No Progress in Philosophy (Introduction)

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Wednesday, July 22, 2015, 22:21 (3199 days ago)

I enjoyed reading this and thought you might like it too.-http://commons.pacificu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1396&context=eip-Sorry I've not been able to keep up with discussions here. 
I'm too busy on other things, or else wasting time on twitter.

--
GPJ

No Progress in Philosophy

by David Turell @, Thursday, July 23, 2015, 00:19 (3199 days ago) @ George Jelliss

I enjoyed reading this and thought you might like it too.
> 
> http://commons.pacificu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1396&context=eip-
&... Thanks again for another wonderful article. No wonder dhw and I keep at it, but I think have taught him a great deal, even if I can't convince him.:-)

No Progress in Philosophy

by dhw, Thursday, July 23, 2015, 13:05 (3199 days ago) @ George Jelliss

GEORGE: I enjoyed reading this and thought you might like it too.-http://commons.pacificu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1396&context=eip-Sorry I've not been able to keep up with discussions here. 
I'm too busy on other things, or else wasting time on twitter.-Many thanks, George. You were among the very first contributors to this website, and it is always a pleasure to welcome you back. I used to keep track of your activities on your Jeepy Jay Diary, but you seem to have stopped jeepyjaying (or activating) back in April -The article is great and I shall pick out just one quote: -“Whatever you believe, no matter how obvious or fundamental, no matter who you are, or where, or when, there's a good philosophical argument that your belief is false. There is no deep, foundational belief that philosophy cannot refute...”-This is the very basis of our forum and of my own agnosticism. There is ALWAYS a counter argument, because nobody knows the objective truth.-DAVID: Thanks again for another wonderful article. No wonder dhw and I keep at it, but I think have taught him a great deal, even if I can't convince him. :-) -David has indeed taught me a great deal. (Pssst, he may have learned a few things from me, but please don't tell him - he likes to think he knows it all.) :-(

No Progress in Philosophy

by David Turell @, Thursday, July 23, 2015, 16:12 (3199 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Thanks again for another wonderful article. No wonder dhw and I keep at it, but I think have taught him a great deal, even if I can't convince him. :-) 
> 
> dhw: David has indeed taught me a great deal. (Pssst, he may have learned a few things from me, but please don't tell him - he likes to think he knows it all.) :-(-George's article tells us that philosophy may have advanced our ways about thinking about deeper truths, but we are still at Aristotle's level, and in comparison, I find the same result in noting that you are still on your picket fence, unable to reach conclusions. And more surprising, the experts you throw at me are generally from information I have presented to you.- As an example of experts disagreeing, global warming comes to mind: alarmists and deniers. Please keep in mind there is room for both. I am on the side of the deniers who in a nuanced fashion point out there is certainly current warming from the previous Little Ice Age (1450-1800)but no need for extreme alarm over the small possibility of excessive warming since the actual temperatures don't fit any of the predictive alarmist models. ;-)

No Progress in Philosophy

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Thursday, July 23, 2015, 18:47 (3198 days ago) @ David Turell

I think the author undermines his own case in part by not admitting Locke and Mill to be philosophers when they are being social activists. And Aristotle, though he may have got mechanics wrong, was quite right on any number of other things.-I've not been posting on my Jeepyjay Diary, or here, because I've been busy trying to finish my book on Knight's Tours, which hasn't left me much time for anything else, and I'm aware of running out of time these days.

--
GPJ

No Progress in Philosophy

by dhw, Friday, July 24, 2015, 13:52 (3198 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: George's article tells us that philosophy may have advanced our ways about thinking about deeper truths, but we are still at Aristotle's level, and in comparison, I find the same result in noting that you are still on your picket fence, unable to reach conclusions. And more surprising, the experts you throw at me are generally from information I have presented to you.-Not surprising. You are my acknowledged, respected and much appreciated guide through the magical maze of science. The surprising thing is how often you present us with information which lends itself to a very different interpretation from your own. But that is often the case when someone has preconceived ideas: they automatically select the pros, and seem to miss the cons. The latter usually underlie my own contribution to the scientific areas of our discussions, the intelligent cell being a prime example.-DAVID: As an example of experts disagreeing, global warming comes to mind: alarmists and deniers. Please keep in mind there is room for both. -A charming reminder from a committed theist to a non-committed agnostic.-GEORGE: I think the author undermines his own case in part by not admitting Locke and Mill to be philosophers when they are being social activists. And Aristotle, though he may have got mechanics wrong, was quite right on any number of other things.-He does actually mention Mill and Locke as exceptions, and since Karl Marx did a doctorate in philosophy, he might also have been included! But I think the author's general thesis is spot on: “Whatever you believe...there's a good philosophical argument that your belief is false.” -GEORGE: I've not been posting on my Jeepyjay Diary, or here, because I've been busy trying to finish my book on Knight's Tours, which hasn't left me much time for anything else, and I'm aware of running out of time these days.-Delighted to hear about the book. “Aware of running out of time”...Oh, aren't we all?

