pood
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2021
- Messages
- 4,507
- Basic Beliefs
- agnostic
I have seen a number of posts in various threads suggesting that philosophy is useless to science, or just useless period. And it’s true that many scientists say they have no use for philosophy. On Page One of one of his books, Steven Hawking famously declared “philosophy is dead,” and then went on to write a book — of philosophy. Apparently he didn’t get his own memo.
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed science journal that publishes work across a wide range of disciplines, does not agree. I commend to your attention Why Science Needs Philosophy, which focuses on the major contributions of philosophy to biology, including stem-cell research, the discontinuity theory of immunity, cognitive science (especially the contributions of the philosopher Jerry Fodor), evolutionary altruism, debates over units of selection, and how to define genes, on which, perhaps surprisingly, there is still disagreement. It also alludes to the contribution of philosophy to physics on the definition of time, especially the work of Huw Price and David Lewis, both of whom I have read, and Lewis’s paper The Paradoxes of Time Travel is a classic contribution to analytic philosophy.
In the quote that opens this article, Einstein takes direct aim at the “shut up and calculate” school of science, likening them to “artisans” as distinct from “real seekers after truth.”
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed science journal that publishes work across a wide range of disciplines, does not agree. I commend to your attention Why Science Needs Philosophy, which focuses on the major contributions of philosophy to biology, including stem-cell research, the discontinuity theory of immunity, cognitive science (especially the contributions of the philosopher Jerry Fodor), evolutionary altruism, debates over units of selection, and how to define genes, on which, perhaps surprisingly, there is still disagreement. It also alludes to the contribution of philosophy to physics on the definition of time, especially the work of Huw Price and David Lewis, both of whom I have read, and Lewis’s paper The Paradoxes of Time Travel is a classic contribution to analytic philosophy.
In the quote that opens this article, Einstein takes direct aim at the “shut up and calculate” school of science, likening them to “artisans” as distinct from “real seekers after truth.”