Theme: Science

  • PHILOSOPHY, MORALITY, SCIENCE, and LAW If philosophy, morality, science, and law

    PHILOSOPHY, MORALITY, SCIENCE, and LAW

    If philosophy, morality, science, and law are not identical propositions then something is very wrong.

    Because philosophy morality science and law can be constructed as identical propositions.

    Because truthful, due-diligent, warrantable, speech is consistent regardless of the discipline in which we utter it.

    Propertarianism.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-01-02 05:22:00 UTC

  • ANOTHER EXAMPLE —“I wonder if Curt Doolittle would share with us which economi

    ANOTHER EXAMPLE

    —“I wonder if Curt Doolittle would share with us which economic discipline ie Keynesianism or Friedman’s Chicagoan School that is more scientific than Austrian economics.”—Brian White

    Brian,

    I can define ‘Scientific’ very precisely. I am not sure that I can define Austrian Economics so precisely – other than stating it as the two German and Cosmopolitan (Misesian/Rothbardian) branches. The germans did not make any pseudoscientific claims that I am aware of. However, Mises and Rothbard make expressly pseudoscientific arguments – not the least of which is conflating axiomatic (complete) systems for constructing proofs, with theoretical (incomplete) systems for constructing models. The definition of pseudoscientific is a claim that does not follow the scientific method. The scientific method however, is not in fact a method, but a set of moral constraints on warrantable (truthful) speech. Mises claims an axiomatic system is a science rather than a logic. This is simply false. (albeit his era was plagued with philosophical confusion as philosophy desperately attempted to attain the respectability of science. Today it is group with theology both in book stores and in academic budgets..)

    —“Okay Curt I was more interested to know if there were other economic sciences that you concluded were more scientific”—Brian White

    Brian,

    Logical fallacy.

    Something is not more scientific than something else. The point of demarcation in science is whether the scientific method is used or not. As such practicing science is a binary proposition, not an analog proposition. So “more scientific” is not possible. Either someone follows the scientific method or one does not. The definition of ‘science’ is whether one practices the scientific method.

    Economic science is practiced scientifically. Misesianism is the non-scientific branch of Austrian economics. All working economists today who call themselves Austrians (that I know of) practice empirical, scientific, economics. In other words, they are not Misesians.

    Instead,working Austrians require praxeological testing (operational falsification) of economic theories rather than macro correlations alone. This is tantamount to placing two additional requirements on the scientific method: (a) that economic theories must be operationally falsifiable, and (b) that economic theories of policy must be stated such that they expose the degree of moral or immoral consequences.

    Cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-01-02 04:50:00 UTC

  • TURNING RATIONALISM ON ITS HEAD – AS AUTHORITARIANISM (from elsewhere) Thanks An

    TURNING RATIONALISM ON ITS HEAD – AS AUTHORITARIANISM

    (from elsewhere)

    Thanks Andrew:

    In regard to my statement:

    —“So no statement that is not open to sympathetic testing (falsification) by operational means (sympathetic testing) can be ‘true’, nor ‘scientific’ since ‘scientific’ refers to morally warrantable constraint upon one’s statements.”—

    You argue:

    –“It is important to consider if this statement itself is scientific or ‘true’ by its own terms. “–

    Well, this is a rationalist position, not a scientific position. So what is important to a person who justifies arguments to see if they are true (a rationalist), and a person who criticizes hypotheses to see if they are provide predictive results (a scientist) is considerably different.

    A frequent fallacy of philosophical argument is that there are two, not three arguments. They are 1) Rationalist, 2) Empiricist, and 3) Scientific. 1 and 2 are philosophical justifications. 3 is not. It merely seeks what works. Philosophers attempt quite often to cast as justificationary (under their control) that which does not seek justification, but only seeks to perform.

    A scientist seeks to testify that he has done due diligence, he does not seek to make true statements. After his due diligence, and after the community’s due diligence, that which survives remains hypothesis theory or law.

    Science is not philosophical, but like law, practical. By practical application law evolves, and by practical applicatoin, science evolves. We philosophers attempt to explain this, but we do not inform science. We inform others about the progress of science. (Which in itself is an interesting phenomenon.)

