Any experiment that fulfils those criteria would suffice — Kenosha Kid
If you don't know exactly what the original conditions are, how can you expect your predictions to be exact?It only has to be known to the requisite precision of the experiment. — Kenosha Kid
Yes. Let's do a little bit of analytical work here on your criteria for falsification. Especially since I've never come across those criteria before, and yet have read 90% of Popper's opus, and he's the guy who came up with the criterion of falsifiability in the first place... which means that your criteria appear very much to be your criteria. So let's see some definitions.Do you want to refer back to my criteria for falsification? — Kenosha Kid
high precision. — Kenosha Kid
So, 1) you propose throwing a ball as an attempt to falsify determinism, 2) I show you some balls being thrown and landing on the ground haphazardly, and 3) you say: "no no no this doesn't count".Balls have been thrown up and down before, and we do seem to have difficulties predicting their trajectory. You've heard of the Galton box?
— Olivier5
Yes, and that is a great example of unknowability in a chaotic system yielding unpredictable behaviour at a classical scale, but it is not shown to be an example of non-deterministic behaviour. — Kenosha Kid
Fully known? You have any example of something that can be fully known?only takes one observation where the initial state is fully known — Kenosha Kid
Or it could just be throwing a ball in the air and seeing it change trajectory mid-flight — Kenosha Kid
Who wants another European war? If the EU has any advantage, it's in offering a peaceful way to do some level of integration. It's the value proposition of the EU. And yes, the price to pay is slowness and hence patience. It's a long-term project.In my view the EU would have to understand it cannot be the US of Europe, it indeed is a confederacy of independent states, and it is wrong and actually harmful to try to reach something more.
It comes back to the fact that if you are willing really to unify Europe under one political rule, you have to use force, just like Napoleon, Charlemagne, and just like the Romans. And the military has to be dominant and always on the alert, otherwise it will break up. This is something that the EU is not willing to understand. — ssu
a model relies on determinism to function. — Echarmion
Also, it took Him millions of years to figure it out... He can't be that bright.if god exists and he's the one behind all creation in general, evolution in particular, and if his preferred method is trial and error, it must be that god is not a genius who understands the ins and outs of creation and life but is actually a simpleton as herein defined. — TheMadFool
But you said it yourself: unpredictable is different from undetermined. Something could be fully determined but unpredictable. For example the three bodies problem in classic physics is I think deterministic in the sense that it can be proven (I think) that there is only one solution to the equation. However we cannot compute the solution, we don't know how to do it, and therefore the behavior of three bodies interacting through Newtonian gravity cannot be successfully predicted with the tools at our disposal. It doesn't mean it's not deterministic.Do you understand what falsifiability is? That nature is deterministic can be falsified by the discovery of a phenomenon which is knowable, tractable, but at any scale unpredictable. — Kenosha Kid
If it undergoes some collapse mechanism (Copenhagen) or other probabilistic means if producing singular measurement outcomes (e.g. transactional QM), it is non-deterministic, specifically it is probabilistic. — Kenosha Kid
There is no such thing. QM are generally interpreted as indeterministic.the widespread acceptance of deterministic interpretations of QM. — Kenosha Kid
How would you go about falsifying determinism, then? Please propose an experiment that could prove it false.determinism is falsifiable — Kenosha Kid
Aka polysemia.The meaning of a sentence consists of more than one thing. — creativesoul
Indeed, but poetic. Perhaps determinism is just the small gaps between the wheels of randomness. Except that I'm pretty sure this randomness, large or small, calls for a more rigorous explication. I'll read if you care to write - but I'm not asking. — tim wood
Superior animals look purposefully for data, in an active manner, they don't collect them passively. They are looking. This indicates an awareness of the world out there and of their presence in it.It may be that some other species has consciousness, perhaps porpoises. If so, it is not because they can process data, but because they are aware of some of the data they process. — Dfpolis
Yeah but somebody keyed it in, or connected to the computer a camera or another sensor, itself designed by some folk at pointed somewhere by another. Data means "given" and it's given by something or somebody. There's always a source to the data and it is always collected for a reason or another.Data in a computer is simply a physical state, typically accumulations of electrons or sets of magnetic orientations. — Dfpolis
Rocks are not been chased by predators. It's easier for them.Overlaying rocks protect underlying rocks without a hint of intent or awareness. — Dfpolis
We weren't talking about QM. We were talking about theories where it doesn't just resolve into determinism at the scale of biological processes. — Isaac
We are talking here about determinism in the context of behavioural causality or neurological decision-making processes. What 'current' experts use your approach? — Isaac
(emphasis added)Life results from the non-random survival of randomly varying replicators. — Richard Dawkins (The Blind Watchmaker)
Data means something. It's provided by the senses, and it therefore refers to the world out there, or rather to our perception of it.There is no warrant for imbuing data processing systems, whether organic or artificial with such human attributes. To do so is anthropomorphizing them. — Dfpolis
Logically, it does... To protect something, one needs to be aware of that something.Self preservation requires a sense of self.
— Olivier5
No, it does not. — Dfpolis
Forced in a top down manner on the people, I mean, recent, not cast in stone. In fact the Scott's voted against Brexit and whether they will stay in the UK remains to be seen.people have come up with ideas that unite them, don't think that it makes them fake — ssu
I guess only France and the Benelux countries see themselves as being in the heart of Europe. — ssu
You're still using random as a synonym for unpredictable. And it is still irrelevant to my point. — Kenosha Kid
optimisation problems — Kenosha Kid
we can take that as a given. — Kenosha Kid
You seem to have taken some sketchy and speculative theories at the fringe of very specific fields and decided that their existence should shift the presumption of cause and effect on which our entire interaction with the world is built. I just wonder if it's worth it. — Isaac
But if there is no freedom then learning would also be an illusion. — Pantagruel
