SolitaryWalker
Tenured roisterer
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2007
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Well, at least we can agree that typology is unscientific and purely a form of philosophy. Half the people here are still hung up on looking for scientific proof of a system that doesn't even purport to be scientific.![]()
I believe that Jung would endorse this view and in fact, the main message of my Principles of Typology was that typology is a philosophical discipline rather than psychological.
http://www.typologycentral.com/foru.../23728-typology-philosophical-discipline.html
Amazon.com: Principles of Typology (9781438927145): Aleksey Bashtavenko: Books
^^^philosophy can and should be scientific.
also re the other points raised prior to the interjections about Jung, folskiness and philosophy: if I'm both bullying and self-victimizing does that make me the masterdebatermanipulator?or just a twat?
Typology isn't ready for scientific inquiry as neuroscience is not advanced enough to investigate the cognitive tendencies Jung had in mind. However, typology should make a shift from philosophy onto neuroscience as soon as possible.
yeah I don't really know how to express it, as I will make any number of semantic errors.
I'm not a "scientist" but I know that it's at least not accepted by all scientists, that "science=empiricism". I mean I know Marxist scientists who believe strongly in dialectical materialism (there's a good book called The Dialectical Biologst by two, umm, biologists, called Richard Levins and Richard Lewontin).
I don't think anyone has a monopoly on the term "scientific" and find it hard to accept that, the observance of tendencies whcih you support with empirical evidence, and then making hypotheses based on them, can't be called "scientific". Would you say Freud was "unscientific" for example?
But, I digress. And from my own thread no less.
There may be many different scholarly definitions of the term science, however, they all have one item in common: there must be a certain standard of rigor regarding empirical investigation and all scientific investigation is by definition empirical. An empirical method is rarely the sole feature of the scientific method, however, it is an indispensible part thereof. Hence, empiricism is a necessary though an insufficient condition for the definition of the scientific method.