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In ancient philosophy, there was no difference between the liberal
arts of mathematics and the study of history, poetry or
politics—only with the development of mathematical proof did there
gradually arise a perceived difference between "scientific"
disciplines and others, the "humanities" or "liberal arts". Thus,
Aristotle studies planetary motion and poetry with the same methods,
and Plato mixes geometrical proofs with his demonstration on the
state of intrinsic knowledge. This unity of science as descriptive
remains, for example, in the time of Thomas Hobbes who argued that
deductive reasoning from axioms created a scientific framework, and
hence his Leviathan was a scientific description of a political
commonwealth. What would happen within decades of his work was a
revolution in what constituted "science", particularly the work of
Isaac Newton in physics. Newton, by revolutionizing what was then
called "natural philosophy", changed the basic framework by which
individuals understood what was "scientific". |
Scientific treatment of philosophy
While he was merely the archetype of an accelerating trend, the
important distinction is that for Newton, the mathematical flowed
from a presumed reality independent of the observer, and working by
its own rules. For philosophers of the same period, mathematical
expression of philosophical ideals was taken to be symbolic of
natural human relationships as well: the same laws moved physical
and spiritual reality. For examples see Blaise Pascal, Gottfried
Leibniz and Johannes Kepler, each of whom took mathematical examples
as models for human behavior directly. In Pascal's case, the famous
wager; for Leibniz, the invention of binary computation; and for
Kepler, the intervention of angels to guide the planets.
In the realm of other disciplines, this created a pressure to
express ideas in the form of mathematical relationships. Such
relationships, called "Laws" after the usage of the time became the
model which other disciplines would emulate.
August Comte (1797-1857) argued that ideas pass through three rising
stages, Theological, Philosophical and Scientific. He defined the
difference as the first being rooted in assumption, the second in
critical thinking, and the third in positive observation. This
framework, still rejected by many, encapsulates the thinking which
was to push economic study from being a descriptive to a
mathematically based discipline. Karl Marx was one of the first
writers to claim that his methods of research represented a
scientific view of history in this model.
With the late 19th century, attempts to apply equations to
statements about human behavior became increasingly common. Among
the first were the "Laws" of philology, which attempted to map the
change over time of sounds in a language.
It was with the work of Darwin that the descriptive version of
social theory received another shock. Biology had, seemingly,
resisted mathematical study, and yet the Theory of Natural Selection
and the implied idea of Genetic inheritance - later found to have
been enunciated by Gregor Mendel, seemed to point in the direction
of a scientific biology based, like physics and chemistry, on
mathematical relationships. In the first half of the twentieth
century, statistics became a free-standing discipline of applied
mathematics. Statistical methods were used confidently, for example
in an increasingly statistical view of biology.
The first thinkers to attempt to combine inquiry of the type they
saw in Darwin with exploration of human relationships, which,
evolutionary theory implied, would be based on selective forces,
were Freud in Austria and William James in the United States.
Freud's theory of the functioning of the mind, and James' work on
experimental psychology would have enormous impact on those that
followed. Freud, in particular, created a framework which would
appeal not only to those studying psychology, but artists and
writers as well.
One of the most persuasive advocates for the view of scientific
treatment of philosophy would be John Dewey (1859-1952). He began,
as Marx did, in an attempt to weld Hegelian idealism and logic to
experimental science, for example in his "Psychology" of 1887.
However, it is when he abandoned Hegelian constructs, and joined the
movement in America called Pragmatism, possibly under the influence
of William James' "Principles of Psychology" that he began to
formulate his basic doctrine, enunciated in essays such as "The
Influence of Darwin on Philosophy" (1910).
This idea, based on his theory of how organisms respond, states
that there are three phases to the process of inquiry:
Problematic Situation, where the typical response is inadequate.
Isolation of Data or subject matter.
Reflective, which is tested empirically.
With the rise of the idea of quantitative measurement in the
physical sciences, for example Lord Rutherford's famous maxim that
any knowledge that one cannot measure numerically "is a poor sort of
knowledge", the stage was set for the conception of the humanities
as being precursors to "social science" was set.
This change was not, and is not, without its detractors, both inside
of academia and outside. The range of critiques begin from those who
believe that the physical sciences are qualitatively different from
social sciences, through those who do not believe in statistical
science of any kind, through those who disagree with the methodology
and kinds of conclusion of social science, to those who believe the
entire framework of scientific zing these disciplines is solely, or
mostly, from a desire for prestige and to alienate the public.
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