Why Talk to Philosophers? Part I. by philosopher of science Wayne Myrvold.
See also Sean Carroll's own blog entry, Physicists Should Stop Saying Silly Things about Philosophy.
Sean classifies the disparaging comments physicists make about philosophy as follows: "Roughly speaking, physicists tend to have three different kinds of lazy critiques of philosophy: one that is totally dopey, one that is frustratingly annoying, and one that is deeply depressing". Specifically:
- “Philosophy tries to understand the universe by pure thought, without collecting experimental data.”
- “Philosophy is completely useless to the everyday job of a working physicist.”
- “Philosophers care too much about deep-sounding meta-questions, instead of sticking to what can be observed and calculated.”
He counters each argument presented.
Personally, I am underwhelmed, since he does not address the point of view that philosophy is great at asking interesting questions but lousy at answering them. Typically, an interesting answer to a philosophical question requires first recasting it in a falsifiable form, so that is becomes a natural science question, be it physics, cognitive sciences, AI research or something else. This is locally known as hacking away at the edges. Philosophical questions don't have philosophical answers.
I'm not completely sure what your question is here, but it sounds like it may be begging.
Yes. There's no indication in the laws of physics or of biology of anything that resembles a genuine choice. If you think otherwise, show it.
I'm not sure what you think you are being a counterexample to here. No one has claimed that no one studying physics hasn't gotten some ideas in this regard. Heck, Roger Penrose, whose opinions I should take far more seriously than yours (or almost anyone on LW) has similar ideas. The question isn't "is there a minority who have studied physics and think there's room for free-will" but what the facts actually support. It isn't tough to find minority views of all sorts that aren't terribly justified- Jonathan Sarfati is an accomplished chemist and a staunch young earth creationist for example. One needs a lot more than simply saying "I've studied this and I disagree" (and frankly- given your posts here I've seen no indication that you have any substantial physics background at all).
Again, apparently begging the question. You claim that people here don't understand the questions. Arguing that a set of questions is ill-formed or has simple answers is not by itself a sign one doesn't understand the question.
I don't know what you mean by "refuse" an answer- and I fail to see why you think these are answers that would be given by an "imaginary physicist"- but it may be that you are actually falling into the common failure mode of a lot of bad philosophy where you think having a minority view of something makes it a genuine case in controversy. The rest of your paragraph is simply repeating what you've already claimed.
This does not follow. At best, this is a possible metric. And when there's a large number of people who are at work at something, noting that they are doing badly at what they are trying is highly relevant. But it is worth noting that many major aspects of what LW's approach are ideas supported by major, prominent philosophers, like Quine. And in fact, if one looks at actual data for what professional philosophers think, many attitudes of LW are decidedly mainstream. To a large extent, the problem isn't that philosophers haven't gotten the right answers, it is that many of them then spend inordinate amounts of time on the bad ones.
I'm not sure what you mean here, and suspect you may mean quantitative data. In that case, I suggest looking at the link I gave earlier which is a systematic survey of what professional philosophers believe.
Being blunt, I'm one of the people who more frequently than not is arguing that people on LW should read more philosophy and that there are substantial aspects of it that matter. But that doesn't change that philosophy as practiced today has deep-seated problems. And moreover, simply repeatedly asserting that professional philosophy is somehow in good shape is just like asserting that you believe in free-will, you may or may not have a choice about doing that, but either way, it isn't productive.
In the sense of "why shouldn't I take my toothache to the dentist"
It is a fact that naturalistic libertarianism has been advanced Robert Kane , Tony Dore and others.
I would invite you to reflect on 3 things:
Why you think your own opin... (read more)