
by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:30 pm

by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 7:12 pm

by Katganistan » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:07 pm

by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:10 pm
Katganistan wrote:Perhaps a title that actually identifies the topic as a type of anarchism might help -- most people scanning the titles won't open it if they have no idea what you're driving at.

by Katganistan » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:13 pm

by Norstal » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:20 pm
Wikipedia wrote:The theory advocates treating science as an ideology alongside others such as religion, magic and mythology, and considers the dominance of science in society authoritarian and unjustified. Promulgation of the theory earned Feyerabend the title of “the worst enemy of science” from his detractors.
Toronto Sun wrote:Best poster ever. ★★★★★
New York Times wrote:No one can beat him in debates. 5/5.
IGN wrote:Literally the best game I've ever played. 10/10
NSG Public wrote:What a fucking douchebag.

by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:23 pm
Katganistan wrote:Then clarify it in your title.

by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 10:04 pm

by Seperates » Wed Aug 17, 2011 10:07 pm
Four-sided Triangles wrote:This thread's a miserable failure.

by Free Soviets » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:18 pm
Norstal wrote:He's batshit crazy. Seems like he wants to take out falsifiability out of science. There's no more to talk about as the scientific method is a valid method in discovering the truth. Anyone can do it.
Norstal wrote:I just love how someone who's not a scientist are telling how scientists are supposed to do their jobs. Love it. Maybe I should become philosopher of Nationstates Moderation next.

by Trotskylvania » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:31 pm
Your Friendly Neighborhood Ultra - The Left Wing of the Impossible
Putting the '-sadism' in PosadismKarl Marx, Wage Labour and Capital
Anton Pannekoek, World Revolution and Communist Tactics
Amadeo Bordiga, Dialogue With Stalin
Nikolai Bukharin, The ABC of Communism
Gilles Dauvé, When Insurrections Die"The hell of capitalism is the firm, not the fact that the firm has a boss."- Bordiga

by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:33 pm
Trotskylvania wrote:I think that a bit of Feyerabend is both healthy and necessary. Science's position in modern society is pretty clearly overprivileged,
the epistemological claims that are often made by scientists, both in the "hard" sciences and the social sciences, are often philosophically tenuous.

by Trotskylvania » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:45 pm
Four-sided Triangles wrote:Trotskylvania wrote:I think that a bit of Feyerabend is both healthy and necessary. Science's position in modern society is pretty clearly overprivileged,
I don't think it's clear at all. Explain.the epistemological claims that are often made by scientists, both in the "hard" sciences and the social sciences, are often philosophically tenuous.
Such as?
Your Friendly Neighborhood Ultra - The Left Wing of the Impossible
Putting the '-sadism' in PosadismKarl Marx, Wage Labour and Capital
Anton Pannekoek, World Revolution and Communist Tactics
Amadeo Bordiga, Dialogue With Stalin
Nikolai Bukharin, The ABC of Communism
Gilles Dauvé, When Insurrections Die"The hell of capitalism is the firm, not the fact that the firm has a boss."- Bordiga

by Moogs World » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:47 pm

by Trotskylvania » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:56 pm
Moogs World wrote:I have an interest in philosophy of science but havent read Feyerabend yet. He is on the reading list. I have heard it said that he made purposefully exaggerated arguments in order to engage further debate. I think that the most important element of inquiry is honesty and that pseudoscience is characterised by distortion and selective use of evidence. I also think that falsification is an important criteria for a reliable narrative but there will be things that fall outside like string theory which should not be thrown in with pseudoscience.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Ultra - The Left Wing of the Impossible
Putting the '-sadism' in PosadismKarl Marx, Wage Labour and Capital
Anton Pannekoek, World Revolution and Communist Tactics
Amadeo Bordiga, Dialogue With Stalin
Nikolai Bukharin, The ABC of Communism
Gilles Dauvé, When Insurrections Die"The hell of capitalism is the firm, not the fact that the firm has a boss."- Bordiga

by Four-sided Triangles » Thu Aug 18, 2011 12:04 am
Trotskylvania wrote:I would feel a whole lot better about the claims made by the academy as a whole with regards to the methodology of science if they could provide any evidence of a unifying scientific method. The fact that there never has been a universal scientific method was one of Feyerabend's central points:
In spite of tremendous advances that have been made in the philosophy of science, the academy worldwide is stuck in the outmoded Popperian notion of falsification. As T.S. Kuhn noted, if scientists actually strictly observed Popper's criteria, they'd never get any science done at all. What's worse, is that many modern scientists are simply philosophically illiterate.
Clearly we need to introduce a little anarchy in the academy.

