So, Question, we can be much more sure of negative climate developments than we can of beneficial economic developments. — Bitter Crank
What would you count as an example of each? Abduction happens every time someone devises a new theory. Induction happens every time someone experimentally tests a proposed theory. — aletheist
To take one of your examples: No one "observed" the Higgs boson until they went looking for it (induction) because it was a necessary consequence (deduction) of an explanatory hypothesis (retroduction). — aletheist
Your view of logic seems too narrow. Again, no one is claiming that retroduction or induction is deductively valid. — aletheist
That was indeed Popper's view, but not Peirce's. The latter suggested - long before Popper wrote anything - that the logical form of abduction looks something like this:
The surprising fact, C, is observed.
[*}But if A were true, then C would be a matter of course.
Hence there is reason to suspect that A is true.
Indeed, this is deductively invalid - reasoning from consequent to antecedent, which is why Peirce also called it retroduction and acknowledged that its outcome is merely plausible at best. However, it furnishes the components of a perfectly valid deductive syllogism in which the conclusion is the surprising fact (C), the minor premiss is the credible conjecture (A), and the major premiss is the reason why C follows necessarily from A. In other words, A explains C in light of other known information, so a well-prepared mind is absolutely essential to the generation of viable hypotheses. — aletheist
Nevertheless, the logical form of induction is such that if the hypothesis is false, this will eventually come to light - it is by no means infallible, but it is self-correcting over the long run. — aletheist
The Popper who wrote Conjectures and Refutations? Conjectures result from what Peirce called abduction (or retroduction), and refutations (or corroborations) result from what Peirce called induction. — aletheist
Do you really want to claim that quantum mechanics and relativity did not begin as plausible conjectures to explain surprising phenomena (abduction), which had predictable experiential consequences (deduction) that were subsequently evaluated through rigorous experimental testing (induction)? — aletheist
Abduction is not another name for induction, and induction can and does happen in reality. The scientific method employs both of them routinely. It seems like you may not be familiar at all with what Peirce meant by these terms. — aletheist
For example, I have been working for a while on adapting Peirce's "logic of inquiry" in science to identify a "logic of ingenuity" in my profession of engineering. — aletheist
Bertrand Russell's neutral monism is the view that objects are neither material nor mental. The most important implication of neutral monism is that we can constitute objects surrounding us by predicate logic. It sounds like interesting. However, neutral monism is not much discussed recently. Many philosophers see neutral monism as a kind of dualism. The closest type of neutral monism is David Chalmers' version of dualism. The question is why neutral monism is not much discussed. — mosesquine
Yeah the particle behaves spontaneously. So what? That doesn't mean that it's uncaused. It is caused, because something, namely a field, produces that particle, for once, and secondly because that particle has a certain nature, a nature which causes it to be spontaneous. In other words, doesn't its nature cause its free response? Its nature is such that it has a free response. Nothing uncaused about that. So no - sorry to burst your bubble. There's nothing uncaused about indeterminism :D — Agustino
I was using it in the ordinary sense as it is used in that Wikipedia article. If you are doubtful about what sense a term is being used in you can always ask, instead of assuming it is being used in some other sense you intend; and without giving any explanation of your own usage. — John
You don't understand what uncaused means. Uncaused means that there is no particle there even. If there is a particle there, then that particle has a certain nature, a certain way of behaving. That way of behaving may be indeterministic in nature. It may be random, it may be spontaneous. All that doesn't mean there isn't a cause. It means there is a cause - that cause is the nature of the particle. — Agustino
Well, all that the free-will theorem proves, if anything, is that quantum mechanics is indeterministic. That isn't to say that it is acausal. Science views indeterminism with something being uncaused, but this isn't true at all. With regard to the spin-1 boson. Taking QFT as true, the material cause is the field, the formal cause is the boson, the efficient cause is whatever gave energy to the field to move into the higher state and produce the boson, and the final cause is whatever interaction the boson has (which may indeed be an indeterminate interaction - because it is in the nature of the boson to interact, even randomly if you want, with other particles). — Agustino
It all depends on what you mean by 'random' I suppose. From Wikipedia:
Radioactive decay is a stochastic (i.e. random) process at the level of single atoms, in that, according to quantum theory, it is impossible to predict when a particular atom will decay, — John
What about the second law of thermodynamics, the only theory in physics that has never been questioned - the so called arrow of time? — Agustino
Give a specific example. — Agustino
That's because you, like other physicists, are using muddled up notions of causality. I've explained for example, how radioactive decay, a phenomenon widely taken to be uncaused in physics is actually caused, and can be explained and understood perfectly by Aristotle's fourfold causality metaphysics. — Agustino
