On a science show today a physicist said
‘… I feel sorry for philosophers, they can’t measure anything’
What does philosophy say about what human life depends on?
Science bakes bread, philosophy bakes Twinkies … tastes sweet but no nutritional value,
It appears that to some philosophy is as much an identity and ideology as theists. They will defend beliefs to the bitter end.
Steve obviously really applied himself to studying this thread and the associated links,
This is a very provincial view of life, shared, I am given to understand, by a number of engineers, some of whom are actually ID creationists. It’s just really silly to think everything is an engineering problem.
Again putting words in my mouth. Never said all things reduce to an 'engineering problem'.
One of the best pieces of advice I got when starting out was 'you can't apply engineering logic to people'.
I have posted several times I worked with creationists who were very good engineers. They compartmentalize science and engineering. Same with the history of science. Newton.
James Clerk Maxwell who in the late 19th century developed electromagnetics the foundation for electronics was a Christian. Einstein gave credit to Maxwell.
The idea that philosophy feeds science dies not hold up.
As to measurements, again you miss the point. Philosophy is subjective and not quantifiable, and science is.
From my experience all organized groups are the same. Norms and ways of ding hustings dfvelop. Hierarchical structures form. There is politics and infighting.
In that regards science, politics, unions, religion and so on have the same general social form. After all it is all the same humans with the same human brain.
People on the forum quote secular philosophers from ancient times to today much as Christians quote scripture.
Pattern recognition and seeing commonality is a necessary skill in science and engineering.
Today social groups are studied in sociology and psychology, not philosophy. They are sometimes called soft science.
In the 70s and 80s Zen became popular. Books on the Zen of business. A Book Of 5 Rings by an ancient Samurai Mustachio became popular for a while in business. Applying the Samurai warrior code and attitude to business completion.
If you want to read something other that the same old western philosophy read Book Of 5 Rings. He is an interesting character in non western philosophy. I read it in the 80s when I was into martial arts. I read Bruce Lee as well, he was a philosopher.
'Take what is udeful and fiorget the rets' whn it came to all of the martial arts.
en.wikipedia.org
An individual in any occupation can find inspiration and personal guidance from any number of sources. That does not mean any given source of inspiration uniquely 'feeds ' the occupation.
That philosophy feeds science is a very simplistic view of a very complex social and intercultural process. Complex in that it is difficult to model in detail.