Oh, decidedly not. He owes his insight to an entirely different line of thought. His point is not cynical or critical of science at all, the way theirs has been construed to be.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 9:37 amWell, Polanyi is just one link in a chain of thought that goes back through Hume's "Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions" all the way to Protagoras claiming that "Man is the measure of all things."Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 amThe problem, as Postmodernist critics have ably shown, is that scientific neutrality is an ideal that nobody can meet. And in science, as Polanyi has pointed out, we have to begin with an intution -- the scientist observes a phenomenon, and then he hypothesizes, and so on...Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pmSo in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"
But wait.Polanyi points out the overlooked step: how does the scientist know what is "interesting," or what is "worthy of hypothesizing about"?
No, Polanyi is only interested in reintroducing us to the role of the investigator in any investigation. As he puts it, "Knowledge is personal," or as he also said, "tacit" -- not meaning that it is unreliable, or suspect, or like Nietzsche thought, all about power, but rather that science is a distinctly human activity, in which human beings are invariably involved, and which much of which goes on in the procedure is done with a kind of intuitive, human impulse, rather than with some mechanistic purity.
That being said, Polanyi was himself a scientist of great distinction. He had no disdain for science or its methods, for sure.
Polanyi's point is that you never really do "escape" your role as a human investigator. You always bring, along with your methods, your own disposition and interests. Along with that, things like bias can come, to be sure, especially if the investigator is not humble and alert to their possibility. And that's what Polanyi seems to campaign for: not the denigration of science, but rather its performance as a duly humble and self-aware kind of activity.How do human beings, you for instance, manage to escape their "biases, predispositions, particular interests, and so on" when they are doing religion?
So no kind of investigation is entirely what we pretend, sometimes: neutral, devoid of human input, utterly impartial, only-the-facts, and so on. All of it involves a personal commitment of some kind. But that commitment is not, according to Polanyi, automatically evil or polluting of our "pure" scientific process, but rather the reasonable accommodation to the undeniable fact of our participation in our science.
Religion isn't science, of course. Science deals with the physical and material world only. So far as the metaphysical or transcendent goes, it has difficulty even having anything to say. It has some, of course; but mostly inductive stuff, not experimentation, data, methodology, and so forth, which are the real stock-in-trade of science. The bottom line is that science is terrific for the areas in which is claims competence, but a realistic view of science doesn't mistake science as the comprehensive answer to every question...or even every important one.
I find that a pretty clear claim, I think. But okay, I can illustrate.What does it mean for your assertion that:Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am...a dictionary is "accurate" when it captures the most relevant facts about the thing it is defining with the greatest precision.
Try to define "palomino." But try to do so in a way that keeps it clear that a palamino is not just not a beagle or a wardrobe, but is also not a shire, or an appaloosa, or a rahvan, or a unicorn, or whatever else. A good definition will include precisely the characteristics that make a palomino a palomino, and eliminate all the other possible confusions with other types of horse.
A poor definition would be "a palomino is a type of horse," because such a definition would be too broadly inclusive to capture the relevant details; and with such a definition, you'd never find a palomino, except by pure accident. A good definition would include that "palomino" is a recognizable colour type, and give you that -- that would narrow your search considerably. A technical definition might give you not just the colour type, but also the fact that palominos are products of a particular recessive gene, so the genetics will not be as telling as they should be in other horses...and so on. But only experts in horses are going to be much interested in the genetic particulars; ordinary folks might be quite happy to go on the colour-of-coat criterion alone, and for some folks who are not much interested in horses, the definition "a type of horse" may be all they care about. It depends on what purposes each reader has in mind.
Clear enough?