No Progress in Philosophy

by David Turell @, Friday, July 24, 2015, 15:20 (3198 days ago) @ dhw

dhw:The surprising thing is how often you present us with information which lends itself to a very different interpretation from your own. But that is often the case when someone has preconceived ideas: they automatically select the pros, and seem to miss the cons. The latter usually underlie my own contribution to the scientific areas of our discussions, the intelligent cell being a prime example.-You have my developed ideas backwards. I was a lazy agnostic after medical school. Lazy in the sense that I had not done any deeper thinking than religion is boring and science will in time probably explain everything, a thought based on how well medical training was explaining the human biology. Then I began to read lay science reviews of the latest discoveries in particle physics and cosmology and surprisingly the Big Bang theory read like the first few chapters in Genesis. I had just written my book on American politics and discussed with my editor doing something on a comparison of the BB and Genesis as a piece of evidence there might be a God. He told me to check out Darwin's theory of evolution. I found it to be totally wanting, and also found a book by a Ph.D. theoretical physicist who also was an Orthodox Jewish scholar of the OT. He had done the comparison of the BB and the first chapters of Genesis, and I was now fully convinced there was a God. What you see from me does not come from an original preconception. I am strongly committed to a self-educated point of view.

No Progress in Philosophy

by dhw, Saturday, July 25, 2015, 15:01 (3197 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: The surprising thing is how often you present us with information which lends itself to a very different interpretation from your own. But that is often the case when someone has preconceived ideas: they automatically select the pros, and seem to miss the cons. The latter usually underlie my own contribution to the scientific areas of our discussions, the intelligent cell being a prime example.-DAVID: You have my developed ideas backwards. I was a lazy agnostic after medical school. Lazy in the sense that I had not done any deeper thinking than religion is boring and science will in time probably explain everything, a thought based on how well medical training was explaining the human biology. Then I began to read lay science reviews of the latest discoveries in particle physics and cosmology and surprisingly the Big Bang theory read like the first few chapters in Genesis. I had just written my book on American politics and discussed with my editor doing something on a comparison of the BB and Genesis as a piece of evidence there might be a God. He told me to check out Darwin's theory of evolution. I found it to be totally wanting, and also found a book by a Ph.D. theoretical physicist who also was an Orthodox Jewish scholar of the OT. He had done the comparison of the BB and the first chapters of Genesis, and I was now fully convinced there was a God. What you see from me does not come from an original preconception. I am strongly committed to a self-educated point of view.-You can't actually have a preconception until you have a belief. The moment we become “fully convinced” of something, we often exclude (or even ignore) any material that contradicts our convictions. You undoubtedly notice how atheists do this, but you cannot see that you have the same problem. That is why I talk so often of pots and kettles. I am no different. The admirable critique of philosophy that George posted sums up my own preconception: whatever anyone believes, there will always be a counter argument, and I automatically look for it. This is not meant to be a criticism of you or of myself, but simply an observation.-As for the course that has led us to our current positions, we have indeed come from opposite directions. I have always thought deeply about these matters ever since childhood, and am fully aware of the possibility that I think too much. (That may need explaining, but it's a subject in itself.) Initially I was very religious, in my teens I began to question and became an atheist, and on reading Darwin became an agnostic. I too am “strongly committed to a self-educated point of view”, and opened this website in the hope of enlightenment. Thanks to you and other contributors, I have certainly found plenty of light, but so far it has only lit the way to an impenetrable darkness. However, I love the light, and am not afraid of the dark.

No Progress in Philosophy

by David Turell @, Saturday, July 25, 2015, 15:53 (3197 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: As for the course that has led us to our current positions, we have indeed come from opposite directions. I have always thought deeply about these matters ever since childhood, and am fully aware of the possibility that I think too much. (That may need explaining, but it's a subject in itself.) Initially I was very religious, in my teens I began to question and became an atheist, and on reading Darwin became an agnostic. I too am “strongly committed to a self-educated point of view”, and opened this website in the hope of enlightenment. Thanks to you and other contributors, I have certainly found plenty of light, but so far it has only lit the way to an impenetrable darkness. However, I love the light, and am not afraid of the dark.-I'm delighted with others to have led you into the darkness with all the information I have unearthed after becoming committed to Theism from earlier research. I will keep trying to show you the light through scientific research.

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