Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sat Jun 14, 2025 3:11 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 6:30 pmOh. To paraphrase you, "people with a sense of humour" expect jokes to be amusing or witty, rather than merely gratutious.
Not everyone finds the same things amusing or witty, but I would expect someone with a sense of humour to recognise a joke, even one they don't find funny.
Well, I guess that what you said was
like a joke, only not as funny.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 6:30 pmWould that reply be snarky or not?
Mr Can, if you set a trap, finish the job and add some camouflage.
Hey, they were your words. If you don't like the snark, don't use the words.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 6:30 pmInstead, you merely plead that you have no idea what physics can or cannot do eventually...
Also correct.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 6:30 pm...and hence, that you have no stable concept in your mind of what "physics" even entails as a discipline?
That's a bit more complicated. I can run with your physics deals with the physical, I'm even prepared to accept it as definitional, but it has no content. You haven't defined what is physical and nobody, not even you, knows the metaphysical cause of physical phenomena.
It has this content, for sure: that it points out the derivation of the term "physics." And while that should be screamingly obvious, perhaps it's not, to all people -- after all, there are those (like Emergentists and Eliminativists) who think it can explain metaphysics, even though it exhibits no ability at all to do so at present.
As I said, I understand that your view is essentially Cartesian dualism.
Then I'm sorry, but you don't understand it at all. Cartesian dualism is Gnostic, and explicitly so. I have no hint of the Gnostic in my beliefs.
Nothing wrong with that as an hypothesis, but that's what it is, and as I said, it is not the most parsimonious.
"Parsimony," while a virtue of some epistemics, is not a virtue of all, and demonstrably so. There was a time when it was thought that reality was composed of "matter." Parsimonious? Yes. It's far easier to believe in the simple solidity of "matter" than to explain vibrating energy fields or quarks. Materialism sure was
parsimonious -- but also, as it turns out, reductional and untrue.
Now, I know perfectly well that you will insist that only one hypothesis is true, which I happen to believe. The trouble is, from a list of empirically adequate options, choosing one is a choice determined by your preferences; which is why I say it is fundamentally an aesthetic choice.
I don't think so. I don't think you will really think that either, once you consider it more carefully.
Does the presence of theories like Aristotelian "elements" or the old theory of "matter" make it merely a matter of aesthetic choice when one is believing in quarks? Of course not. One theory accords much better with the available date than the other two: in fact, the available data now renders the other two theories implausible and indeed, impossible. Once can remain Aristotelian or Materialist only by refusing the data...no other way. "Aesthetics" have nothing at all to offer that situation.
Likewise, as you say, no matter what one "aesthetically" believes, only one hypothesis will turn out to be true. Of course, if we don't have all the theories possible, then all the ones we have could be equally false -- a situation which, again, recourse to "aesthetics" will do nothing at all to cure.
Or to put it another way, and to quote the old aphorism,
"Reality is what you run into when your beliefs are false." There will still only be one truth, whether or not at a given moment anybody knows what it is. But possibly, some do. And it's the question of which theory is most fitting to the data which is really the only interesting question --
aesthetics, that is, what people might prefer, has nothing at all to tell us. It's worse than useless.