That's a persuasive definition fallacy.tillingborn wrote: ↑Thu Feb 11, 2021 9:40 am 3. There are many underdetermined theories about what causes gravity, but all reason, rationality, plausibility and anything else you care to include being exhausted, the thing that tips the decision one way or the other, is some personal preference; an aesthetic choice.
You've left the backdoor open to expand the notion of "aesthetics" to broadly encompass any and all personal preferences even those which are not about aesthetics. You've rigged the stage so any argument agrees with your conclusions. It's intentionally unfalsifiable.
Different folks have different backgrounds - some might find a geometric theory being more intuitive; others may prefer an algebraic theory.
This is not aesthetic - it's about how well the theory integrates with the rest of their knowledge.
Either way, the fact that they are deciding without a coin-toss means that something makes theory A better than theory B for that person. You are calling any "something" aesthetics.
Which is what you are doing with gravity also. ANY explanation for the apples falling is "gravity".