonsensical), just because we cannot actually verify it's truth or falsity, or demonstrate or test it. That would seem to imply only that which we can know to be true or false can actually be true or false, but that seems arrogant to me. For instance, we cannot know or verify whether the neanderthal who had the most sexual partners ever imagined a purple crescent moon, but that does not imply that the assertion that she or he did is not truth apt or meaningful. And back to metaphysical systems, they may not be demonstrable, testable or verifiable - but they certainly have meaning; and that's how we can for instance cogently distuinguish one metaphysical system from another, and argue about how parsimonious they are, and what they imply etc.After all, the logic in my first example is sound, but unobservable. And it means nothing to us.
But once the decision is made, it relates to the real world. It has a demonstratable consequence. Thus, it is no longer purely philosophical.
What do you mean by the "real world"?
Certainly physicalism,
and naturalism,
and other metaphysical systems, claim to relate to the real world. They might not verifiable (or testable or demonstrable), but that does not mean that are nonsensical or meaningless.
That was the mistake of Logical Positivism, for instance when Schlick said: "The meaning of a proposition is the method of its verification". Wittgenstein by apparently helped correct that error explaining the the meaning of a term was in it's use rather than a positive referent "pictured" by it.
I don't see why a statement ought not be regraded as truth apt (because nonsensical), just because we cannot actually verify it's truth or falsity, or demonstrate or test it.
That would seem to imply only that which we can know to be true or false can actually be true or false, but that seems arrogant to me. For instance, we cannot know or verify whether the neanderthal who had the most sexual partners ever imagined a purple crescent moon, but that does not imply that the assertion that she or he did is not truth apt or meaningful.
And back to metaphysical systems, they may not be demonstrable, testable or verifiable - but they certainly have meaning; and that's how we can for instance cogently distuinguish one metaphysical system from another, and argue about how parsimonious they are, and what they imply etc.
It seems like you would like to say that the difference between physicalism and idealism is the differece between the two nonsense terms "uejenshsytebndnja!" and "shsywetrjsauapl!". Surely someone would have noticed by now?
I think if I understand Logical Positivism the meaning of a word was to be found in it's referent. The meaning of the term "Henry's cat" was Henry's cat. The positivist element (and hence the idea of a positive referent) was the idea that only things that could be positively measured via sense perception, like the temperature of water, could count as referents for terminology. Therefore, unless there was a potential positive empirical referent to a term, it was regarded as meaningless. (I am not mentioning analytic statements here, but only the idea that synthetic statements had to have "positive reference" in their component terms, like a cat for the tern "cat" and a Henry for term "Henry"). Therefore mataphysical statements such as "the unobserved is physical" were meaningless, having no possible empirical content, and not being analytic in nature.My goodness, that's hard to understand. Is there an english translation of that? What the hell is a positive referent?
They are studied by physics, and so part of the physical universe, therefore they are physical. Event horizons are spatial locations beyond which no light can escape from a gravitational field. I would have thought so, anyway...Is that testable? Can you conduct an experiment to see if it is true? An example that comes to mind of something that is real and yet not physical is the event horizon of a black hole, or gravitational distortions in spacetime. They are not physical, yet they can be measured.
Do you mean that unless I support the claim "I am sat on a chair" that statement is meaningless, and therefore not truth apt, and therefore neither true nor false? What do you mean by "meaningless"? Do you understand the import of "I am sat in a chair" when I do not support the statement? It is true that I am, or that I am not, whether I support that statement or not, right?If they cannot even be demonstratable in the real world, then they could very well not even be true. A claim to truth is fine, but that claim is meaningless unless it can be supported.
But you seem to be saying something is consequential only if it can be measured. That excludes the possibility of there being a reality where there are no measurements made, or there being unmeasurable things. Maybe "man is the measure of all things" and "without man there is nothing to be measured"?
I think if I understand Logical Positivism the meaning of a word was to be found in it's referent. The meaning of the term "Henry's cat" was Henry's cat. The positivist element (and hence the idea of a positive referent) was the idea that only things that could be positively measured via sense perception, like the temperature of water, could count as referents for terminology. Therefore, unless there was a potential positive empirical referent to a term, it was regarded as meaningless. (I am not mentioning analytic statements here, but only the idea that synthetic statements had to have "positive reference" in their component terms, like a cat for the tern "cat" and a Henry for term "Henry"). Therefore mataphysical statements such as "the unobserved is physical" were meaningless, having no possible empirical content, and not being analytic in nature.
They are studied by physics, and so part of the physical universe, therefore they are physical. Event horizons are spatial locations beyond which no light can escape from a gravitational field. I would have thought so, anyway...
Do you mean that unless I support the claim "I am sat on a chair" that statement is meaningless, and therefore not truth apt, and therefore neither true nor false? What do you mean by "meaningless"? Do you understand the import of "I am sat in a chair" when I do not support the statement? It is true that I am, or that I am not, whether I support that statement or not, right?
I have been really distressed recently by the apparent irrelevance of much philosophical chatter. Whether with word games, nihilistic non questions, smart alec jargonisation, posturing and abstraction, or logical nonsences the conversations seem to have deteriorated and lost sight of the real purpose of philosophy.
Philosophy should be about the meaning of life. It is for life and about life. It is the pursuit of the kind of wisdom that changes cultures and provides the seminal thinking that defines the next generation.
The methodologies of philosophers- logical argumentation from clearly defined premises, the ability to assess the strengths and weaknesses of various positions, the ability to see a system as a whole and explore and improve its systematic consistency should be subordinate to this task. Philosophy in a sense is the belief that a mans mind has enough light in it to be able to reason its way to meanings and by exploring them to deepen ones awareness of them. It has the humility to recognise its limits and by its arguments demonstrates the limits of reasons and is more connected to the real issues of its culture and time than much of the relativistic and jargonised nihilistic rantings that passes for philosophy these days.
Has philosophy lost its way? Has it become the minority pasttime of jargonised professionals and lost the common touch that once allowed to define eras and lay the foundations for future actions for better or for worse?
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