Wrong. Formal cause is still "how". The atom's structure is its formal cause, and it is part of the how with regards to radioactive decay. Your notions are very muddled up, as I've said before. — Agustino
It cannot yet be reduced, but according to the scientific worldview it is in principle reducible. — Agustino
Because physics studies the building blocks of the world. Physics was there before biology, and physics gave rise to biology. Thus causality must go from physics towards biology, not the other way around. Something that isn't in the cause cannot be in the effect. — Agustino
There's also conceptual problems regarding how something that is uncaused can even be conceived to begin with. — Agustino
However, John has a point that, ultimately, according to the scientific worldview, biology and chemistry ultimately have to be reducible to physics, and hence to quantification and mathematical description. — Agustino
Something being uncaused means it is random... Great. That's a new one. Radioactive decay and other subatomic phenomena are uncaused... That too is a new one. — Agustino
Evolution is understood in terms of the interactions between the structural and functional changes caused by genetic mutations, and the physical conditions of environments, the physical constraints they impose on action and the combined effects these have on breeding populations. All of these entirely physical effects and actions are modeled and understood in terms of the physical characteristics of materials; which is reducible to their interactions at cellular and molecular scales. — John
The need of the human mind to reduce elements of causal processes to discrete units in order to grasp them is exemplified by the use of calculus to model change. — John
I see the Born rule as an empirical result that is useful for making predictions about the state that will be observed. But I don't have an explanation for the rule. Do you? — Andrew M
The amplitude is a complex number associated with a quantum system. It's about the ontology. Whereas the probability (a real number between 0 and 1) is the predicted likelihood that that quantum system will be observed if a measurement were made. It's about the epistemology. — Andrew M
Well...considering the theorem established the fact that a yes/no choice we make isnt a function of the past , its truly indeterminate, — Nicky665
Rather it says that subatomic particles have as much free will as us. — Michael
But the notion of free will that this theorem uses is simply "present behaviour is not a function of the past". This isn't anything like libertarian free will. It's more like free will in the sense of random behaviour. — Michael
The free will we assume is just that the experimenter can freely choose to make any one of a small number of observations.
So don't mistake it as saying that particles make choices. — Michael
Try Google, it's very helpful, but let me try, maybe I can describe it. The Hamiltonian operator describes a system in terms of the energy of all the particles within the system. There is a time-energy uncertainty, so any derived time evolution is inherently probabilistic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematically states in a quantum superposition are probabilistic. — mcdoodle
The Hamiltonian operator describes the system in terms of probabilities due to the reality which the uncertainty principle is supposed to represent. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you think that the Schrodinger equation converts these probabilities into realities? — Metaphysician Undercover
The criticism is, to start with, that the axiomisation is invalid in certain reasonable circumstances — mcdoodle
I told you this already, the energy of the system is expressed as probable locations of particles. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is an amount of energy introduced into the system, as you say, a photon particle or number of particles are "fired". The energy of that system is expressed as particles. This expression is used in the Hamiltonian, and therefore the Schrodinger. — Metaphysician Undercover
Have you ever heard of wave/particle duality? Two different words to express the same thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is only the Born rule, which is not part of the Schrodinger equation, that enables us to extract the probabilities for observing those states when a measurement is made. — Andrew M
No it is easy enough to visualize three groups of four or four groups of three, and to see that it equals twelve. Of course it's not possible with larger numbers of objects. But really the idea of simple multiplication is just an extension of the idea of simple addition. For the simplest case where you have two objects it can be intuitively understood that one plus one equals two or that two times one equals two. — John
It represents all the energy within the system. Probability is inherent within the Hamiltonian — Metaphysician Undercover
In order to apply the Schrodinger, there must be some initial measurements of energy which is attributed to the system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Probability is inherent within the way that this energy is represented in the equation, it is the energy of the particles. — Metaphysician Undercover
- Philosophers are still unable to determine whether they're dreaming or not.
- Philosophers are still unable to provide a non-circular justification for the reliability of their cognitive faculties (senses, memory, reason, intuition, etc.)
- Philosophers still can't offer any reason to believe in free will.
- Philosophers still can't offer any reason to believe in the existence of other minds.
- Philosophers still can't offer any reason to believe in the existence of a mind-independent external world. — lambda
I have no idea what this means, or how it relates to anything that I have said here. — aletheist