Category: Science, Physics, and Philosophy of Science

  • SAM HARRIS AGREES WITH ME (SORTA) Ideas we need to retire? Our narrow definition

    SAM HARRIS AGREES WITH ME (SORTA)

    Ideas we need to retire? Our narrow definition of ‘science’

    –“Search your mind, or pay attention to the conversations you have with other people, and you will discover that there are no real boundaries between science and philosophy—or between those disciplines and any other that attempts to make valid claims about the world on the basis of evidence and logic. When such claims and their methods of verification admit of experiment and/or mathematical description, we tend to say that our concerns are “scientific”; when they relate to matters more abstract, or to the consistency of our thinking itself, we often say that we are being “philosophical”; when we merely want to know how people behaved in the past, we dub our interests “historical” or “journalistic”; and when a person’s commitment to evidence and logic grows dangerously thin or simply snaps under the burden of fear, wishful thinking, tribalism, or ecstasy, we recognize that he is being “religious.”

    The remedy for all this confusion is simple: We must abandon the idea that science is distinct from the rest of human rationality. When you are adhering to the highest standards of logic and evidence, you are thinking scientifically. And when you’re not, you’re not.”–

    The scientific method IS THE ONLY RATIONAL METHOD OF THINKING. PERIOD. Everything else is a very poor substitute.

    And that is the proposition that I have taken with propertarianism.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-02-02 10:36:00 UTC

  • SIMPLE GENERAL RULES : PHYSICAL SCIENCE VERSUS COOPERATIVE SCIENCE The physical

    SIMPLE GENERAL RULES : PHYSICAL SCIENCE VERSUS COOPERATIVE SCIENCE

    The physical universe consists of very simple general rules that produce very complex results.

    The moral universe, likewise consists of very simple rules that produce very complex results.

    By speaking in the language of construction – in operational language – we can teach people those very general rules.

    Just as we have simplified the physical world through the use of the operational language of the physical sciences, we can simplify the political world through the use of the operational language of cooperation.

    The language of American Conservatism is lost in layers of allegorical loading and framing. They know how to USE terms but they do not understand the construction of those terms.

    If we give conservatives knowledge of ethical and moral construction, they will then be able to argue their aristocratic egalitarian ethics in rational language.

    Ethics it turns out, is a very simple subject. With very simple general rules.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-26 16:34:00 UTC

  • METAPHYSICS VS SCIENCE (worth reading) –“Curt, loved your brief defense of prax

    METAPHYSICS VS SCIENCE

    (worth reading)

    –“Curt, loved your brief defense of praxeology earlier on (below). This is off subject but like Katherine, I too am curious in what way metaphysics failed and science is now close to triumph. An example or two please? We can go off line if you like.”– Pat

    Pat,

    This is the largest and most controversial topic in philosophy. And I find that I lose pretty much everyone when I try to address it. So I don’t think I can do it in a couple of examples. I can given an analogy between the problems of constructive/intuitional­ mathematics, the requirements for scientific argument (which are moral constraints actually), the problem of inconstant relations in economics, and the difference between truth and proof. And that forms a basic language for discussion.

    Since that conversation requires a pretty exhaustive knowledge of multiple disciplines It seems that the argument is quite hard to make even if done in long form.

    BUT TRYING ANYWAY

    The best I can do is state that imagination can only be tested by action – external correspondence. And our understanding of of our actions tested by internal consistency. And the veracity of our internal consistency by our understanding of construction. As such, our logical methods allow us to construct instruments which assist us in testing correspondence, internal consistency, and construction. Albeit, while internal consistency can be expressed in complete terms, neither external correspondence nor construction can be.

    Without such instruments to extend our perception, memory, and calculability, we lack the ability of sufficient introspection, and the ability of sufficient external perception, to perceive the internal and external world, at the SCALE of those action that we require for cooperating in large numbers, in a vast division of knowledge and labor – the sum of which constantly reduces the cost in calories and time of the production of goods and services which serve our reproductive interests and perpetuation as a species.

    This is why ratio-scientific societies outperform magian and allegorical societies: because the constancy of their efforts in correspondence with physical and social reality allows them to take better advantage of physical reality and to cooperate at scale for the production of goods and services.

    So, since the above statements effectively reflect the scientific method, then the scientific method is not constrained to ‘science’ per say, but it is the only method by which we can improve our actions. ergo: the scientific method is ‘the method’ of philosophy.

    Now, this does not mean that allegorical language (mysticism, religion, mythology, the narrative) have no pedagogical value. They do because we cannot teach the young any other way. It does not mean that Obscurant language (deception) such as is used by the continentals as a means of maintaining loading and framing, and therefore simply preserving christianity and authoritarianism in new form, is impossible or will not succeed in achieving those desires.

