Originally posted by: Viper0329
Originally posted by: myusername
IME, Philosophy teachers are not well versed in hard science, and generally don't let science conflict with their little models.
I think a clear distinction must always be kept. People try and combine what philosophy and science have as their goals. One must kept a very clear distinction between:
A) Science - Gathering of emperical evidence to explain how things operate and work in the universe/world. Science seeks to explain how things behave. It assumes that the subject being studied or observed exists at all.
B) Philosophy - Philosophy seeks to explain the nature of things through the use of human reason. More often than not, emperical evidence CANNOT BE USED. It wants to know the NATURE of things, if they exist at all, why do they exist, etc. NOT how they behave, that is science's job.
There are several philosophers of the 20th century that were very well versed in science. Read Whitehead, Maritain, William Wallace, and many others.
Philosophers must keep their discipline to explaining what things are, not how they behave.
Scientists must keep within their own realm of explaining how things behave, not the nature of things.
Much of the error in today's thoughts come from blurring the line between the two principles and confusing each's role.