Theme: Operationalism

  • THE TABLE OF ETHICAL ARGUMENT ETHICAL 1) Truthful speech: Operational. Knowledge

    THE TABLE OF ETHICAL ARGUMENT

    ETHICAL

    1) Truthful speech: Operational. Knowledge of construction. Proof of existence.

    ETHICALLY POSSIBLE

    2) Pragmatic speech : operationally abbreviated. Insufficiently demonstrated.

    ETHICALLY IMPOSSIBLE

    3) Allegorical speech: knowledge of use but not construction.

    UNETHICAL

    4) Dishonest speech.

    🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-25 04:47:00 UTC

  • UNDER PROPERTARIANISM, OPERATIONALISM PREVENTS *HARM* —“All arguments put into

    UNDER PROPERTARIANISM, OPERATIONALISM PREVENTS *HARM*

    —“All arguments put into the marketplace of ideas function as conceptual goods – products for our use. Now since we are producing goods we do have the ability if not the necessity to provide consumer protection. This is all that operationalism does for us. It doesnt say you’re doing good (telling the truth) it tests whether or not you are doing HARM. It makes sure that you’re not using verbalisms. Under Propertarianism we require you warranty your goods and services. And those warranties are subject to legal enforcement by universal standing where the loser pays.”—-


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-25 02:47:00 UTC

  • THE PROPERTARIAN CRITICISM OF PLATONIC TRUTH (important piece) –“We can speak a

    THE PROPERTARIAN CRITICISM OF PLATONIC TRUTH

    (important piece)

    –“We can speak about truth even without a warranty, and we don’t mean truthlike or agreed to be true, just plain true.”—Bruce

    Yes, but how do we know you are speaking truthfully?

    How do we prevent pseudoscience? Or are you, like free speech advocates, saying that the damage that is done by error is less than the good that is achieved by tolerating it? Which is terribly pragmatic. It’s also demonstrably false. Propagating false arguments turns out to be much more effective than true ones.

    Or do you claim that scientists should be able to engage in untruthful speech? Or are you saying that because truth is unknown and never knowable, that I can never speak the truth?

    ***What is the material difference between a theory stated truthfully (internally consistent and externally correspondent), and a theory not stated truthfully (internally consistent and externally correspondent) yet excused as not being possible to be true, and therefore not subject to requirement that it is spoken truthfully?***

    This isn’t an immaterial question. It is perhaps THE ethical question facing scientific investigation in ANY field.

    Evidence is that in hard science this rule is respected. Evidence is that outside of hard science it is not. Then difference is that hard science is a luxury good without opportunity cost, and everything else is — particularly politics and law, where laws do not perish like falsified theories. The communist manifesto, the labor theory of value, the possibility of a universally DESIRABLE moral code vs a universally moral set of laws. These are all false statements, because they are false in construction, not in prediction.

    You see, science is pretty much ‘irrelevant’ because it is a luxury good, but truth must apply universally no? or it is not truthful definition of truth?

    ***While it may be true that the ultimate truth (the most parsimonious statement possible) is the optimum definition of true, does that obviate us from pursuing it with truthful statements? Furthermore why not simply state the truth: that all truthfully constructed arguments and theories are true but incomplete, and constantly open to revision, rather than no theories are true except the one most parsimonious statement that we can never make?***

    You see, you might think it’s clear and simple – but it’s not. It’s just experience that has convinced you so.

    You see, popper’s warning is merely moral, not necessary. And I submit, like the ethics of the ghetto peoples whose verbal methodology, and whose ritualistic literature, was purely pragmatic, that there are vast consequences to platonic truth just as there are vast consequences to platonic (false) anything.

    As far as I know I am correct. I cant get away from it. because we are currently the victims of a century and a half of pseudoscience the immorality of which has not been achieved since the forcible conversion to christianity or the muslim conversion to scriptural perfection.

    If we look at just the one’s that I see as catastrophic; kant, freud, marx, cantor, russell/frege, keynes, mises, rothbard, then all of these fallacies were preventable by a requirement for operational definitions – proof of internal consistency: proof of existence.

