tillingborn wrote: ↑Sun Feb 07, 2021 4:00 pm
I am arguing that even the most exacting standards of data collection and analysis are not guaranteed to lead to a belief that is right.
I don't know why you'd be arguing that.
After all, a broken clock is right twice a day...
but it's totally by accident. Likewise, somebody could stumble on a true belief by aesthetics...but it's not a sensible way to do business, nor likely to produce truth.
Anyway, you don't believe in "right" answers...only "aesthetic" ones.
I don't know if you have been following the exchanges between Skepdick and myself,
Not really.
My belief is that there is no way to distinguish between some theories using the better standards.
Yeah, that's not true.
Anyone can look at the results of experiments and know what happens, and there are any numbers of ways to interpret those results: many worlds, hidden variables and so on.
There are different ways to interpret the variables. Not all of those ways are equally sensible. One may, if you wish to be aesthetic, interpret that experiment as evidence for phrenology or unicorns. But I think that neither of us is going to be willing to say that those interpretations are warranted by the data, or that somebody who takes them is in an equal situation with somebody who takes a rational interpretation.
Meanwhile, you do continue to
argue for
aesthetics. But that is impossible: if your own argument is aesthetic, it cannot be compelled by reasons. One cannot argue for that which has no objective criteria, and is only a matter of "liking."
I marvel that your last response doesn't address that fact. It seems to me decisive.