Theme: Science

  • The Second Enlightenment

    [W]e had to restore science(truth) in order to end more than a thousand years of levantine mysticism. We are now going to have to restore science (truth) in order to end more than a century of levantine pseudoscience. Liars love their lies.  But we can defeat them, with Truth. Liberty in our lifetimes.

  • The ‘Aggressiveness’ of NRx Advocates?

    [T]he NRx movement evolved as a criticism of political correctness, dishonesty, pseudo-rationalism, pseudoscience, and lying in politics.

    The current alt-right has evolved into the practice of activism against political correctness, dishonesty, pseudo-rationalism, pseudoscience, and lying. In their ethos you are practicing political correctness (lying) not science or truth. If we all practice pragmatism we are merely all lying.

    So the question is, how, given the truth, should we construct the commons (social order and the law that enforces it)?

    It is not pleasant to look in the mirror and admit that one is just practicing political correctness (lying) for the purpose of self interest. And that for all intents and purposes one is no different from a neocon or socialist or any other niche that lies for the purpose of self-signal production.

    Truth is a mirror. Use it.  Be aggressive about it.

    TRUTH IS ENOUGH.

  • The ‘Aggressiveness’ of NRx Advocates?

    [T]he NRx movement evolved as a criticism of political correctness, dishonesty, pseudo-rationalism, pseudoscience, and lying in politics.

    The current alt-right has evolved into the practice of activism against political correctness, dishonesty, pseudo-rationalism, pseudoscience, and lying. In their ethos you are practicing political correctness (lying) not science or truth. If we all practice pragmatism we are merely all lying.

    So the question is, how, given the truth, should we construct the commons (social order and the law that enforces it)?

    It is not pleasant to look in the mirror and admit that one is just practicing political correctness (lying) for the purpose of self interest. And that for all intents and purposes one is no different from a neocon or socialist or any other niche that lies for the purpose of self-signal production.

    Truth is a mirror. Use it.  Be aggressive about it.

    TRUTH IS ENOUGH.

  • More on “Peak Human”

    [Y]es, I’ve been doing a bit of research and it’s starting to come together. Whig history bites again. Falsification wins again.

    The problem a polity faces is culling defects consistently and selecting for the amplification of existing traits, not the accumulation of beneficial mutations. In retrospect it is really obvious. We have passed peak human.
  • More on “Peak Human”

    [Y]es, I’ve been doing a bit of research and it’s starting to come together. Whig history bites again. Falsification wins again.

    The problem a polity faces is culling defects consistently and selecting for the amplification of existing traits, not the accumulation of beneficial mutations. In retrospect it is really obvious. We have passed peak human.
  • RECENT TEMPERATURE DATA I am still skeptical despite being involved early on. Bu

    RECENT TEMPERATURE DATA

    I am still skeptical despite being involved early on.

    But then my standard of truth in matters of interference with or deprivation of others is much higher than yours.

    There is nothing out of the ordinary in the readings from this period.

    There are multiple causal relations one of which is likely mans atmospheric pollution. The Sun being the other most obvious and consequential.

    There are multiple solutions – the most important being one child policy in the undeveloped and developing world and in the non performing underclasses of the developed world- And the waste being produced by industry that meets demand for population.

    Unless the data exceeds norms and models are predictive then this is yet another example of reproductive excess only curable by reproductive constraint.

    Fewer people, more advanced, with higher energy consumption or more people less advanced with less consumption.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-21 06:31:00 UTC

  • over realism have been at the center of the philosophy of science for at least s

    http://understandingsociety.blogspot.com/2015/08/niiniluoto-on-scientific-realism.htmlDebates over realism have been at the center of the philosophy of science for at least seventy-five years. The fundamental question is this: what exists in the world? And how do we best gain knowledge about the nature and properties of these real things? The first question is metaphysical, while the second is epistemic.

    Scientific realism is the view that “mature” areas of science offer theories of the nature of real things and their properties, and that the theories of well-confirmed areas of science are most likely approximately true. So science provides knowledge about reality independent from our ideas; and the methods of science justify our belief in these representations of the real world. Scientific methods are superior to other forms of belief acquisition when it comes to successful discovery of the entities and properties of the world in which we live.

    But this statement conceals a number of difficult issues. What is involved in asserting that a theory is true? We have the correspondence theory of truth on the one hand — the idea that the key concepts of the theory succeed in referring to real entities in the world independent of the theory. And on the other hand, we have the pragmatist theory of truth — the idea that “truth” means “well confirmed”. A further difficulty arises from the indisputable fallibility of science; we know that many well confirmed scientific theories have turned out to be false. Finally, the idea of “approximate truth” is problematic, since it seems to imply “not exactly true,” which in turn implies “false”. Hilary Putnam distinguished two kinds of realism based on the polarity of correspondence and justification, metaphysical realism and internal realism; and it seems plain enough that “internal realism” is not a variety of realism at all.

    Another central issue in the metatheory of realism is the question, what kinds of considerations are available to permit us to justify or refute various claims of realism? Why should we believe that the contents of current scientific theories succeed in accurately describing unobservable but fundamental features of an independent world? And the strongest argument the literature has produced is that offered by Putnam and Boyd in the 1970s: the best explanation of the practical and predictive successes of the sciences is the truth of the theoretical assumptions on which they rest.