    Analogy and meaning are properties of myths. Action and measurement are properties of reality.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev, Ukraine


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-25 02:34:00 UTC

  • AN END TO A CENTURY OF PSEUDOSCIENTIFIC MYSTICISM ATHENS(BRITAIN) VS JERUSALEM(T

    AN END TO A CENTURY OF PSEUDOSCIENTIFIC MYSTICISM

    ATHENS(BRITAIN) VS JERUSALEM(THE GHETTO) WHILE SPARTA(GERMANY) SPINS IN THE WIND.

    Yes, well, it looks like I’ll put an end to a century of mysticism erected on a scaffold of critique and pseudoscience.

    Here is a nice sketch that for those who want to know: (From the CR group)

    (IN SEARCH OF TRUTH: Some of us search for products to distribute in exchange for individual heroic achievement – status. Some of us search for god without offending the priesthood. The perspective of Athens vs Jerusalem.)

    —–

    The reasons I criticizes Popper here, despite the excellence of his work, is so that defenders like yourself will provide perspective – all of which helps me narrow and improve my own work.

    The reason I don’t produce citations is that it’s costly in time, and I’m rarely making a tactical criticism which would require a few citations, and instead a categorical one that would require many. Lets look at why:

    If popper’s criteria for truth as you said is ‘ultimate truth’ (the most parsimonious statement possible) not truthful construction, then newton’s theory is false. However, newton’s theory is not false at human scale. Since increase in the scale of our arguments due to increased capacity of our instruments placed pressure on our logic thought leaders in multiple fields have been attempting to solve this issue. Popper’s answer is to avoid the issue by casting all as false and permanently open to revision, rather than to solve the logical problem that increases in scale have placed upon our family of logical instruments. This is a practical solution but it is not an explicative one. I am trying to solve the explicative problem. My motivation is not limited to the physical sciences. Physical sciences ignore philosophy altogether. My motivation is to prevent pseudoscience and pseudo rationalism in intellectual speech, politics and law.

    There is nothing I need to cite in order to levy my criticism other than the two principles of CP and CR. These tools use common logic of Critique any student of jewish law (philosophy) must master. They do not use the common logic whose origin is testimony as used in anglo empiricism.

    Now, I try to be respectful as long as people to not levy ad hominems at me of any kind. I try at most times to be respectful of people here and I appreciate all the help I get from this group of what I consider experts in this field. But you should not make the assumption that I do not understand the criticisms that I levy, the mission that I am on, or the subject matter in its broadest context. I am not an acolyte studying one philosopher, but every possible philosopher that I can find, for solutions to a very serious, and somewhat ancient problem.

    The fact that I will not degenerate into Critique myself, in and endless he-said,she-said, and preserve attempts to hold arguments at first principles, is simply a strategic choice that any professional would hold himself to.

    First principles are enough in this case. “Truth is that which is unknowable, and all we can do is provide critique.” This is Popper’s application of cultural bias to the philosophy of science. Any student of theology would recognize it as such.

    ****The interesting thing about westerners is that while we can make this observation about other cultures, we cannot introspectively make this observation about our own: that truth is a promise about a product that you testify and warranty – a product that you place into the market for use until someone invents a better one. Nor is it obvious the value of this approach over the approach that truth is unknowable – something platonic or divine.****

    So please judge my attempts at argument here as investigations using good manners designed to ask uncomfortable questions that may help me on my journey, without causing much offense. Unlike many thinkers I am not skilled at empathizing with other points of view and am a little autistically stuck with scientific (necessary and demonstrable) arguments and naturally allergic to verbalisms: analogies as substitutes for causality. Poppers value in pedagogy is in part due to his use of allegory rather than causality. But analogies are not truths.

    (***That paragraph should blow your mind.) (revised it a bit for clarity)



    Operationalism succeeded in science where it is one of the canons although only stated explicitly in experimental psychology, where it was most needed, it has been adopted as a norm in science: a sequence of observations must be stated in objective measures.

