shmik wrote:These ground rules already assume so much that you would end up begging the question against traditional epidemiologists.
Traditional epistemology is useless today. It is being pushed further and further into a tiny pocket on campus folded into the Humanities Department.
shmik wrote:
There is an objective world called the universe, and it is composed of stable atoms.
This axiom assumes Kant is incorrect in that it claims knowledge of the noumenon.
Right except we designed something called an "Atom Bomb" on a chalkboard and then went out in the desert in Nevada and it actually worked. Emmanuel Kant did not live in the 1940s. He may have been correct in the time he lived and published. Unfortunately we now know at least something about the noumenon. We know something to the point where we can manipulate and control it as it is manipulated and controlled in a nuclear weapon. We have the periodic table of elements now. We understand that sunlight is the product of fusion of hydrogen nuclei. We even understand how heavier elements are fused in the deaths of stars. We are not in a medieval position where we "cannot understand" how our sense organs interact with the outside world. We have modern biology.
I am not asking you to pledge allegiance to the wildest theories of science here. What is being asked of you (epistemically) is that you take your Kantian sense organs and place them into the same "ontological set" as the noumenon. i.e. We are inside the noumenon at all times. Our sense organs are the noumenon itself. This is not wild, and this is not crazy, and there is simply no rational reason not to adhere to it as an axiom.
shmik wrote:
Energy is conserved in every change and in every reaction in the universe.
This axiom assume Hume critique of induction is flawed.
Except again, David Hume did not live in the 20th century. We have extremely well-grounded rational systems that describe how a law of physics is extrapolated to all points in space. This is not theoretical musings anymore. We describe the fact that mechanical laws are invariant to location by something in our equations called "symmetries". This is not the bleeding edge of science. (It may by for you, but not inside the discipline of physics itself). Today, an entire well-grounded edifice exists in physics regarding symmetries. I would say strongly here (although some might find wiggle-room), that we are not engaging in flights of inductive fantasy when we claim that the laws that exist here in the room are the same laws that operate millions of light years away.
Another note I might add here --> The process of induction has been completely fleshed out as rigorous proof within some exacting branches of mathematics, particularly number theory. Was that the case during Hume's lifetime? I don't know. I would mention to you that there was a revolution in mathematics that gave rise to a branch of math called "Proof Theory". These questions regarding what can be considered "rigorous" proof came out of a revolution around the time of Cantor, Bertrand Russell, David Hilbert, and finally Kurt Godel. Roughly 1880 to 1935 or so. That is a good 150 years after David Hume died. What I'm saying to you, is that some of the quandaries raised by Hume don't apply anymore, because these concepts were not institutionalized or formalized during his lifetime. Today they are in dusty textbooks and we teach them to undergrads. This is not theory anymore. This is common stuff.
For the sake of irony, when you posted here in this thread, you were using a piece of technology (a computer) which was the direct technological product of the revolution in proof theory. Alan Turing was a child of that revolution and many of this theorems appear in textbooks on Proof Theory.
shmik wrote:What is the justification for accepting these axioms, have we really gotten to the point where we can ignore all modern epistemology?
How "modern" is modern epistemology anymore? You are basically reading men from the 18th century, who believed that we have eyes because
"God gave us eyes so that we could perceive his creation." Does that sound silly to you? It is silly -- but this is precisely what those men presumed was actually happening. Today, we have a completely different way of looking at this. Organs of perception, ears, eyes, nerves on the skin, perform a function related to the survival and fitness of an organism in its environment.
Ask yourself -- is there anyone on this forum at all who thinks we have eyes
"so that we can perceive God's creation"?? Certainly you and I don't. Outside of some wacky evangelicals typing from their cabin in Montana, I don't think anyone on this forum believes this or even frames the situation in this manner. But to be a "good epidemiologist" on campus you have to not just have a belly-feel for this presumption, you have to marry yourself to it as an axiom. That is not reasonable. Humans are the products of natural selection, and their sense organs are directly related to their fitness in an ancestral environment.
You are reading men who are going to tell you that the pituitary gland in the brain is where the "soul interacts with the body" (Descartes). Today we know that there are entire organs in the human brain responsible for mitigating fear responses during fright. So in the presence of a startling loud noise, the human body will have a freezing reaction. This is controlled by a part of the limbic system called the amygdala. What is the point of this example? The point is that the human brains contains entire innate structures related to reactions that are directly responsible for the survival of the body in the environment. These innate reactions, fear responses, salivating around food, being attracted to the opposite sex , etc, etc these are innate tendencies built directly in the brain of the human being, which are directly related to the bodily needs of us as an organism in an environment.
shmik -- Where is the discussion of
value in these wigged 18th century writers? Where? Human value extrapolated onto the world. Value regarding us as organisms who must reproduce ourselves. We must eat, drink water, seek shelter, be afraid of predators, pair-bond, baby-raise, etc etc. You were born screaming and hugging your mother and feeling cranky and desiring to suckle a breast for sustenance. You came into the world as an organism with needs that must be fulfilled. You did not deduce these things.
The wigged epistemologists are going to have you believing that you are some sort of floating disembodied Tabula Rasa that passively receives its "Sense perceptions". This is a lie. The truth is that you are a mortal organism in an environment and you act in that environment to survive and propagate yourself. This is not theory anymore.
Any epistemological framework that accepts these suppositions would be both well-grounded, as well as wholly consistent with the facts of science. Traditional western philosophy was perhaps building a bridge to the scientific method. Once that bridge is finished, we have to toss the ladder away and give up on mystical floating tabula rasas who "deduce" everything about the world starting from nothing. We must toss away the ladder like Wittgenstein did in the last chapter. It is time to grow up. It is time to move on.