Studying Philosophy Does Make People Better Thinkers (www.cambridge.org)
from misk@piefed.social to science@mander.xyz on 22 Aug 09:11
https://piefed.social/post/1174438

#science

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Tomorrow_Farewell@hexbear.net on 22 Aug 13:27 next collapse

Anecdotally, my engagement with philosophy resources, philosophers, and philosophy enthusiasts hasn’t been supportive of this claim.

In particular, I have found them both incurious about math/logic (outside of specifically the parts labelled ‘logic’ as far as they relate to rhetoric) and their verbal skills to be lacking (more specifically, their inability/unwillingness to define their terms).

Cat_Daddy@hexbear.net on 22 Aug 13:40 collapse

Also anecdotally, I really enjoyed my philosophy and logic courses in college. But, admittedly, my professors were closely aligned with the sciences in my school. One class was even taught by two professors: one from philosophy and one from science.

fubarx@lemmy.world on 22 Aug 16:25 next collapse

Daringly published in Journal of the American Philosophical Association.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/838ca95a-a95c-4e30-a38f-a57f71cb0f67.gif">

TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world on 22 Aug 16:47 collapse

Studying philosophy well, and actually learning how to do it, makes you a better thinker. Yes, just like running will make you a better runner.

However, doing it poorly, will make you worse. Lots and lots of casual consumers of philosophy dont’ study it. They just read it passively and parrot it back out. Sort of like running for 200m and feeling like that is as good as running a 2km.