    Operationalism succeeded in mathematics in requiring all mathematical statements be reducible to operations – but preserved classical mathematics as a cognitively efficient tool for the exploration if not proof of mathematical statements.

    Operationalism succeeded in the discipline of logic culminating most recently with Kripke’s application of Cantor to language.

    [Operationalism succeeded in computer science where it is not an option: if it cannot be acted upon it cannot exist. ]

    Operationalism succeeds (I hypothesize) in economics where mises failed, to develop operationalism, because he, as a borrower of ideas from other fields, did not understand the meaning of them. He correctly intuited that something was correct, but not that ‘investigation can be done by any means possible, but proof of internal consistency requires operational definitions’.

    So operationalism provides in all human actions, not just math, or logic, or science, also economics, a proof of internal consistency: that we rely upon actions and observations not analogies and the imaginary.

    In the sense that an idea is a product manufactured for consumption, this is the greatest warranty that I can give it. No greater warranty is possible. But that product of intellect is warrantied if operationally stated. And it can be used as a recipe by others until a better one is found. However, I am accountable for it. whereas under popper’s cosmopolitanism, I am unaccountable for my testimony, and my work product is not warrantied. This is why science was an heroic achievement in the west. It was paid for by social status obtained in reward for production of a commons. Thus providing incentive.

    Now empirically test which method produces a greater rate of human scientific innovation? We know that already.

    Ideas have consequences. Even the ideas within our ideas. Even our metaphysical assumptions that we are unaware of.

    Operationalism and instrumentalism are part and parcel of empiricism, made so by the vast increase in the scale of our observations. This is for example why the Bayesian’s have successes but don’t understand them: because the algorithms assist us with problems of scale. They are merely accounting systems. But as scale increases we require accounting systems for the same reason we required number systems: to compensate for the limited cognitive ability nature gave us.

    Curt

    —-

    Those two comments should be enough to make my case, and demonstrate the progress I have made. Again, as always I appreciate the help I get from this group. It has been immensely valuable to me. And I will be forever grateful. But at some point you might want to consider that Popper is like any other intellectual, and that time and intellectual history move forward.

    All ideas have consequences.

    — NOTES:—

    ) Proof != Truth. I was going to ask this of the group earlier, but how many of us understand that proof is a test of internal consistency, not of external correspondence? Mathematicians construct proofs, but do not lay claim to truths. That is outside of their purvey.

    2) Operationalism is not a test of truth but of internal consistency: operational definitions test whether one’s statements are real(actionable and causal) or imaginary(allegorical and correlative).

    3) Popper constantly confuses parsimony(precision) with truth(correspondence).

    4) Unfortunately, despite is many successes, Popper ultimately failed, right? Or he would have provided the answer to that which he does not. His generation all failed to provide an answer to the increase in scale of concepts that began in the 19th century. Like many of his peers he had to resort to platonism when he could not find the answers by other than means of analogy.

    5) I now understand (Thanks again to Alex Naraniecki) that popper was a cosmopolitan. I understand (and this may be novel) the difference between cosmopolitan, continental, and anglo empirical truth. It is not necessary that a philosopher be perfect, only that he contribute an idea. Popper gave us more than one. But he is a victim of his heritage, just as was Mises. And just as we all are. I cannot put this to bed quite yet, but I am very close. And this explains what has been troubling me for many years: why does popper speak in allegory rather than operations? What did he have wrong that required him to resort to ‘ways of thinking about what might be true, rather than truth itself?”

    Cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-21 01:48:00 UTC

  • OPERATIONAL CURE FOR MADNESS As far as I know, of the cases below, operational d

    OPERATIONAL CURE FOR MADNESS

    As far as I know, of the cases below, operational definitions, operational language, under e prime will make most of these sentences impossible to speak. In other words, most of the madness of philosophy (and reason) is attributable to analogies (functions) used as if they refer to objects, processes, or actions.

    ——————–

    Here, then, are examples of forty different ways in which thought can go irretrievably wrong, of which we can identify only the first two.

    1 Between 1960 and 1970 there were three US presidents named Johnson.

    2 Between 1960 and 1970 there were three US presidents named Johnson, and it is not the case that between 1960 and 1970 there were three US presidents named Johnson.

