pornstarwannabe
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With questions like "Is that a hole in an ass, or an ass surrounding a hole," we need a Science to help us formulate an answer. Any Philosophers here? Don't be shy. Speak up.
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With questions like "Is that a hole in an ass, or an ass surrounding a hole," we need a Science to help us formulate an answer. Any Philosophers here? Don't be shy. Speak up.
Philo-sophia is the greek "love of wisdom"; sciencia is the latin "knowledge" (the greek equivalent being "episteme"). So are wisdom and knowledge the same? Not exactly, by most accounts anyway, but they're certainly related. Science is trying to get at the details, the facts, the actual information that we can pin down and make use of. Philosophy is trying to look at the larger picture and understand the interrelations, what it all means, the foundation for existence to start with.
Philosophy was once thought to start where natural science ends, and in this sense to be the ultimate "science", in the broad sense (that is, the ultimate "knowledge"). In the modern age, many people presume there is no knowledge beyond the natural sciences, and therefore that either philosophy doesn't exist, or it is just talking about the stuff that science hasn't yet designed machines to investigate, that it's basically the speculative branch of science. This is quite confusing, though, since theoretical physics, eg, is quite speculative itself. Where science ends and philosophy begins there is a matter of some debate (and often agreed to be an issue of semantics as much as anything).
The problem really is that there are two things we like to call "philosophy" and they are only tangentally related. On one hand you have the framework of thinking - logic, epistemology and metaphysics. Or as you put it the acquisition of wisdom.~~~
Quotes of Aristotle
“Philosophy is the science which considers truth”
~~~
It would appear that etymology holds the answer. Science is the acquisition of knowledge; Philosophy is the acquisition of wisdom; there for science is a sub category of philosophy.
So...yes, Philosophy is a science by definition as science is a part of it.
Amicus Veritas![]()
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Quotes of Aristotle
No, philosophy is not science; philosophy is how you organize what you know.
Science is what you do with your philosophy.
Since when?Every philosophy class I have taken came with the firm reassurance that no one really knows anything.
...
Then your instructors have followed Kant and Hegel, the Subjectivist Philosophers...
So do our leaders in the West. Look to Objectivist Epistemology.![]()
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http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/03/on_restoring_american_individualism.html
http://forum.literotica.com/showthread.php?t=802444
Different views....and I'm sure it has come up with some great questions, labeled and defined some hard to define things but it's still not a science.
One modern 'philosophy' (nods to Liar) was made necessary by the pressing requirement for those of dubious intellect to pontificate on Porn Boards.![]()
AMICUS
I disagree.
Philosophy cannot account serendipity, and much of our 'science' is exploring crazee ideas.
Philosophy helps you get from Pixley to Hooterville but its as lost as Dorothy Gale on Oz when notions fall outta the Blue.
No, philosophy is not science; philosophy is how you organize what you know. Science is what you do with your philosophy.
I have to rejoice!
For I now know that ami isn't dead. Moronicity lives!!
With questions like "Is that a hole in an ass, or an ass surrounding a hole," we need a Science to help us formulate an answer. Any Philosophers here? Don't be shy. Speak up.
With questions like "Is that a hole in an ass, or an ass surrounding a hole," we need a Science . . .
With a question like that, what you need is a hobby.Specifically, for a question like that, you need topology. (Well, actually, what you need is a reason, but we'll assume that as a given.)