https://aeon.co/essays/post-empirical-science-is-an-oxymoron-and-it-is-dangerous

*Theoretical physicists who say the multiverse exists set a dangerous 
precedent: science based on zero empirical evidence*

Jim Baggott
@JimBaggott

...

Sean Carroll, a vocal advocate for the Many-Worlds interpretation, prefers 
abduction, or what he calls ‘inference to the best explanation’, which 
leaves us with theories that are merely ‘parsimonious’, a matter of 
judgment, and ‘still might reasonably be true’. But whose judgment? In the 
absence of facts, what constitutes ‘the best explanation’?

Carroll seeks to dress his notion of inference in the cloth of 
respectability provided by something called Bayesian probability theory, 
happily overlooking its entirely subjective nature. It’s a short step from 
here to the theorist-turned-philosopher Richard Dawid’s efforts to justify 
the string theory programme in terms of ‘theoretically confirmed theory’ 
and ‘non-empirical theory assessment’. The ‘best explanation’ is then based 
on a choice between purely metaphysical constructs, without reference to 
empirical evidence, based on the application of a probability theory that 
can be readily engineered to suit personal prejudices.

Welcome to the oxymoron that is post-empirical science.

...

Still, what’s the big deal? So what if a handful of theoretical physicists 
want to indulge their inner metaphysician and publish papers that few 
outside their small academic circle will ever read? But look back to the 
beginning of this essay. Whether they intend it or not (and trust me, they 
intend it), this stuff has a habit of leaking into the public domain, 
dripping like acid into the very foundations of science. The publication of 
Carroll’s book Something Deeply Hidden, about the Many-Worlds 
interpretation, has been accompanied by an astonishing publicity blitz, 
including an essay on Aeon last month. A recent PBS News Hour piece led 
with the observation that: ‘The “Many-Worlds” theory in quantum mechanics 
suggests that, with every decision you make, a new universe springs into 
existence containing what amounts to a new version of you.’

...

Perhaps we should begin with a small first step. Let’s acknowledge that 
theoretical physicists are perfectly entitled to believe, write and say 
whatever they want, within reason. But is it asking too much that they make 
their assertions with some honesty? Instead of ‘the multiverse exists’ and 
‘it might be true’, is it really so difficult to say something like ‘the 
multiverse has some philosophical attractions, but it is highly speculative 
and controversial, and there is no evidence for it’? I appreciate that such 
caveats get lost or become mangled when transferred into a popular media 
obsessed with sensation, but this would then be a failure of journalism or 
science writing, rather than a failure of scientific integrity.


@philipthrift

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