    3 God is three persons in one substance, and one of these persons is Jesus, which is the lamb that was slain even from the foundations of the world.

    4 Three lies between two and four only by a particular act of the Divine Will.

    5 Three lies between two and four by a moral and spiritual necessity inherent in the nature of numbers.

    6 Three lies between two and four by a natural and physical necessity inherent in the nature of numbers.

    7 Three lies between two and four only by a convention which mathematicians have adopted.

    8 There is an integer between two and four, but it is not three, and its true name and nature are not to be revealed.

    9 There is no number three.

    10 Three is the only number.

    11 Three is the highest number.

    12 Three is a large number.

    13 Three is a lucky number.

    14 The sum of three and two is a little greater than eight.

    15 Three is a real object all right: you are not thinking of nothing when you think of three.

    16 Three is a real material object.

    17 Three is a real spiritual object.

    18 Three is an incomplete object, only now coming into existence.

    19 Three is not an object at all, but an essence; not a thing, but a thought; not a particular, but a universal.

    20 Three is a universal all right, but it exists only, and it exists fully, in each actual triple.

    21 Actual triples possess threeness only contingently, approximately, and changeably, but three itself possesses threeness necessarily, exactly, and immutably.

    22 The number three is only a mental construct after all, a convenience of thought.

    23 The proposition that 3 is the fifth root of 243 is a tautology, just like ‘An oculist is an eye-doctor.’

    24 The number three is that whole of which the parts are all and only the actual inscriptions of the numerals, ‘three’ or `3′.

    25 Five is of the same substance as three, co-eternal with three, very three of three: it is only in their attributes that three and five are different.

    26 The tie which unites the number three to its properties (such as primeness) is inexplicable.

    27 The number three is nothing more than the sum of its properties and relations.

    28 The number three is neither an idle Platonic universal, nor a blank Lockean substratum; it is a concrete and specific energy in things, and can be detected at work in such observable processes as combustion.

    29 Three is a positive integer, and the probability of a positive integer being even is ½, so the probability of three being even is ½.

    30 In some previous state of our existence we knew the number three face-to-face, as it is in itself, and by some kind of union with it.

    31 How can I be absolutely sure that I am not the number three?

    32 Since the properties of three are intelligible, and intelligibles can exist only in the intellect, the properties of three exist only in the intellect.

    33 How is the addition of numbers possible? Nothing can make the number three into four, for example.

    34 What the number three is in itself, as distinct from the phenomena which it produces in our minds, we can, of course, never know.

    35 We get the concept of three only through the transcendental unity of our intuitions as being successive in time.

    36 One is identity; two is difference; three is the identity of, and difference between, identity and difference.

    37 The number three is not an ideal object of intellectual contemplation, but a concrete product of human praxis.

    38 The unconscious significance of the number three is invariably phallic, nasal, and patriarchal.

    39 The three members of any triple, being distinct from and merely related to one another, would fall helplessly asunder, if there were not some deeper non-relational unity of which their being three is only an appearance.

    40 It may be – though I don’t really believe in modalities – that in some other galaxies the sum of three and two is not five, or indeed is neither five nor not five. (Don’t laugh! They laughed at Christopher Columbus, you know, and at Copernicus; and even the logical law of excluded middle is being questioned nowadays by some of the sharper young physicists.)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-20 13:31:00 UTC

  • (worth repeating) —“We have limited cognitive and perceptive abilities, and re

    (worth repeating)

    —“We have limited cognitive and perceptive abilities, and require this multitude of tools to testify that we in fact are conveying OBSERVATIONS rather than IMAGINATIONS. “—

    The purpose of that method we call ‘the scientific method’ is ethical: to ensure that we are testifying to observation rather than imagination.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-17 20:11:00 UTC

  • WORK IN PROGRESS Operationalism (Action – or whatever I must end up calling it).

    WORK IN PROGRESS

    Operationalism (Action – or whatever I must end up calling it).

