So for you, if QM's indeterminism is a falsification of your preference for metaphysical determinism, then you reject QM as an adequate account of nature. The world has to adjust itself so that it conforms to your notion of how to be truth-apt. — apokrisis
So a statement like "if I had opened the box at time t I would have found the cat to be dead" could be true even though the laws of nature do not determine that this would have been the outcome? — Michael
So we have to abandon the principle of bivalence? Some statements do not have exactly one truth value? — Michael
So given the counterfactual statements "if I had opened the box at time t I would have found the cat to be dead" and "if I had opened the box at time t I would have found the cat to be alive", which agrees with the laws of physics? — Michael
So given a counterfactual claim such as "had I opened the box at this particular time I would have found the cat to be dead", something other than a reference to the laws of nature must be used to explain its truth value (assuming it has one). — Michael
My point was that counterfactuality amounts to having some theory in play. You can be sure of X because you are sure of what would count as not-x. So counterfactuality becomes the basis on which we can verify or falsify. — apokrisis
Indeed. If there ends up there being two "copies" of you, you never find yourself in a situation where you are both of them. — Pierre-Normand
I can't be in two different branches of a decohered wavefunction. I'm only ever in one. — Michael
I think the reduction of explanation to description is indicative that Hume's reasoning was flawed. Either he was wrong that we don't perceive causation, or he was wrong in excluding inference as a source of knowledge. — Marchesk
But the statement we're considering is "the coin will land hands", not "the coin has a 0.5 chance of landing heads". If the former is true, what makes it true? Certainly not the laws of nature, as the laws of nature aren't deterministic (assuming for the sake of argument that the "coin flip" is some quantum event). — Michael
The issue here is sexual violence, against minors in particular, which considering your facetious reply and your consistently empty posts, you don't actually seem to take very seriously. And yes sexual abuse against women and girls is sanctioned in places in the Bible, but seeing as I'm satirizing your thesis not forwarding my own, I'm not obliged to dig that up. — Baden
Or maybe you should become a Christian. The Philippines also happens to be one of the world's major sex tourism centres. — Baden
Quick, let's all convert to Islam! — Baden
For the moment, yes. The question I asked is not a complicated one. I'll take the fact that you won't address it as an admission of a serious weakness in your perspective. Unless you'd like to take a stab at it:
If you blame Islam for a crime, are you saying that the human perpetrators are not responsible for their actions? — Mongrel
Your response is dubious, and we can discuss that if you want. But I wonder if you might address the question I asked. If you blame Islam for a case of gang-rape, does that not let the gang rapers off the hook? It appears the proposition is that we should put Islam on trial for the crime. — Mongrel
This is the problem, tom: if you blame the religion for the atrocities, it would appear that you're taking the individual human actors off the hook. They aren't to blame. The real villain is the religion which failed to condemn their actions.
Did you not just locate the blame in nowhere land? — Mongrel
I'm trying to understand if you actually have a position to defend, — VagabondSpectre
I'm just trying to understand the source of your motivation for mostly restating contentious platitudes without any attempt at providing critical analysis or thought to accompany them. Do you specifically oppose Islam and not other religions whose texts and histories share similar degrees of abhorrence? If not, why not? — VagabondSpectre
What do you support though? Anti-religious sentiment in general? Are you a full blown hard-atheist anti-theist? You've condemned Islam, so what now? — VagabondSpectre
Indeed, thanks for pointing that out. I had thrown an -ism onto the end of anti-Islam, and totally missed the resulting ambiguity. — VagabondSpectre
Reductionism may or may not be a good guide for a program of weather
forecasting, but it provides the necessary insight that there are no
autonomous laws of weather that are logically independent of the
principles of physics. Whether or not it helps the meteorologist to
keep it in mind, cold fronts are the way they are because of the
properties of air and water vapor and so on, which in turn arethe
way they are because of the principles of chemistry and physics.