    Science then does not bear a burden of analytic truth. It bears only its evolved polycentric, normative, laws against error, bias, and deception in the presentation of theories. Those laws are often poorly articulated (outside of experimental psychology). We can analyze those laws and translate them into philosophical terms as a warranty (promise) that theories are:

    i) internally consistent (logical)

    ii) externally correspondent (correlative)

    iii) empirical (observable)

    iv) operational (existentially possible)

    v) falsifiable

    vi) reasonably falsified

    Now, a good critical rationalist would say that all those criteria are means of falsification (criticism), not justifications, as most rationalists would attempt to assert. However, I see this as again, non-performative (verbalist) rationalist language. And instead that these are our evolved conditions of intellectual warranty, that have survived the test of time by eliminating error, bias, and deception.

    (a) “is the statement falsifiable?”

    My statement is reducible to “only existentially possible human operations – whether mental or physical – can exist”. This is a metaphysical not epistemological assertion. So the proposition that we must falsify a metaphysical statement is inapplicable. Without this stipulation no further argument is possible on any grounds.

    Just for fun: If we could state that existentially impossible human actions can exist, then yes it is falsifiable. Just as if we state that existentially impossible mathematical operations can exist. While both of these things are hard to conceive of, that does not mean that they cannot be constructed, just as we did not imaging that length was a local rather than absolute concept. (Einstein/Brouwer). all premises are theoretical, even metaphysical premises.

    Can something demonstrably exist, and can such a thing be observable? Since (this is the point of empiricist arguments) we can both sympathize with one another (or we could not cooperate on intentions) and observe our own reaction to incentive-producing phenomenon, we can in fact, make internal observations, and we can collect external, empirical observations from others. (We do. All the time. In many disciplines. )

    Now it is possible that say, the quantum theory of subconscious communication is possible, but that would only state that we were not conscious, not that we reacted to incentives (information). And that we could not observe it, just as we cannot observe many of our intuitionistic functions of the mind. They are hidden from us.

    Next;

    (b) “Not being an empirical statement, it cannot itself be empirically tested.”

    Well, it being a metaphysical statement that is its definition.

    But that said, this is a good example of the rationalist fallacy. Given that empirical means observable, that I know of, we cannot make non-empirical statements. This is the debate between empiricism and rationalism. Measurements are empirical observations. Internal observations of our own sensations are empirical observations. The question is whether we insert error, bias, and deception into those observations. We are not trying to assert observations are true, we are trying to assert that observations are reasonably free of all possible error, bias, and deception.

    Moreover, isolating and constructing a demonstrative test is useful only in those circumstances where we seek to uncover first principles (reduce variables). Not in those cases where we seek to discover emergent phenomenon in fully informed (existential) reality, in real time (study variables). Economics requires the latter. In physics the former. In economics we can subjectively test incentives – that is why we can cooperate, and why apes don’t (well). It is why we can use juries in courts. But we cannot deduce from incentives all possible emergent economic phenomenon, which while based upon simple rules produces fractal results (emergent complexity we cannot anticipate). In physics by contrast we do not know the first principles – we cannot empathize or sympathize with the physical universe (yet).

    Another rationalist fallacy: it is MORE accurate to collect unintentionally constructed data and see if it fits your model, than it is to construct an experiment and intentionally construct data. This is one of the benefits of economic data over other tests: we collect demonstrated preferences (performatively-true testimonies). Whereas we have demonstrated that we cannot collect performatively-true testimonies in most cases because of error bias and deception.

    (c) “There is the question of science vs. orthodoxy.”

    Orthodoxy is a justificationist position not a scientific one.

    So, actually, the question is normative (as practiced), juridical(survives criticism), and metaphysical(existentially possible). Philosophy as practiced is largely justificationary for ancient reasons. Science is demonstrative and theoretical for equally ancient reasons – largely to avoid the politically normative, which is highly loaded with error, bias and deception.

    For this reason it behooves us to recognize that philosophy as practiced is a political activity, not a scientific one. That is why the most sophisitcated deceptions in history have been constructed via rationalist means. First monotheism was developed argumentatively as an authoritarian vehicle. Next philosophical argument. Then pseudoscientific. Finally postmodern abandoned all truth and reason.