    Testimony (Truth) (“I can demonstrate the ethical right to make this claim”)

    – Proof (causality) Testimony to proof of operation (existence and observability).

    – Proof (internal consistency ) Testimony to consistency

    – Proof (external correspondence) Testimony to correspondence and falsification.

    – Proof (perfect parsimony) Testimony to perfect parsimony at given precision.

    Propertarianism (Moral Realism)

    — man, cooperation, morality, property

    Applications to Common Problems (Propertarianism)

    Sociology (the behavior of individuals in groups)

    Post Monopoly (Democratic) Political Institutions.

    – Voluntary membership, Reciprocal Insurance, Right of Secession

    – Militia, Regiments, Elected Generals, Private Weapons Production, Nuclear Arms

    – Constitution, Property, Common Law, Judges, Courts, (Academy/Association), Insurers. (Anarchic Government)

    – Contractual Production of Necessary Commons.

    —- Infrastructure

    – Contractual Production of Preferential Commons.

    —- Insurance

    – Contractual Production of Luxury Commons

    —- Arts and Monuments

    Aristocratic Egalitarianism (reciprocal insurance of property rights)

    🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-14 05:39:00 UTC

  • “How do we take a measure of something?” vs “How do we observe something” THese

    “How do we take a measure of something?” vs “How do we observe something”

    THese are synonymous statements, since our observations are narrowly constrained to human scale, and that any observation beyond human scale (perception) requires some form of instrumentation, and some form of scale by which to describe changes in state. There is no difference between instrumentation captured by the eye or that captured by complex scientific machinery other than, while both are often equally fallible, we are born with the first, and must construct the second. But in both cases, external changes in state must be reduced to stimuli that we can contrast and compare.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-13 07:47:00 UTC

  • 20th Century Philosophers Were Seeking Power, Not Truth

    [O]perationalism constructs rigid correspondence, eliminates the problem of imprecise language, even non-existent language, by creating names for operations rather than allegories, normative usage, or worst of all, relying upon names of experiences rather than the actions that cause them. It has become increasingly frustrating, if not dismissive, to read the philosophical arguments of the 20th century, which seek to find truth in language through a variant of set operations – which of course, must be nothing more than circular. When the answer was just sitting there for everyone to pick up and run with. But It was apparently much better to seek truth as a means of persuasion of others, rather than to seek truth as a means of testing the content of one’s testimony. And I think the psychologists and intellectual historians could spend a lot of time analyzing that particular bit of 20th century mysticism. Or perhaps pseudoscience. Or more graciously ‘error’. What vanity, or error would lead a body of people to seek authority rather than duty? I hope the depth of that question comes across. We all seek power. But the truth is just as likely to impede our ambitions as assist in them. But the academy, sought to take power from the church. Moral power. Reason and Science were the first blow. Darwin was the second. The Universalist State the third. It was all in pursuit of power. Philosophers of the 20th century, knowingly or not, were seeking power, not truth.

  • 20th Century Philosophers Were Seeking Power, Not Truth

    [O]perationalism constructs rigid correspondence, eliminates the problem of imprecise language, even non-existent language, by creating names for operations rather than allegories, normative usage, or worst of all, relying upon names of experiences rather than the actions that cause them. It has become increasingly frustrating, if not dismissive, to read the philosophical arguments of the 20th century, which seek to find truth in language through a variant of set operations – which of course, must be nothing more than circular. When the answer was just sitting there for everyone to pick up and run with. But It was apparently much better to seek truth as a means of persuasion of others, rather than to seek truth as a means of testing the content of one’s testimony. And I think the psychologists and intellectual historians could spend a lot of time analyzing that particular bit of 20th century mysticism. Or perhaps pseudoscience. Or more graciously ‘error’. What vanity, or error would lead a body of people to seek authority rather than duty? I hope the depth of that question comes across. We all seek power. But the truth is just as likely to impede our ambitions as assist in them. But the academy, sought to take power from the church. Moral power. Reason and Science were the first blow. Darwin was the second. The Universalist State the third. It was all in pursuit of power. Philosophers of the 20th century, knowingly or not, were seeking power, not truth.