    It does mean that achieving those desires through obscurantism, deception, framing other than by means of correspondence, will produce negative economic, social and political consequences, because of their failure to correspond to reality.

    -Curt


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-19 07:57:00 UTC

  • False theories are different from incomplete theories

    http://phys.org/news/2014-01-einstein-wrong.html#jCpAgreed. False theories are different from incomplete theories.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-16 08:45:00 UTC

  • SOCIAL SCIENCE : THE PHRASES THAT SELL ON KICKSTARTER 🙂

    http://scienceblog.com/69625/study-finds-phrases-that-pay-on-kickstarter/#cmqSVFWWt4QDETRB.01GOOD SOCIAL SCIENCE : THE PHRASES THAT SELL ON KICKSTARTER 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-14 16:54:00 UTC

  • What is the likelihood that attempts at saving money in research in the physical

    What is the likelihood that attempts at saving money in research in the physical sciences, by reliance on mathematical analysis rather than experimental science, has delayed development of the physical sciences?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-13 06:09:00 UTC

  • TO “RETIRE” THE CONCEPT OF INFINITY (and cantor’s contribution to 20th century m

    http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/jan/12/what-scientific-idea-is-ready-for-retirement-edge-org?CMP=twt_fdTIME TO “RETIRE” THE CONCEPT OF INFINITY

    (and cantor’s contribution to 20th century mysticism with it)

    from: http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/jan/12/what-scientific-idea-is-ready-for-retirement-edge-org?CMP=twt_fd

    —–

    MAX TEGMARK

    Physicist, researcher, precision cosmology; scientific director of the Foundational Questions Institute; author of Our Mathematical Universe

    I was seduced by infinity at an early age. Cantor’s diagonality proof that some infinities are bigger than others mesmerised me, and his infinite hierarchy of infinities blew my mind. The assumption that something truly infinite exists in nature underlies every physics course I’ve ever taught at MIT and indeed all of modern physics. But it’s an untested assumption, which raises the question: is it actually true?

    There are in fact two separate assumptions: “infinitely big” and “infinitely small”. By infinitely big, I mean the idea that space can have infinite volume, that time can continue for ever, and that there can be infinitely many physical objects. By infinitely small, I mean the continuum: the idea that even a litre of space contains an infinite number of points, that space can be stretched out indefinitely without anything bad happening, and that there are quantities in nature that can vary continuously. The two are closely related because inflation, the most popular explanation of our big bang, can create an infinite volume by stretching continuous space indefinitely.

    A galaxy photographed by the Hubble Space Telescope

    ‘We don’t actually need the infinite to accurately describe the formation of galaxies.’ Photograph: Scott Camazine/Alamy

    The theory of inflation has been spectacularly successful, and is a leading contender for a Nobel prize. It explained how a subatomic speck of matter transformed into a massive big bang, creating a huge, flat and uniform universe with tiny density fluctuations that eventually grew into today’s galaxies and cosmic large-scale structure, all in beautiful agreement with precision measurements from experiments such as the Planck satellite. But by generically predicting that space isn’t just big, but truly infinite, inflation has also brought about the so-called measure problem, which I view as the greatest crisis facing modern physics. Physics is all about predicting the future from the past, but inflation seems to sabotage this: when we try to predict the probability that something particular will happen, inflation always gives the same useless answer: infinity divided by infinity. The problem is that whatever experiment you make, inflation predicts that there will be infinitely many copies of you far away in our infinite space, obtaining each physically possible outcome, and despite years of tooth-grinding in the cosmology community, no consensus has emerged on how to extract sensible answers from these infinities. So strictly speaking, we physicists are no longer able to predict anything at all!

    This means that today’s best theories similarly need a major shakeup, by retiring an incorrect assumption. Which one? Here’s my prime suspect: infinity.

    A rubber band can’t be stretched indefinitely, because although it seems smooth and continuous, that’s merely a convenient approximation: it’s really made of atoms, and if you stretch it too much, it snaps. If we similarly retire the idea that space itself is an infinitely stretchy continuum, then a big snap of sorts stops inflation from producing an infinitely big space, and the measure problem goes away. Without the infinitely small, inflation can’t make the infinitely big, so you get rid of both infinities in one fell swoop – together with many other problems plaguing modern physics, such as infinitely dense black hole singularities and infinities popping up when we try to quantize gravity.