    So the problem is not that science, must meet philosophical standards, but that rationalists must prove that they do not practice world history’s most successful art of lying, bias, and error. Since most great deceptions were carried out by rationalist rather than scientific means. Not the least of which were the church’s integration of aristotelianism, Rousseau’s justification and responsibilty for the horrors of the revolution, Kant’s authoritarianism and responsibilty for making marxism possible, marx’s responsibility for the death of 100M, Keynesianism’s responsibilty for western civilization’s suicide, freudian psychology’s century long survival and all the damage it has done to individuals, cantorian sets and the platonization of math and physics, scientific socialism and the loss of eastern europe, and the postmodern and feminist attacks on the family – the central unit of reproduction.

    So rationalists must warrant that they do no harm, scientists must not warrant, and do not warrant that they speak the truth. Only that they have done due diligence against doing harm to the informational commons via error bias and deception. Could we hold a court to convict both rationalists and scientists on the harm done by error, bias and deception, the prisons would be filled with rationalists and nearly empty of scientists.

    Because the harm done by rationalists, is only exceeded by the great plagues. In that sense rationalism (justificationism) is an intellectual plague that we are justified in exterminating. (Which is to some small degree part of my work.)

    (d) ” it is an interesting philosophy that states that philosophy is to be excluded from consideration.”

    This statement requires that we agree on the term ‘philosophy’. Since in my work, I argue i think persuasively, that there isn’t any difference if both philosophy and science are subject to the same criterion. If science, philosophy, morality and law are not identical in content then someone is engaged in error, deception, or bias.

    Instead, I state that rationalism (at least german and jewish rationalism) is a justificationary, authoritarian cult that has produced catastrophic harm to man on the same scale as scriptural monotheism, and only slightly less terrible than the great plagues.

    And that is simply the result of looking at the evidence.

    CLOSING

    Hopefully I put this conversation into perspective, not only correcting a number of common rationalist fallacies.

    It might be a bit to swallow, but that’s just how it is.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    L’viv Ukraine.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-01-02 04:47:00 UTC

  • GETTING EASIER TO GET ACROSS THE MAIN MESSAGE (reposted from elsewhere) The scie

    GETTING EASIER TO GET ACROSS THE MAIN MESSAGE

    (reposted from elsewhere)

    The scientific method consists of a set of moral rules on what scientists must consider truthful testimony. Otherwise no ‘method’ exists. The scope of these moral rules has evolved during the twentieth century in ways that I think very few people, scientists included, understand. (I will go into this a bit later if need be.)||

    Scientists do not practice (or even pay any attention to) philosophy or philosophers. Philosophers tend to be justificationists, but scientists do not practice justification. So no, scientists do not defend arenas using logic at all. That is what philosophers do when they try to defend one epistemological justification or another. Scientists demonstrate. They do not justify. Philosphers justify. So no, they did not evolve nor are they practiced by similar means. Rationalism and science are practiced by opposite means: justification versus demonstration and warranty.

    Scientists, and the discipline of science operate upon these epistemological principles:

    (a) we know nothing for certain, and may never be able to know anything for certain. (the most parsimonious non tautological statement possible).

    (b) we know what works and what doesn’t work. Everything else we say is just hypothesis, theory and law

    (c) all knowledge is theoretical (intuition, hypothesis, theory, or law)

    (d) we can combine theories to create models, which themselves are theories.

    (d) To publish a theory (‘distribute an intellectual product for consumption’) one must subject it tests (Provide a Warranty) stating that it is:

    i) consistent (logical)

    ii) correspondent (correlative)

    iii) empirical (observable)

    iv) operational (existentially possible)

    v) falsifiable

    vi) reasonably falsified

    The scientific method consists, if anything, in meeting these moral constraints upon their statements. It is their job to speak truthfully. But they never claim to state the truth. Even mathematicians (of any degree of sophistication) will say that truth is a problem of philosophy, while proof is a problem of mathematics.