    Ilkka Niiniluoto’s 1999 Critical Scientific Realism proceeds from the general orientation of Roy Bhaskar’s critical realism. But it is not a synthesis of the philosophy of critical realism as much as it is an analytical dissection of the logic and plausibility of various claims of scientific realism. As such it is an excellent and rigorous introduction to the topic of scientific realism for current discussions. Niiniluoto analyzes the metatheory of realism into six areas of questions: ontological, semantical, epistemological, axiological, methodological, and ethical (2). And he provides careful and extensive discussions of the issues that arise under each topic. Here is a useful taxonomy that he provides for the many variants of realism (11):

    Here is how Niiniluoto distinguishes “critical scientific realism” from other varieties of realism:

    R0: At least part of reality is ontologically independent of human minds.

    R1: Truth is a semantical relation between language and reality (correspondence theory).

    R2: Truth and falsity are in principle applicable to all linguistic products of scientific enquiry.

    R3: Truth is an essential aim of science.

    R4: Truth is not easily accessible or recognizable, and even our best theories can fail to be true.

    R5: The best explanation for the practical success of science is the assumption that scientific theories in fact are approximately true.

    These are credible and appealing premises. And they serve to distinguish this version of realism from other important alternatives — for example, Putnam’s internal realism. But it is evident that Niiniluoto’s “critical scientific realism” is not simply a further expression of “critical realism” in the system of Bhaskar. It is a distinctive and plausible version of scientific realism; but its premises equally capture the realisms of other philosophers of science whose work is not within the paradigm of standard critical realism. As the diagram indicates, other philosophers who embrace R0-R5 include Popper, Sellars, Bunge, Boyd, and Nowak, as well as Niiniluoto himself. (It is noteworthy that Bhaskar’s name does not appear on this list!)

    So how much of a contribution does Critical Scientific Realism represent in the evolving theory of scientific realism within philosophy of science? In my reading this is an important step in the evolution of the arguments for and against realism. Niiniluoto’s contribution is a synthetic one. He does an excellent job of tracing down the various assumptions and disagreements that exist within the field of realism and anti-realism debates, and the route that he traces through these debates under the banner of “critical scientific realism” represents (for me, anyway) a particularly plausible combination of answers to these various questions. So one might say that the position that Niiniluoto endorses is a high point in the theory of scientific realism — the most intellectually and practically compelling combination of positions from metaphysics, epistemology, semantics, and methodology that are available in the assessment of the truthiness of science.

    What it is not, however, is the apotheosis of “critical realism” in the sense intended by the literature extending from Bhaskar to the current generation of critical realist thinkers. Niiniluoto’s approach is appealingly eclectic; he follows the logic of the arguments he entertains, rather than seeking to validate or extend a particular view within this complicated field of realist arguments. And this is a good thing if our interest is in making the most sense possible of the idea of scientific realism as an interpretation of the significance of science in face of the challenges of constructivism, conceptual and theoretical underdetermination, and relativism.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-17 16:15:00 UTC

  • SEE THE VIRTUE OF COMPUTER SCIENCE? Something that is not well understood, even

    http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/jesse.shapiro/research/CodeAndData.pdfECONOMISTS SEE THE VIRTUE OF COMPUTER SCIENCE?

    http://www.env-econ.net/2015/08/coding.html

    Something that is not well understood, even in computer science, is that just as they syllogism, the ratio, the calculus, and statistical relation were innovations in human thought, so was programming an innovation in the process of human thought.

    It is hard to accept the fact that programming may be as important as mathematics, the scientific method, and logical reasoning, grammar and rhetoric.

    For the single reason that unlike statistical relations programs consist of existentially possible operations.

    The 20th century failure of operationalism, intuitionism and praxeology is due to the failure to grasp that justification (confirmation) is not meaningful, and that correlation provides us with a source of inquiry, but only a sequence of operations provide us with evidence of existential possibility. And only parsimony assists us in choosing truth candidates between existentially possible sequences of operations.

    In other words, if statements of social science cannot be reduced to sympathetically testable, rationally decidable sequences of choices, they we have no idea if they CAN be true.

    We train ourselves to be intolerant of inserting information that does not exist, because the entire purpose of science is to eliminate error, bias, wishful thinking and deception from propositions that we construct by means of free association. And that is what statistical analysis helps us do: extend our senses so that we can construct possible free associations from that which we cannot sense without such technological devices.

    Cheers

    http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/jesse.shapiro/research/CodeAndData.pdf


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-17 15:23:00 UTC

  • THE SECOND RESTORATION We had to restore science in order to end more than a tho

    THE SECOND RESTORATION

    We had to restore science in order to end more than a thousand years of levantine mysticism. We are now going to have to restore truth in order to end more than a century of levantine pseudoscience.

    Liberty in our lifetimes.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-16 06:43:00 UTC

  • SKETCH (Trying to find a way to describe uniting organizing(business), productio

    SKETCH (Trying to find a way to describe uniting organizing(business), production(engineering), investigationI(science), and decision making(law), and philosophy(truth).

    – Dreaming

    – Daydreaming

    – Imagining

    – Free-Associating

    – Reasoning

    – Hypothesizing

    – Testifying

    – Theory

    – Decidability

    – Law

    – Truth

    – Tautology


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-11 09:46:00 UTC