by Four-sided Triangles » Thu Aug 18, 2011 12:06 am
Trotskylvania wrote:If you haven't heard of it yet, add Thomas Samuel Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions to your reading list; it's a seminal work int he philosophy of science, though you may not like what he has to say about falsification.

by Moogs World » Thu Aug 18, 2011 12:10 am
Trotskylvania wrote:Moogs World wrote:I have an interest in philosophy of science but havent read Feyerabend yet. He is on the reading list. I have heard it said that he made purposefully exaggerated arguments in order to engage further debate. I think that the most important element of inquiry is honesty and that pseudoscience is characterised by distortion and selective use of evidence. I also think that falsification is an important criteria for a reliable narrative but there will be things that fall outside like string theory which should not be thrown in with pseudoscience.
If you haven't heard of it yet, add Thomas Samuel Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions to your reading list; it's a seminal work int he philosophy of science, though you may not like what he has to say about falsification.

by Sovereign Spirits » Thu Aug 18, 2011 12:12 am
Trotskylvania wrote:I would feel a whole lot better about the claims made by the academy as a whole with regards to the methodology of science if they could provide any evidence of a unifying scientific method. The fact that there never has been a universal scientific method was one of Feyerabend's central points:
In spite of tremendous advances that have been made in the philosophy of science, the academy worldwide is stuck in the outmoded Popperian notion of falsification. As T.S. Kuhn noted, if scientists actually strictly observed Popper's criteria, they'd never get any science done at all. What's worse, is that many modern scientists are simply philosophically illiterate.
Clearly we need to introduce a little anarchy in the academy.

by Moogs World » Thu Aug 18, 2011 12:16 am
Sovereign Spirits wrote:Trotskylvania wrote:I would feel a whole lot better about the claims made by the academy as a whole with regards to the methodology of science if they could provide any evidence of a unifying scientific method. The fact that there never has been a universal scientific method was one of Feyerabend's central points:
In spite of tremendous advances that have been made in the philosophy of science, the academy worldwide is stuck in the outmoded Popperian notion of falsification. As T.S. Kuhn noted, if scientists actually strictly observed Popper's criteria, they'd never get any science done at all. What's worse, is that many modern scientists are simply philosophically illiterate.
Clearly we need to introduce a little anarchy in the academy.
Sounds like Feyerabend was onto something. The zeal with which some will elevate specific persons in the scientific community to nearly god-like status, and by which they pursue a long train of formulas before the rails are even laid much less staked, is probably a symptom arising out of the figurative disease of an ideological two-party system.
Science at its core and in its purest form is welcome and necessary, as is spirituality at its core and its purest form. Just like churches and Religion have perverted the good that arises from spirituality by using it as a tool for control and brainwashing, so too has the State when it comes to science.
The most important aspect is Truth, at every step of the way. You will never reach it by climbing a ladder of lies, and illusion which makes you think you're getting closer when, at best, you're going nowhere at all. Generally, this means not being thick-headed about how accurate or infallible your particular form of truth might be.
Today, our search for truth is severely hampered. We grow up under the bias of the secular or the religious. It is this that leads us to believe that we are better-informed now than we were previously. It is too bad that the misinformation is as rampant as ever, and much of it arises from misplaced trust. At some point, both the secular and the religious stop checking their sources and simply become parrots, if they aren't already. When they bother to go back and check, their rose-colored glasses hide the errors.
Nobody is omniscient, nobody is unbiased, and nobody holds a monopoly on truth. And because I feel the need to clarify, that includes you and I. Get your nose out of the books once in a while and experience the Earth. What is it that tells you your explanation is the correct one or "more right/less wrong" than another? I think when you get right down to it, anything you don't experience for yourself and discover the exact cause or source of with 100% accuracy and absolutely no errors, is basically an act of trust and giving someone or something the benefit of the doubt.