    Mises’ argument is false because there are no non-trivial, non-tautological, certain, premises. If, as Einstein demonstrated, even time and length are concepts that we cannot count upon (length is the argument used to demonstrate the fallacy of even geometric premises). While we may imagine a point or a line, we cannot construct one. While we may imagine infinite sets, we cannot construct one. While we may imagine the square root of two, it cannot exist without a physical context to determine its arbitrary precision and therefore its existence.

    So no. Mises’ rationalism is a good story. But it’s just a story. An analogy.

    In order to warranty a statement as truthfully represented, it must meet the criteria that scientists have put forward. Science is merely a moral discipline for the purpose of truth telling. If we cannot say it scientifically then we cannot warrant that we are saying it truthfully: free of all possible error, bias, and deception.

    Mises was trying to combat the abuse of pseudoscience in economics, but he did not, as Brouwer did in math and Bridgman did in physics, discover Intuitionism, Operationalism and Operationism: the necessary test of existential possibility that checks our premises against the context in which we apply them. Praxeology was very close. But he got it wrong. If we see him in this light, as failing in economics where others succeeded in math and science, we can see Mises as part of a triumvirate that tried to add a new moral constraint to the sciences consistent with, or perhaps as an extension of falsification.

    It is unfortunate, since the reason Brouwer and Bridgman were not influential was that they failed to grasp that they were making a moral argument to the externalities caused by failing to demonstrate tests of existential possibility. whereas in economics, EVERYTHING WE WORRY ABOUT IS A PRODUCT OF EXTERNALITIES.

    Had Mises gone with Science rather than Rationalism we might have saved a century of semi-pseudoscientific argument only recently overthrown. Because in economics, externalities matter. It matters that Keynesian macro is an attempt to justify the manufacture of vast, slowly accumulating, negative externalities that burn down social and genetic capital. It matters that mathematicians talk about a mathematical reality that does not and cannot exist; that Cantorian sets are a bit of verbal nonsense by which to substitute quantity in timeless state, with frequency in a state where time is present. It matters that mathematical physics has seem to be nearly fruitless compared to physical experimentation, and that the entire multiple-world hypothesis was as nonsensical as we intuited.

    Externalities matter. And that is before we start talking about postmodernism: the most elaborate lie developed since the invention of theism.

    So the truthful, testifiable statement, is not the one mises makes, but that no economic statement that cannot be reduced to sympathetically testable operations can be true. AND any economic proposition that has not been reduced to a sequence of sympathetically testable operations can be stated to be ethical and or moral.

    So no statement that is not open to sympathetic testing (falsification) by operational means (sympathetic testing) can be ‘true’, nor ‘scientific’ since ‘scientific’ refers to morally warrantable constraint upon one’s statements.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    L’viv, Ukraine.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-01-01 14:03:00 UTC

  • the bonobo myth creeps forward

    http://www.skepticink.com/incredulous/2014/12/29/questioning-sexy-bonobo-hype-part-2-primatologist-responds-christopher-ryan/Ending the bonobo myth creeps forward.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-12-31 13:07:00 UTC

  • “We invented science and reason twice. We can do it a third time if we have to.”

    “We invented science and reason twice. We can do it a third time if we have to.” — Don Finnegan


    Source date (UTC): 2014-12-31 07:40:00 UTC

  • REFLECTIONS ON THE STATE OF PROPERTARIANISM Now that I have shown that: 1) Scien

    REFLECTIONS ON THE STATE OF PROPERTARIANISM

    Now that I have shown that:

    1) Science is a name for the discipline of truthfully speaking, regardless of subject;

    2) And that physical science merely ignores cost and morality (making it easier to speak the truth against political convention); but that cost and morality can be added to the method of truthfully speaking – yielding the universal means of warrantable, insurable, and therefore truthful speech.

    3) And that all disciplines must adhere to the art of truthful speech for their statements to be warrantable (and therefore their work products distributable);

    I must now return to one of the arguments the Critical Rationalist group attacked me with such hostility for:

    4) That the epistemic cycle of the scientific method is the universal method, and that consumers producers, engineers, and scientists merely attribute preferential value to different inputs and outputs of that methodological process. But this process is the universal method that man has evolved and must follow. And somehow I must find a way of talking about that so that it’s not so confusing. And I think that way of talking requires a few pictures.