We don’t know the final laws of nature, but we know that they are
not expressed in terms of cold fronts or thunderstorms. — Frederick KOH
I did not suggest that they were approximations, though some undoubtedly are. For a law not to apply universally need not entail that there must exist a more precise, as of yet unknown, "universal" law that it approximates. — Pierre-Normand
My point was different. There are strong arguments to be made (on Kantian/Aristotelian grounds) that any law that purportedly governs empirical phenomena either must have exceptions (i.e. can be interfered with by something (or may fails to apply at some energy scale, etc.) or isn't really an empirically significant law but rather merely is an idealized abstract principle (a mathematical constraint, for instance). — Pierre-Normand
Truly exceptionless "laws" always are unreal abstractions, on that view. This possibility may be obscured by the tendency to conceive of "universal laws of nature" against the background assumption of a metaphysics of temporally instantaneous (and ontologically self-contained) "events" and Humean causation. — Pierre-Normand
Bohr's complementarity principle, in its wider philosophical generalization beyond the narrow scope of quantum mechanics, constitutes an explanation of this, I think. The principles of quantum mechanics determine not only the unitary evolution of pure quantum "states" (this is the abstract "universal" part of the theory) but must also specify the projections of those states onto definite "observables". — Pierre-Normand
That's true, for sure. But in addition to this, many of the laws of chemistry are valid only for some specific classes of bounded chemical systems (and withing specific boundary conditions, such as the total energy of the system). In that regard, such laws are akin to the laws of animal physiology and behavior that govern specific animals. — Pierre-Normand
This binary question is much too crude. There are specific laws of chemistry that are autonomous with respect to the laws that govern simple molecular interactions. — Pierre-Normand
If for a theory to be fundamental means that it is universal and applies everywhere, at any time, and on every energy/spatial scale, then very few theories are fundamental (not even general relativity). — Pierre-Normand
If it means that they provide autonomous explanations that abstract away from features of the contingent material constitution of the entities that they regulate, then stating that they are fundamental doesn't entail anything more than stating that they are autonomous. — Pierre-Normand
Quantum mechanics is more of a framework than it is a theory. It consists in a set of formal features shared by more determinate empirical theories such as quantum electrodynamics. Such theories are likewise autonomous. — Pierre-Normand
Yes, I thing that is true also. Causal networks in complex dynamical systems can be very messy and fail to display clear cases of upward and downward causation operating between neatly distinguished levels. — Pierre-Normand
Do the following have these non-reductive features
1) Protein production
2) Plant conversion of sunlight into starches
3) Macroscopic properties of gasses. — Frederick KOH
It is pointless because it is impossible. It is also pointless because, even if, per impossibile, such a reductive explanation were to be achieved, it would be redundant with the formal explanation at the emergent level. — Pierre-Normand
That some of the features of the theory that are explanatory fruitful do not admit of further reduction isn't a claim of ignorance. It is a positive claim that can be demonstrated conclusively and without appeal to any sort of magic. — Pierre-Normand
Suppose we have an empirically adequate theory at a certain level. Does an "emergentist" have any theory to determine whether that theory is autonomous or admits further reduction? — Frederick KOH
But if you feel it must be said, then here it is from the Qur'an: — VagabondSpectre
That's beautiful. — Mongrel
For that cause We decreed for the Children of Israel that whosoever killeth a human being for other than manslaughter or corruption in the earth, it shall be as if he had killed all mankind, and whoso saveth the life of one, it shall be as if he had saved the life of all mankind. Our messengers came unto them of old with clear proofs (of Allah's Sovereignty), but afterwards lo! many of them became prodigals in the earth.
The only reward of those who make war upon Allah and His messenger and strive after corruption in the land will be that they will be killed or crucified, or have their hands and feet on alternate sides cut off, or will be expelled out of the land. Such will be their degradation in the world, and in the Hereafter theirs will be an awful doom;
Surely you know that DNA replication is something that has been explained at the level of individual molecules. — Frederick KOH
"There is no crime for those who have Christ." In 1095 at the Council of Clermont, Pope Urban II sanctioned the idea of bellum sacrum ("holy war"). — Ciceronianus the White
Around the 13th century, the Mongols destroyed the material and governmental stability of the empire while the mullahs and clerical hardliners were largely successful in casting philosophers, scientists, and Sufis as heretics. — Thorongil
So what is being encoded is the sequence of molecules cytosine (C), guanine (G), adenine (A), and thymine. We are in agreement here. They are molecules. Would it be reductionist to say that why they and related molecules behave the way they do is because of chemistry and physics? — Frederick KOH
Could you provide a synthesis for out benefit? — Frederick KOH
Genes are portions of DNA — Frederick KOH
The former is is widely known in the literature. Can you give me references for the latter? — Frederick KOH
Genes or DNA, would it be reductionist to say that they behave the way they do because of chemistry and physics? — Frederick KOH