scientific means are not genuine questions at all, they hold. The grounds for
the view /lie in a doctrine called ‘naturalism', which stresses that we human
beings áre part and parcel of the natural world, not something apart from it, ás
was once believed.' Since science studies the whole of the natural world, surely
it should be capable of revealing the complete truth about the human condition,
leaving nothing left for philosophy?」Adherents of this view/sometimes addthat
science undeniably makes progress, /while philosophy seems to discuss the
same questions for centuries on end. On this conception, there is no such