    5) That if we account for costs and morality, then justification is no longer illogical, but merely an earlier, lower-cost, technology – just as repetition and imitation were earlier least-cost technologies, just as memory, was the lowest possible cost technology after genetic memory (evolution).

    IF ONLY THEY HAD LISTENED TO WEBER

    Mises got his idea of economic calculation from Weber, and Weber was right – as he was about many things. Which is why Minsky is ‘right’ – which Ludwig van den Hauwe managed to get through my rather thick skull this weekend with his new paper on crises. I had never paid Minsky much attention, but he is closer to an operational analysis of the problem than the Austrians were. So I’m going to have to revisit Weber, Poincaré, Schumpeter, and Minsky and see if I can put the problem of calculability in terms familiar to the history of economic thought.

    And maybe then I can work on calculability, law, and constitutions.

    I DON’T THINK ONE CAN IMPROVE MUCH ON THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD

    I think the improvements are in warranty (falsification), and in insurance (law), which will assist us in preventing error, bias and deception.

    BECAUSE WE CANNOT TOLERATE ANOTHER CHRISTIANIZATION, COUNTER ENLIGHTENMENT(RATIONALISM), PSEUDOCIENTIFIC CONQUEST(COSMOPOLITANISM), OR POSTMODERN/NEO-PURITANIZATION SUICIDE OF THE WEST.

    Our struggle goes on. The constant struggle to resist the seduction that the rest of the world fell into – the comfort of lies.

    **The seduction by the words of priests rather than adaptation to the actions of heroes.**

    Because truth, trust, production, and commons are the west’s competitive advantage against the untruthful, untrusting, unproductive, and parasitic peoples.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev, Ukraine


    Source date (UTC): 2014-12-28 05:06:00 UTC

  • THE REFORMATION OF WESTERN THOUGHT Science as we understand it is an attempt to

    THE REFORMATION OF WESTERN THOUGHT

    Science as we understand it is an attempt to create a discipline of truthful speech.

    Science as we understand it does not ‘recognize’ this attribute of science.

    Science as we understand it does not include those properties we call costs.

    Science as we understand it does not include those properties we call moral.

    Science as we understand it can be extended to include those properties we call costs and morality.

    Science as we understand it can then be restated as the discipline of constructing moral truthful speech.

    Science then is identical to epistemology in philosophy, and philosophy en toto as a discipline is begun, as its first purpose, with ethics (morality), not metaphysics.

    Law can now be scientifically constructed.

    Truth, science, law, morality are now identical.

    All else currently masquerading as philosophy, is no longer categorizable as philosophy, but as theology, psychology, or deception.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-12-27 02:57:00 UTC

  • THE REFORMATION OF WESTERN THOUGHT Science as we understand it is an attempt to

    THE REFORMATION OF WESTERN THOUGHT

    Science as we understand it is an attempt to create a discipline of truthful speech.

    Science as we understand it does not ‘recognize’ this attribute of science.

    Science as we understand it does not include those properties we call costs.

    Science as we understand it does not include those properties we call moral.

    Science as we understand it can be extended to include those properties we call costs and morality.

    Science as we understand it can then be restated as the discipline of constructing moral truthful speech.

    Science then is identical to epistemology in philosophy, and philosophy en toto as a discipline is begun, as its first purpose, with ethics (morality), not metaphysics.

    Law can now be scientifically constructed.

    Truth, science, law, morality are now identical.

    All else currently masquerading as philosophy, is no longer categorizable as philosophy, but as theology, psychology, or deception.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-12-27 02:56:00 UTC

  • You can teach nearly anyone Austrian economics, and only a limited number of peo

    You can teach nearly anyone Austrian economics, and only a limited number of people monetary economics. Besides, Austrian economics is, at least in its empirical wing, a moral discipline, and Keynesian economics is not. The citizenry does not want or need to be better informed about the abuse of the monetary system. They need to be better informed about how it should not be abused, and how they should expect governments to behave, and what institutions that can improve their way of life.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-12-26 07:54:00 UTC