Hobbes' Choice wrote:Scott
You seem to pretend that I'm against the scientific method all together. I extend the need to include logic as a function of it as the most significant missing factor. Replicability and demonstration is important but NOT without also providing a justified counter reason for how any such theory could be disproven. And also, any such replicability or demonstration can fit with multiple reasons. As such, you are being hypocritical to accept some things but not others within the method. You still have not explained how you can assert measuring observations using logic when you don't accept it as real? Even if something appears as merely a catalyst for reaction, you don't dismiss its reality because it remains unaffected. You may think logic only acts as such a catalyst but only think of the premises that get affected in change in the final conclusion as all that is significant. This is a big mistake.
It was just the fact that you asked, and I told you. The point about demonstrability, is that the multiverse is simply not demonstrable. It remains a clumsy and non Ockhamist way to solve a problem that does not exist. Bit like a solution looking for a problem. Don't need to disprove
any theory in any case. Having a means to falsify; is not the same as a edict to have to disprove every crack-pot scheme you might dream up. But the difficulty here is, what good is any theory without cause and effect? If the world brings things into being without cause, then basically the whole scientific project is meaningless.Obviously, just because I don't like it, does not mean it is not true, but the results of deterministic "laws", such as they are, do provide predictive results, and whilst this is the case, I'd seek to preserve the method we have and not throw the baby out with the bathwater.
The multiverse IS determined indirectly just as many other inferences done scientifically too. The difference is that you only need the first observer (reader of the argument) as the 'empirical' witness and their internal reasoning however realized (whether interpreted as learned or genetic) PLUS a valid argument. It is also in line with Occam since I don't even assume anything to reality beyond the observer to be unable to deny it.
Like I'm trying to caution you, I am not against science here. The Falsification I referred to wasn't a challenge for you to try to 'falsify' any unreasonable claim or fantasy you think I have without warrant. I mentioned it with respect to the hypocrisy of those who hold to a
strict stance of the empirical method but opt to pick and choose which things they are or are not required to have challenged. The fear of concerns for science, especially of the past, was a problem with demarcating truth as a scientist is able to do as opposed to religious ones. I get this but know that this is NOT a real issue as most believe. My own logical method also is able to definitively demarcate the absurd as well. I just think that logic has in the past gained a bad rap for appearing to support non-sense. This is because the propositions (premises) that go into any argument do NOT have to map onto our reality in order to be valid or sound. And I also thought that this dismissal is like throwing the baby out with the bathwater too. I certainly am not for throwing out the empirical method in any way. I am concerned about specific philosophical details about some problems within it but am more concerned about the disrespect of the incompleteness of determining any of its truths without assuring a soundness and real veracity of the logic it uses as well.
Here is an example of how the concern within contemporary science that I see is clearly in error: While I agree to conservation principles, I find the BB theory proposing certain concepts that is highly magical and absurdly mystical when they propose that conservation doesn't apply at the beginning when or where it is assumed that a fixed quantitative amount of matter and energy just appears without warrant. I would understand nothing OR, an infinite quantity, but to assume an inserted and fixed quantity at some point simply for no reason (not even causatively justified according to your favor), is hypocritical. This is no different than one proposing a non-deistic God who created the universe because it commands a unique non-zero/non-infinite quantity that is arbitrary. Now, for those who at least propose a multiverse theory, this is not so hypocritical since is then interprets our particular universe as just being one of every possible arbitrary quantity to begin with. I take the further step by presuming a vacant reality. This is certainly an appropriate way to assume, just as being atheistic implies an absence of belief. I propose NOTHING necessary to initiate reality as the appropriate and rational way to begin.
You miss that our brains do not immediately interpret input from our senses as distinct from memory as data to be used to interpret reality just as a computer does not make a distinction between memory or ports. Only when we test, using our internal reasoning ideas do we even recognize a difference. As such even our sensory input relies on reason prior to even sensing. Note that the major distinctions of reality from outside is its VARIABILITY and its INDETERMINACY and this has to be tested for internally. Thus, as far as the mind is concerned, these phenomena are merely 'ideas' still as they do not actually represent the objects out there directly. You also have to add the fact unless you restrict observation to the present tense, any use of memorized data that you use to interpret what is valid as objective reality is still reduced to the remnants of memory of this and is thus as fallible as any idea where you trade any idea in your head to measure with reasoning.