by Four-sided Triangles » Thu Aug 18, 2011 12:17 am
Sovereign Spirits wrote:Sounds like Feyerabend was onto something. The zeal with which some will elevate specific persons in the scientific community to nearly god-like status, and by which they pursue a long train of formulas before the rails are even laid much less staked, is probably a symptom arising out of the figurative disease of an ideological two-party system.
Science at its core and in its purest form is welcome and necessary, as is spirituality at its core and its purest form. Just like churches and Religion have perverted the good that arises from spirituality by using it as a tool for control and brainwashing, so too has the State when it comes to science.
The most important aspect is Truth, at every step of the way. You will never reach it by climbing a ladder of lies, and illusion which makes you think you're getting closer when, at best, you're going nowhere at all. Generally, this means not being thick-headed about how accurate or infallible your particular form of truth might be.
Today, our search for truth is severely hampered. We grow up under the bias of the secular or the religious. It is this that leads us to believe that we are better-informed now than we were previously. It is too bad that the misinformation is as rampant as ever, and much of it arises from misplaced trust. At some point, both the secular and the religious stop checking their sources and simply become parrots, if they aren't already. When they bother to go back and check, their rose-colored glasses hide the errors.
Nobody is omniscient, nobody is unbiased, and nobody holds a monopoly on truth. And because I feel the need to clarify, that includes you and I. Get your nose out of the books once in a while and experience the Earth. What is it that tells you your explanation is the correct one or "more right/less wrong" than another? I think when you get right down to it, anything you don't experience for yourself and discover the exact cause or source of with 100% accuracy and absolutely no errors, is basically an act of trust and giving someone or something the benefit of the doubt.

by Norstal » Thu Aug 18, 2011 1:12 am
Seperates wrote:Four-sided Triangles wrote:This thread's a miserable failure.
Hey, I still love you FT. Not all of them can be winners.
And on the guy? Needs to take the time to actually read what the Baconian Method actually entails, and why it works.
I wish more people were versed in the philosophy of science... but it's hard enough to get people who are actually versed in science..
Toronto Sun wrote:Best poster ever. ★★★★★
New York Times wrote:No one can beat him in debates. 5/5.
IGN wrote:Literally the best game I've ever played. 10/10
NSG Public wrote:What a fucking douchebag.

by Norstal » Thu Aug 18, 2011 1:23 am
Sovereign Spirits wrote:Trotskylvania wrote:I would feel a whole lot better about the claims made by the academy as a whole with regards to the methodology of science if they could provide any evidence of a unifying scientific method. The fact that there never has been a universal scientific method was one of Feyerabend's central points:
In spite of tremendous advances that have been made in the philosophy of science, the academy worldwide is stuck in the outmoded Popperian notion of falsification. As T.S. Kuhn noted, if scientists actually strictly observed Popper's criteria, they'd never get any science done at all. What's worse, is that many modern scientists are simply philosophically illiterate.
Clearly we need to introduce a little anarchy in the academy.
Sounds like Feyerabend was onto something. The zeal with which some will elevate specific persons in the scientific community to nearly god-like status, and by which they pursue a long train of formulas before the rails are even laid much less staked, is probably a symptom arising out of the figurative disease of an ideological two-party system.
Science at its core and in its purest form is welcome and necessary, as is spirituality at its core and its purest form. Just like churches and Religion have perverted the good that arises from spirituality by using it as a tool for control and brainwashing, so too has the State when it comes to science.
The most important aspect is Truth, at every step of the way. You will never reach it by climbing a ladder of lies, and illusion which makes you think you're getting closer when, at best, you're going nowhere at all. Generally, this means not being thick-headed about how accurate or infallible your particular form of truth might be.
Today, our search for truth is severely hampered. We grow up under the bias of the secular or the religious. It is this that leads us to believe that we are better-informed now than we were previously. It is too bad that the misinformation is as rampant as ever, and much of it arises from misplaced trust. At some point, both the secular and the religious stop checking their sources and simply become parrots, if they aren't already. When they bother to go back and check, their rose-colored glasses hide the errors.
Nobody is omniscient, nobody is unbiased, and nobody holds a monopoly on truth. And because I feel the need to clarify, that includes you and I. Get your nose out of the books once in a while and experience the Earth. What is it that tells you your explanation is the correct one or "more right/less wrong" than another? I think when you get right down to it, anything you don't experience for yourself and discover the exact cause or source of with 100% accuracy and absolutely no errors, is basically an act of trust and giving someone or something the benefit of the doubt.
).Toronto Sun wrote:Best poster ever. ★★★★★
New York Times wrote:No one can beat him in debates. 5/5.
IGN wrote:Literally the best game I've ever played. 10/10
NSG Public wrote:What a fucking douchebag.

by Four-sided Triangles » Thu Aug 18, 2011 3:33 pm

by Chumblywumbly » Thu Aug 18, 2011 3:47 pm
Norstal wrote:I just love how someone who's not a scientist are telling how scientists are supposed to do their jobs. Love it. Maybe I should become philosopher of Nationstates Moderation next.
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