    In the past, many venerable mathematicians expressed scepticism towards infinity and the continuum. The legendary Carl Friedrich Gauss denied that anything infinite really existed, saying “infinity is merely a way of speaking” and “I protest against the use of infinite magnitude as something completed, which is never permissible in mathematics”. In the past century, however, infinity has become mathematically mainstream, and most physicists and mathematicians have become so enamoured of infinity that they rarely question it. Why? Basically, because infinity is an extremely convenient approximation for which we haven’t discovered convenient alternatives. Consider, for example, the air in front of you. Keeping track of the positions and speeds of octillions of atoms would be hopelessly complicated. But if you ignore the fact that air is made of atoms and instead approximate it as a continuum, a smooth substance that has a density, pressure and velocity at each point, you find that this idealised air obeys a beautifully simple equation that explains almost everything we care about: how to build airplanes, how we hear them with soundwaves, how to make weather forecasts, etc. Yet despite all that convenience, air of course isn’t truly continuous. I think it’s the same way for space, time and all the other building blocks of our physical word.

    Let’s face it: despite their seductive allure, we have no direct observational evidence for either the infinitely big or the infinitely small. We speak of infinite volumes with infinitely many planets, but our observable universe contains only about 10 to the power of 89 objects (mostly photons). If space is a true continuum, then to describe even something as simple as the distance between two points requires an infinite amount of information, specified by a number with infinitely many decimal places. In practice, we physicists have never managed to measure anything to more than about 17 decimal places. Yet real numbers with their infinitely many decimals have infested almost every nook and cranny of physics, from the strengths of electromagnetic fields to the wave functions of quantum mechanics: we describe even a single bit of quantum information (qubit) using two real numbers involving infinitely many decimals.

    Not only do we lack evidence for the infinite, but we don’t actually need the infinite to do physics: our best computer simulations, accurately describing everything from the formation of galaxies to tomorrow’s weather to the masses of elementary particles, use only finite computer resources by treating everything as finite. So if we can do without infinity to figure out what happens next, surely nature can too – in a way that’s more deep and elegant than the hacks we use for our computer simulations. Our challenge as physicists is to discover this elegant way and the infinity-free equations describing it – the true laws of physics. To start this search in earnest, we need to question infinity. I’m betting that we also need to let go of it.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-12 15:51:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2013/11/16/fukushima-radiation-in-pacific-tuna-is-equal-to-one-twentieth-of-a-banana/Drama.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-10 21:21:00 UTC

  • “Natural Science is the Arbiter of Ontology” Elegant

    “Natural Science is the Arbiter of Ontology”

    Elegant.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-10 12:53:00 UTC

  • MATH HAS BEEN FRUITFUL BECAUSE IT IS THE MOST SIMPLE DOMAIN “Naturalists are mot

    MATH HAS BEEN FRUITFUL BECAUSE IT IS THE MOST SIMPLE DOMAIN

    “Naturalists are motivated by the thought that scientific or mathematical standards are the most successful standards we possess.” -S.E.P.

    This is backwards. Philosophical naturalists are skeptical about the current state of science and mathematics, just as they are about the current state of academic philosophy.

    The reason math is the most successful tool we possess is that it is the SIMPLEST of the logics, because math is the tool of constant relations, almost all of which are self defined. (The more math I understand the more ridiculous I find claims about it.) (and its cheap)

    The reason physics is the next most successful tool we possess is that is the next most simple tool we possess for the study of existing constant CAUSAL relations. (And it’s costly)

    The reason biological (genetic) science are the next most successful tool we possess is that after physics, it is the next most simple tool we possess, and both properties and causal relations are extremely complex to determine. (it has been very costly)

    The reason economics (cooperation) is less successful, is that economics does not consist of constant relations, nor CAN it consist of constant relations, nor can we collect data about it at a granular enough level, nor is it testable without altering the course of the experiment. So mathematics fails to assist us in forecasting economics, because science as structured holds to the criteria of prediction. However, it is nothing to be proud of that math and science are predictable, any more than after observing a stone rolling downhill, that further stones will run downhill, since math is the study of constant relations, and the natural world of the physical sciences, outside of evolutionary biology consists of constant relations.

    We do not yet have the equivalent of a mathematics of non-constant relations sufficient to assist in forecasting rather than simply narrating, the economy. However, given that we invent the future, it is very unlikely that we can forecast anything other than the crudely obvious, most of which is in-actionable.

    I would love to be proven wrong, but this appears very unlikely without some external mechanism for thinking about greater systems of causal relations than humans can perceive. Such that if we did possess this technology, and it was capable of useful prediction, it would be indistinguishable from the creation of those outcomes.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-01-09 12:20:00 UTC