I've missed nothing at all. And do not see what your case is driving at here. You seem to be driving down a solipsistic route - to what end?
You can dwell in the subject as much as you like, but the dreams of the imagination do not amount to accounts of reality. The scientific method is designed to explicate an objective world, a description of that world in terms of actions lead to another. We seek in vain the "thing-itself" hoping to explain the universe. But when I hear the thunder of hooves I postulate a herd of horses, not a multidimensional crowd of unicorns with goblin riders on their backs.
Obviously the cognitive equipment provided us by evolution is not selected for scientific study, per se, but we have to deal with it the best we can. And that means getting our head out of the subjective sand and into the shared study of the phenomena.
We all start from a solipsistic standpoint until we interpret a set of inputs/outputs that suggest the objective world. But your "objective" world is only about democratic convention to agree to some subset of people's independent subjective views only. There is NO such thing as a sincere "objective" human perspective other than our practical means to politically convene to what we agree is true. But reality doesn't have to abide by people's whims or capacities as a democracy with regards to a real "objective" truth to nature. The only sincere and fair way to find the most unanimously agreed to "objectivity" is if we begin by assuming only what each and every human has the direct capacity to observe from their subjective minds. This is done by the defaulting to propositions that are unanimously logical to each and every person attending the argument.
I know I won't get any possible unanimous agreement in practice as long as even one individual out there is a biological entity since we all evolve necessarily to have an emotional component to favor their existence as a special creature of nature. Even while you may claim no religion, if you believe our universe is specifically determined to be perfectly unique, you believe that your life is inevitable and unique, and thus default to a fatalistic interpretation to determinism about nature.
I'm intellectually inclusive to accept both memories and present inputs as equally valid where you are not. I agree that what we refer to as 'soundness' of an argument is dependent upon using inputs (premises) anywhere which map appropriately to the proper ranges and domains in mind. If your domain is reality from the senses, and you draw a conclusion from them, soundness requires that the range is also only about the domains in all the premises where they came from. But this is also true about using internal memory as input ideas. As long as the conclusions from them relate to the given internal data, there is soundness to argument.
This does not advance your case I think, but simply brings into question the whole problem of cognition.
And strangulated syllogisms about men and Turkeys do not help.
I have to say that you only have a problem here with definition. And you can read the problem as if "turkey" is just another word for "man".
But I understand what you are saying. One might reflect upon scientific mistakes of the past. Let us say Phogistan is to turkey what oxygen is to man. Having the framework of understanding enables the assertions to receiver scrutiny. The failings of the Phlogistan theory led to the 'discovery' of oxygen.
The syllogisms I used were to show how we can err even by proposing theories that appear to 'fit' within the empirical method. I was trying to show how we can have appropriate real observations that map with a good model that acts predictably for practical and equally sound conclusions but still be actually wrong. And the problem with not recognizing this is that the as we evolve within educational institutes to demand obedience not to challenge certain theories just because they presently work, begins a trend towards a new authoritative religion in cycles. The very fact we have any discrepancy between ANY scientific theories that contradict on the fringes (by 'fringe' I refer to Cosmology vs. Atomic sciences, for instance) means there is some problem with the underlying assumptions of one or both extremes in these areas. You prefer to conserve the past theories and only attend to the long line of theoretical conclusions without challenging any earlier ones. By placing an unrealistic burden upon others to have to
invalidate past theories is in error because it ignores the points I made about how
soundness within domains or ranges can trick us into seeing multiple conclusions. What we are doing within science is simply to accept the
first sound arguments that some arbitrary scientist has suggested with credibility when there still exists other sound arguments that actually provide better closure or completeness to science as a whole.
I used, I'm not sure in this thread or another I'm contemporaneously arguing in too, the analogy of attempting to find a route to some town as a goal to which there are many possible routes. Note that the 'shortest'
apparent route in reality (akin to Occam's Razor) is NOT the necessary 'truth' here to find a means to that goal realistically. But what can be recognized is that even while a shortest route can be found for practical purposes, it doesn't dismiss the reality of multiple routes existing. This should be as empirically understood as sufficient justification to infer multiple possible universes alone.
Just to confirm you understand, are you aware of the differences between "soundness" and "validity" within logic? Do you understand "domain" and "range"?