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Comment by soulofmischief

1 month ago

You're confusing philosophy with religion.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy

> Philosophy (from Ancient Greek philosophía lit. 'love of wisdom') is a systematic study of general and fundamental questions concerning topics like existence, knowledge, mind, reason, language, and value. It is a rational and critical inquiry that reflects on its methods and assumptions.

It is literally a self-reflective science.

I recommend taking a basic philosophical course at a local community college, or reading some literature or even watching YouTube videos on the subject of philosophy. Or just skim the Wikipedia article if nothing else. It might completely transform how you perceive and act upon the world.

An example near the start of that article is

>Physics was originally part of philosophy, like Isaac Newton's observation of how gravity affects falling apples.

like back then people would wonder how apples fall and it was labeled philosophy. Now we understand gravitation it's part of physics for the most part. People launching satellites seldom call a philosopher to calculate the orbit.

It remains to be seen if qualia, which we don't understand very well and are so regarded as philosophical, make the transition to neuroscience.

  • The fact that we have sharpened our classification of sciences over time does not imply that philosophy is a study of the ill-defined. It implies the opposite: Philosophy is more precisely defined now than ever.

    If you read the rest of the article, you will see clear examples of what is considered a philosophical problem and what isn't.

    • My argument was more philosophy is for stuff we don't understand like how do qualia work, rather then ill-defined. When you get to stuff like how does neurotransmission work which we do kind of understand it gets classed as science.

      Are there philosophical problems that have definite answers like what is the atomic number of oxygen type answers?

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