Before I embark on this seemingly Sisyphean endeavor, has anyone attempted to measure “philosophical progress”? It seems that no philosophical problem I know of is apparently fully solved, and no general methods are known which reliably give true answers to philosophical problems. Despite this we definitely have made progress: e.g. we can chart human progress on the problem of Induction, of which an extremely rough sketch looks like Epicurus --> Occam --> Hume --> Bayes --> Solomonoff, or something. I don’t really know, but there seem to be issues with Solomonoff’s formalization of Induction.
I’m thinking of “philosophy” as something like “pre-mathematics/progressing on confusing questions that no reliable methods exist yet to give truthy answers/forming a concept of something and formalizing it”. Also it’s not clear to me “philosophy” exists independent of the techniques its spawned historically, but there are some problems for which the label of “philosophical problem” seems appropriate, e.g. “how do uncertainties work in a universe where infinite copies of you exist?” and like, all of moral philosophy, etc.
Seems to me that before a philosophical problem is solved, it becomes a problem in some other field of study. Atomism used to be a philosophical theory. Now that we know how to objectively confirm it, it (or rather, something similar but more accurate) is a scientific theory.
It seems that philosophy (at least, the parts of philosophy that are actively trying to progress) is about trying to take concepts that we have intuitive notions of, and figure out what if anything those concepts actually refer to, until we succeed at this well enough that to study then in more precise ways than, well, philosophy.
So, how many examples can we find where some vague but important-seeming idea has been philosophically studied until we learn what the idea refers to in concrete reality, and how to observe and measure it to some degree?
Before I embark on this seemingly Sisyphean endeavor, has anyone attempted to measure “philosophical progress”? It seems that no philosophical problem I know of is apparently fully solved, and no general methods are known which reliably give true answers to philosophical problems. Despite this we definitely have made progress: e.g. we can chart human progress on the problem of Induction, of which an extremely rough sketch looks like Epicurus --> Occam --> Hume --> Bayes --> Solomonoff, or something. I don’t really know, but there seem to be issues with Solomonoff’s formalization of Induction.
I’m thinking of “philosophy” as something like “pre-mathematics/progressing on confusing questions that no reliable methods exist yet to give truthy answers/forming a concept of something and formalizing it”. Also it’s not clear to me “philosophy” exists independent of the techniques its spawned historically, but there are some problems for which the label of “philosophical problem” seems appropriate, e.g. “how do uncertainties work in a universe where infinite copies of you exist?” and like, all of moral philosophy, etc.
Seems to me that before a philosophical problem is solved, it becomes a problem in some other field of study. Atomism used to be a philosophical theory. Now that we know how to objectively confirm it, it (or rather, something similar but more accurate) is a scientific theory.
It seems that philosophy (at least, the parts of philosophy that are actively trying to progress) is about trying to take concepts that we have intuitive notions of, and figure out what if anything those concepts actually refer to, until we succeed at this well enough that to study then in more precise ways than, well, philosophy.
So, how many examples can we find where some vague but important-seeming idea has been philosophically studied until we learn what the idea refers to in concrete reality, and how to observe and measure it to some degree?