Doug wrote 

 

In retrospect, I suppose I do have faith in one other fairly immutable
quality -- the accuracy of my bullshit detector 

 

Well, why not.   it's always worked in the past .. .  

 

Nick 

 

From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of Douglas Roberts
Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2012 2:55 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Just as a bye-the-way

 

Thanks, Nick, you describe an interesting way of establishing a life-view.

 

Not quite sure how to answer, except to say that if I have faith in
anything, it is in evidence.  If I have accrued a sufficient pile of
evidence that supports a conclusion about some observation, then I'll
probably believe it.  

 

If my collected evidence is such that the inescapable conclusion is that
nothing is constant, then I suppose I'd eventually come around to believe
that, so long as I had a constant framework from which to corroborate and
verify the inconsistencies.  Otherwise, I'd continue to look for the missing
pieces of the puzzle (a reference to the cosmological artifacts I sent you
earlier).

 

As to religion:  for me it's a big "No thank you" to any cult mindthink that
requires brainless acceptance of a supernatural homo-centric
benevolent/malevolent boogyman. And that goes double for one particular cult
whose belief system is predicated upon "hieroglyph"-inscribed disappearing
golden tablets.  Oh, and I guess that goes triple for any cult that attempts
to dictate what kind of skivies I must wear to become a member of the club.
I guess you could say that it would take a miracle to get me to assent to
becoming a member of any of the existing flocks of theist-following sheep
out there.

 

In retrospect, I suppose I do have faith in one other fairly immutable
quality -- the accuracy of my bullshit detector.

 

--Doug

 

On Tue, Mar 27, 2012 at 11:47 AM, Nicholas Thompson
<nickthomp...@earthlink.net> wrote:

Dear Doug,  

 

I am afraid that the black hole example is already too technologically dense
for me, so I am going to punt on the project of luring you inside my walls
and slaughtering you there, and just out-right tell you what I think

.  

The argument began with my detecting in you (perhaps wrongly) the belief
that you, unlike the religious, can get along without some sort of faith in
your life.  Most people I have known in the past who have reached this
conclusion have done so through their confidence in induction. "What do I
need with faith if I can just collect the evidence and act on it?'  And the
answer is that without faith of some sort, there is no foundation for
induction. 

 

The argument for this position is famously from Hume.  A version of it is
colorfully laid out by Nelson Goodman in his  The New Riddle of Induction.
So let's say, I want to learn if grass is green.  My religious buddy says,
"Look in the Bible.  I am sure it's in there somewhere.'  My atheist buddy
says, "nonsense, go out and look at the grass."  I'm an atheist, so I go out
and start collecting samples of grass.  I collect a hundred samples and I
bring them back in announce that I am satisfied that all grass is green.  At
which point my religious buddy says, No, No, you have no evidence there that
Grass is green.  "All you have is evidence that grass is grue." "Grue!?" I
say.  "What's Grue?"

 

Charitably forgoing  the opportunity to ask, "I dunno.  What's Grue with
you?" my religious buddy simply says, "It's the property of being Green
until your last measurement, and Blue thereafter. " 

 

"Nonsense,"  I reply.  "What kind of a property is THAT?  Nature doesn't
HAVE properties like that.  

 

"Perhaps that's been true", he replies, but only up till now!"

 

In other words, our belief in induction is based on our plausible but
unfounded belief in induction, i.e., faith.  

 

Nick 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2012 11:40 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Just as a bye-the-way

 

 

This is a red herring.  The argument for dark matter/energy need not be
inductive.  The inductive form is:

 

o we've defined the set based on the laws of physics we've observed o
everything is in this set o gravity seems stronger/weaker than predicted in
some contexts

.: there are unobserved members of the set: dark matter and energy.

 

A non-inductive argument for dark matter/energy is just as valid:

 

o the model we've induced is not completely consistent with the data o the
laws characterize everything we've encountered so far

.: there must be something we haven't encountered that will refine the laws.

 

No induction is necessary to motivate a hypothesis for some form of matter
that's imprecisely or inaccurately described by the laws we've, so far,
induced.  But parsimony suggests that a theory that assumes it's complete is
more testable than a theory with metaphysical holes in it.

So, the argument for dark matter _seems_ inductive, even though it's not.
Only someone who assumes our laws are complete (fully refined) would think
the argument is inductive.  My sample is small.  But I don't know of any
physicists or cosmologists who think our laws cannot be modified.

 

I.e. it's naive to assume identity between a scientific theory and the
reasoning surrounding the pursuit of a scientific theory.

 

 

Douglas Roberts wrote at 03/24/2012 03:08 PM:

> There's also an interesting "dark matter" inference that has found its 

> way into grudging cosmological acceptance.  This time the role of the 

> inferred substance is to keep galaxies from flying apart, as it has 

> recently been observed that based on the amount of their measurable, 

> observable mass and rotational velocities, they should flung their 

> stars off ages ago.

> 

> --Doug

> 

> 

> On Sat, Mar 24, 2012 at 3:16 PM, Douglas Roberts <d...@parrot-farm.net 

> < <mailto:d...@parrot-farm.net> mailto:d...@parrot-farm.net>> wrote:

> 

>     I feel that I am being drawn in to an enemy encampment, but:

> 

>     Developing a proof would be far better than choosing to rely

>     on inference, if the goal is to develop a larger-scale understanding

>     of a system.

> 

>     Take "dark energy" as an example.  Its presence is inferred from

>     having observed that the rate of expansion of the observable

>     universe began to accelerate relatively recently, on a cosmological

>     time scale.  In response to this, the cosmologists have inferred the

>     existence of a mysterious energy with magical gravitational

>     repulsive properties as a means to explain away an otherwise

>     inexplicable observation.  A much more satisfying approach will be

>     to develop a sufficient understanding of the underlying physics of

>     our universe from which a rigorous proof of the phenomenon could be

>     derived.

> 

>     But, without that understanding, we are left with cosmological

>     "magic dust", instead of a real understanding of the observed
dynamics.

> 

>     --Doug

 

 

--

glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095,  <http://tempusdictum.com>
http://tempusdictum.com

 

 

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-- 
Doug Roberts
drobe...@rti.org
d...@parrot-farm.net

http://parrot-farm.net/Second-Cousins


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505-670-8195 - Cell

 

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