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Philosophy is about vanity.
the search for knowledge and truth
The object of a company is to maximise the financial yield to its shareholders. There may be legal and ethical constraints on how it does so, but the directors can be disbarred and prosecuted for failing in their primary duty. Sadly, not enough shareholders seem to know this, and it is usually only small business directors who get disbarred: the top executives of Carillion, Thomas Cook, and just about every bank you have heard of, can rob their clients, suppliers and shareholders blind as long as they lend the occasional yacht to a politician.
You may describe philosophy as a search for knowledge and truth. That is indeed vanity. Science is about the acquisition of knowledge, and most scientists avoid the use of "truth", preferring "repeatability" as more in line with our requisite humility in the face of observation.
As an occasional company director, I know exactly what I am required by law to do, thanks. It is arguable that the greatest advances in human health and happiness came about by capitalists organising limited companies to make stuff like railways and penicillin (though sewage, the greatest boon to mankind, seems to be a matter of public finance building the infrastructure then handing over the operating profit to private speculators). The best definition of industry I ever heard was "organising men, machines, materials and money, to make things that people want", and if you are going to speculate on a revolutionary product, it's best to do it with private capital.General, established ethics may be encapsulated in the law of the land, and where an endeavour involves subjecting humans to novel physical and chemical challenges, most civilised countries require prior scrutiny by specialist ethical committees. Sadly, although there are voluntary censorship codes within the industry, the general ethics of "computer games" and "antisocial media" escapes scrutiny and vast numbers of human lives are wasted or damaged thereby. But it makes an untaxable profit, so that's OK.
Rethinking efficiencyBusiness thinkers have steadfastly regarded the elimination of waste as management’s holy grail. but what if the negative effects from the pursuit of efficiency eclipse the rewards?The Growing Power of the FewSince 1997 a strong majority of industries in the United States have become more concentrated. Many are now what economists consider “highly concentrated.” This tends to correlate with low levels of competition, high consumer prices, and high profit margins.Source: https://hbr.org/2019/01/rethinking-efficiency
Philosophers always pretend that their work is important and fundamental. It isn't even consistent. You can't build science on a rickety, shifting, arbitrary foundation. It is arguable that Judaeo-Christianity catalysed the development of science by insisting that there is a rational plan to the universe, but we left that idea behind a long time ago because there is no evidence for it.
Cambridge Dictionary: (knowledge from) the careful study of the structure and behaviour of the physical world, especially by watching, measuring, and doing experiments, and the development of theories to describe the results of these activities:
Science may not be able to provide some answers.
presumption of a prior purpose is not based on observation.
the presumption of a prior purpose is not based on observation.
This sounds like easily-dismissible bunkum, but as traditional attempts to explain consciousness continue to fail, the “panpsychist” view is increasingly being taken seriously by credible philosophers, neuroscientists, and physicists, including figures such as neuroscientist Christof Koch and physicist Roger Penrose.Philosophers at NYU, home to one of the leading philosophy-of-mind departments, have made panpsychism a feature of serious study. There have been several credible academic books on the subject in recent years, and popular articles taking panpsychism seriously.
Cosmopsychism might seem crazy, but it provides a robust explanatory model for how the Universe became fine-tuned for life.It turns out that, for life to be possible, the numbers in basic physics – for example, the strength of gravity, or the mass of the electron – must have values falling in a certain range. And that range is an incredibly narrow slice of all the possible values those numbers can have. It is therefore incredibly unlikely that a universe like ours would have the kind of numbers compatible with the existence of life. But, against all the odds, our Universe does.Example: The strong nuclear force has a value of 0.007. If that value had been 0.006 or 0.008 life would not have been possible
Philosophy may provide a solution
The strong nuclear force has a value of 0.007. If that value had been 0.006 or 0.008 life would not have been possible
Wrong. It never has. But it has obstructed the march of science and the growth of understanding.
Quote from: cleanair on 10/10/2019 09:47:29The strong nuclear force has a value of 0.007. If that value had been 0.006 or 0.008 life would not have been possibleBut it is .007, so life is inevitable. Incidentally, .007 of what units?
a search for truth by thinking
How does one test to see if their thinking is accurate?
There is actually a field called philosophy of science. The scientific method is a product, it's a philosophy for science.
stubborn defense of dogmas.
I cited the text from https://aeon.co/essays/cosmopsychism-explains-why-the-universe-is-fine-tuned-for-life It does not mention a unit.
genetic engineered creatures already amount for about 2% of the GDP of USA.
Science is a process, not a philosophy. Even the simplest linguistics confirms this: we "do" science, nobody "does" philosophy.
Quote from: cleanair on 10/10/2019 15:27:41a search for truth by thinkingPlease define truth. It's impossible to find something if you don't know what you are looking for - at best, you might trip over it without noticing!
the search for knowledge and truth, especially about the nature of man and his behaviour/behavior and beliefs
Quote from: cleanair on 10/10/2019 15:27:41stubborn defense of dogmas. Worth looking at the Inquisition's defence of Aristotelian philosophy and papal dogma in the face of Galileo's simple thought experiments. The whole point of science is to question anything that might smell of dogma (or bullshit).
The declaration of independence of the scientific man, his emancipation from philosophy, is one of the subtler after-effects of democratic organization and disorganization: the self- glorification and self-conceitedness of the learned man is now everywhere in full bloom, and in its best springtime - which does not mean to imply that in this case self-praise smells sweet. Here also the instinct of the populace cries, "Freedom from all masters!" and after science has, with the happiest results, resisted theology, whose "hand-maid" it had been too long, it now proposes in its wantonness and indiscretion to lay down laws for philosophy, and in its turn to play the "master" - what am I saying! to play the PHILOSOPHER on its own account.
Science is no more or less than the application of the process of observe, hypothesise, test, repeat. There's no suggestion of belief, philosophy or validity, any more than there is in the rules of cricket or the instructions on a bottle of shampoo: it's what distinguishes cricket from football, and how we wash hair. The value of science is in its utility. Philosophy is something else.
I haven't defended the scientific method by stating that it is "valid as a definition". I merely stated what it is. I don't need to defend cricket, but I can define it as "the game in which eleven players etc...…" You may use science, you may enjoy cricket, but they don't need defending. I think you will find the scientific method to be a lot older than Francis Bacon. He was certainly a noted experimentalist, a perceptive observer, and an excellent writer, but the development of the bow and arrow, or the boomerang, can be traced to much earlier and more widespread scientific processes.
I can't accept your excuse for not defining truth. If you use a word to denote what you are looking for, you must be able to describe its characteristics sufficiently that a person "skilled in the art" would recognise it when he finds it. If philosophers spend their days looking for something that cannot be defined, or whose definition can vary arbitrarily, they are by definition wasting their lives - and mine, if I listen to them!
You mention value. Who determines that value?