Hereandnow wrote: ↑December 29th, 2023, 2:20 pmOf course, this disappoints, because you expected an exposition about just this specialized region in physics, but this is NOT philosophy.
A Material Girl wrote: ↑December 29th, 2023, 12:37 pmI agree with you that physics is NOT philosophy.
I believe that you are wrong. All is philosophy.
A scientist once described the difference between science and philosophy as the following:
"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."
Where are those rules of science coming from? Who/what created those rules? What theory allows one to 'believe' in those rules in time?
A belief in science is simply philosophy turned religious (dogmatic). When looking a bit deeper, one sees, that most honest and true is not science but philosophy.
The following provides a case for it:
Hereandnow wrote: ↑December 30th, 2023, 1:30 amscience itself is not prior to consciousness. Science presupposes consciousness and its phenomena. The matter seems to be at an impasse ...There is an inquiry, but that inquiry cannot have been structured beforehand. Science is therefore a tool while it is philosophy that applies that tool. It is philosophy all the way down!
I believe Kant is wrong on this as well. While one might argue that one would be demanded to be Silent when it comes down to it, perhaps resulting in the wisdom "the wise is silent", most ethical is to speak for the world beyond existence, for a world that is good, because it is in that speaking that the world is manifested good. And so one sees that the never-ending Good-night Fairy Tale philosophy as you described it, is actually more true than science putting a man on the moon. Putting a man on the moon was preceded by a Good-night Fairy Tale! Putting a man on the moon IS a Good-night Fairy Tale and is philosophy!
Hereandnow wrote: ↑August 19th, 2020, 9:06 amthere is the interest, the thrill of being a scientist, of discovery, of positive peer review and so forth. ... It is eternal, as all inquiry leads to openness, that is, you cannot pin down experience in propositional knowledge.
A Material Girl wrote: ↑December 29th, 2023, 12:37 pmevery time you post another Good-night Fairy Tale, in return Lagayscienza posts at least 3 replies to it, assuring you that he is tittering on the edge of your rabbit hole, almost ready to jump into it head-first.When it comes down to it, dogmatic science is dishonest while never-ending and therewith mystic philosophy is most honest, despite all the practical value that science might shine in front of the human eye, with that being the whole Universe an all the matter that it contains, including the human being.
But, he just has one last little doubt for you to dispel it for him, while knowing full-well that in his secret honest materialistic view of objective physical reality, all such metaphysical narratives, including yours, are the opium for the masses, useless incoherent laughable BS. How dishonest and cynical is that?
But when it comes down to it, there is the question Why that world came to be, and Why that world came to be good. And while some think that they can surely put their 'belief in science' as you described it, by looking back at the success of science in history. Most honest from a philosophical position is to know that the past does not determine the future, and that it is philosophy that is fundamental to a future that is good.
Your criticism essentially sees just two options: Lagayscienza being lured into a philosophical rabbit hole, or having entered it. But what is actually most honest and true is the process of exploration of an infinite 🕳∞ rabbit hole that in the same time is relevant to a world that is good, and that is an 'option' of a different nature than science can even hope to describe.