The future of philosophy
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Keywords

ciencia cognitiva
ética
epistemología
ciencia
problema mente-cuerpo
filosofía Cognitive science
Ethics
Epistemology
Science
Mind-body problem
Philosophy

How to Cite

R. Searle, J., & Guarino, J. I. (2010). The future of philosophy. Eikasía Revista De Filosofía, (32), 1–32. https://doi.org/10.57027/eikasia.32.459

Abstract

There is no sharp dividing line between science and philosophy, but philosophical problems tend to have three special features. First, they tend to concern large frameworks rather than specific questions within the framework. Second, they are questions for which there is no generally accepted method of solution. And third they tend to involve conceptual issues. For these reasons a philosophical problem such as the nature of life can become a scientific problem if it is put into a shape where it admits of scientific resolution. Philosophy in the 20th century was characterized by a concern with logic and language, which is markedly different from the concerns of earlier centuries of philosophy. However, it shared with the European philosophical tradition since the 17th century an excessive concern with issues in the theory of knowledge and with scepticism. As the century ends, we can see that scepticism no longer occupies centre stage, and this enables us to have a more constructive approach to philosophical problems than was possible for earlier generations. 

https://doi.org/10.57027/eikasia.32.459
pdf (Español (España))
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