Unit 2 PDF
Unit 2 PDF
Unit 2 PDF
PHILOSOPHYAND THEIR
COMPLEMENTARITY
Contents
2.0 Objectives
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Metaphysics or Philosophy of Being
2.3 Epistemology or Philosophy of Knowledge
2.4 Ethics or Moral Philosophy
2.5 Logic
2.6 PhilosophicalAnthropologyor Philosophy of Human
2.7 Aesthetics or Philosophy ofArt
2.8 Philosophyof Religion
2.9 Philosophy of Mind
2.10 Philosophy of Science
2.11 Complementarity
2.12 Let Us Sum Up
2.13 Key Words
2.14 Further Readings and References
2.15 Answers to Check Your Progress
2.0 OBJECTIVES
Dear students, the whole thrust of this unit is to bring to your attention the various
topics or areas that are covered by philosophy at large.Although philosophy itself is
a different field altogether, but within itself it gives room to manyother sub areas. So
in this unit we will be concentrating on:
Different disciplines within Philosophy
Their uniqueness and
How they compliment each other
2.1 INTRODUCTION
Initially the study of all philosophical questions formed only one undifferentiated
body of knowledge, called philosophy. Philosophizing is a process that is carried
out at various levels of reality and on different aspects.As the body of philosophical
knowledge grew, there appeared disciplines of philosophy dealing with specific 17
Introduction to objects of study such as nature, human, God, morals, knowledge, aesthetics, etc.
Philosophy
The academic discipline of philosophyis traditionallydivided into 6 branches. They
are Metaphysics, Epistemology, Ethics, Logic,Anthropology andAesthetics.
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Introduction to
Philosophy Check your progress I
Note: a) Use the space provided for your answer
b) Check your answer with those provided at the end of the unit.
1) What is metaphysics?
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2) What are the three main activities involved in human knowing?
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2.5 LOGIC
Logic is the systematic study of the general structures of sound reasoning and valid
arguments. It is the study of the methods and principles used to distinguish good
(correct) from the bad (incorrect) reasoning. This does not mean that only a student
of logic can reason well or correctly. To say so would imply that to run well one
requires studying the physics and physiology. However it is true that a person who
has studied logic is more likely to reason correctly than one who has never thought
about the general principles involved in the activity. There are several reasons for
that. First, the proper study of logic will enable the student to reason well, as practice
can make one perfect. Second, the study of logic gives attention to the analysis of
fallacies which are common and finds often natural mistakes in reasoning. Finallythe
studyof logic will give the students techniques and methods for testing the correctness
of different kinds of reasoning. Logic will provide us with criteria to correct reasoning
with which we can test arguments for their correctness.
Logic is best defined as the science of reasoning. Reasoning is a special kind of
thinking in which problems are solved, in which inference takes place, that is, in
which conclusions are drawn from premises. Logic examines how the mind functions
in reaching valid arguments and what are the criteria for validityof these arguments.
The logician is concerned with the correctness of the completed process of reasoning.
The logician asks: do the conclusions reached from the premise used or assumed?
Do the premises provide good reasons for accepting the conclusion? If the premises
do provide adequate grounds for affirming the conclusion, then the reasoning is
correct, otherwise it is incorrect.
Logic is either deductive or inductive because one can argue from the universal to
the particular(deduction) or from theparticular to the universal.(induction). Deduction
is pure reasoning while induction has recourse to experience and observation. A
deductive argument involves the claim that the premises provide conclusive grounds
for its conclusion.An inductive argument is an argument, which claims only that the 21
Introduction to premises provide some evidences for the conclusion. Hence, one of the basic
Philosophy
differences between the deductive and the inductive argument is the strength of the
claim made for the argument. In deduction we pass from the truth of the universal to
the truth of the particular, in induction we pass from the truth of many particular
instances to the truth of a universal law.
a) Every man is mortal.
Socrates is a man
Therefore Socrates is mortal (Deduction).
b) This man is mortal
That man is mortal
Therefore all men are mortal. (Induction)
Check your progress II
Note: a) Use the space provided for your answer
b) Check your answer with those provided at the end of the unit.
1) What are the main characteristics of Ethics that can be deduced from its
Definition.
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2. What is Logic?
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2.11 COMPLEMENTARITY
What is complementarity? Complementarity is “the interrelation of reciprocity
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whereby one thing supplements or depends on the other.” When we take different
Introduction to disciplines in philosophy (metaphysics, epistemology, logic, ethics, aesthetics etc)
Philosophy
we can see that these are the different aspects of the same reality.All these disciplines
supplement each other to arrive at the ultimate truth regarding God, world and man.
Emmanuel Kant in his book ‘Critique of pure Reason’ says that there are three
important questions in philosophy. 1. What can I know? (Epistemology) 2. What
may I do? (Ethics) 3. What may I hope for? (Metaphysics) These three questions
can be answered only if I answer the question: Who is man? (Anthropology).
According to David Hume science of man is the only solid foundation for other
sciences.All the questions regarding God, world etc. have relevance onlywith regard
to man.
Everydiscipline shouldultimatelyaim at givingmeaning to man’s lifeand should help
him to lead a successful life. Hence one discipline can be relevant only in relation to
another.
Metaphysics is the nucleus of philosophy. The other branches of philosophy study
their subject matter from the perspective of metaphysics. Metaphysics in its study of
the being of things discovers ‘laws of beings’that are universally valid for all reality,
obtains conclusions applicable to all beings and ultimately reaches God as the First
Cause of the being of all things. The other philosophical disciplines coincide with
metaphysics in their search for the ultimate cause of reality. However theylimit their
study to some type of beings, which have a specific manner of being, for example
bodies as well as livingthings. Thus theydo not arrive at universal conclusions reached
by metaphysics.
Ethics finds its foundation in Metaphysics. In order to determine the conformity of
human acts to man’s end, one has to consider basic truths about God, creation, the
spiritual nature of man and his freedom which are the topics studied by metaphysics.
There had been modern attempts to elaborate an ethical system without God. But
they did not succeed because they lacked an adequate foundation because they
could not account for the genuine meaning of human life.
Ethics has a close link with philosophyof man because both disciplines deal with the
question of morality. Ethics has to rely on the studies of the philosophy of man when
it deals with the spirituality of the human soul, intellectual and sense knowledge, the
will and human freedom.
Logic too has its foundation in metaphysics, for the relations that the mind establishes
among the products of intellectual knowledge ought to reflect the order existing in
reality; otherwise the mental process will be incorrect and will not lead to the truth.
Epistemology and metaphysics are also closely related because epistemology deals
with the objective value of intellectual knowledge in relation to its primary object, it
deals with being.
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