A theory that explains everything explains nothing. — Karl Popper (Philosopher Of Science)
Of course. Completely explaining a donut includes explaining the hole. :smirk: — 180 Proof
It's your wordplay, Señor Tonto, and not mine that's raised an issue where there isn't one. — 180 Proof
The "ToE" is like the "BB" – an ironic misnomer. Quantum Gravity is what "ToE" is about: the unification, or subsumption under a third, more fundamental theory, of GR and QFT. Such a theory, I suspect (gleaning from wikipedia), is suppose to explain black holes, white holes, cosmic inflation, how to unify all four fundamental forces, emergent quantized spacetime, whether or not time or space is more fundamental than the other, and whole host of other gaps haunting fundamental physics. That, Fool, is not "explaining everything"; QG will only explain the dynamic relation of this false vacuum (universe) to less false / truer vacuums (???) — 180 Proof
What Popper means is that a theory that explains everything is so general as to be useless — Wayfarer
Redacted. Got my and's and or's confused.
Sleep time. — Banno
"Explains everything" is the maximal, complete, 1-to-1 map of the territory, which is merely the terrority itself, and therefore useless as a map. The only "ToE" is the everything itself, thus useless as a theory. That's how Popper's statement speaks to me.Good to know but why is it "useless"? — TheMadFool
A theory that explains everything explains nothing.
— Karl Popper (Philosopher Of Science) — TheMadFool
Here's how I conceptualize this apparent paradox. — Pantagruel
results in a different description of exactly the same thing — Pantagruel
The most interesting thing about mechanical theories is the point at which they fail. Physics is the science of...approximation. — Pantagruel
You do see people saying "everything is information" or "everything is energy". That's the sort of theory that explains nothing. — Daemon
"Explains everything" is the maximal, complete, 1-to-1 map of the territory, which is merely the terrority itself, and useless, therefore, as a map. The only "ToE" is everything itself, thus useless as a theory. That's how Popper's statement speaks to me. — 180 Proof
As the good Kantian that he was , Im sure all we’d need to do to please Popper is adjust the TOE so that it acknowledges we can never reach the thing in itself, and instead aim to approximate absolute truth as asymptotic limit via progressive falsification. — Joshs
Re: To All ... Interesting but irrelevant, even incoherent, because you're overthinking a quote that does not refer to what's actually being pursued in fundamental physics. Popper's caveat, after all, is only philosophical, and has nothing to do with whether or not a "ToE" is falsifiable. Reread me and others. — 180 Proof
"Explains everything" is the maximal, complete, 1-to-1 map of the territory, which is merely the terrority itself, and useless, therefore, as a map. The only "ToE" is the everything itself, thus useless as a theory. That's how Popper's statement speaks to me. — 180 Proof
More or less. The map-territory metaphor (A. Korzybski) refers to abstracting information from the world in order to make predictions about the world. To say "map = territory" (e.g. a "ToE") is to say "use the world itself to make predictions about the world" which, in other words, means watch the world unfold as it will in order to find out what happens – no predictions at all. A "Theory of Everything" is conceptually incoherent when taken literally (K. Popper), which is why I call it a ironic misnomer like the "Big Bang" or the "God Particle". Yeah, it's been widely adopted even by scientists, which is unfortunate and, IMO, philosophically naive. — 180 Proof
Worse than that: anything at all – true, false, nonsensical – "follows" from a contradiction (re: principle of explosion).Now I get why mathematicians are scared silly by contradictions; it implies their axioms are inconsistent i.e. one/more of them are false. — TheMadFool
Only propositions convey truth-values and therefore can "have contradictions". Maps, not territory, "have contradictions"; believing otherwise is to mistake the map for the territory (misplaced concreteness). Proof: the absence of even a single contradictory fact, event or thing in the world. :fire:The question is, what if the territory - the world - does have contradictions?
"Anyone who denies the law of non-contradiction should be beaten and burned until he admits that to be beaten is not the same as not to be beaten, and to be burned is not the same as not to be burned." ~Ibn SinaDo we discard classical logic which collapses under the weight of a single contradiction?
You do see people saying "everything is information" or "everything is energy". That's the sort of theory that explains nothing. — Daemon
Kindly expand and elaborate. — TheMadFool
I think defining consciousness using only the flow of information is lacking. For starters I'd include that conscious entity needs to recognize patterns in this information. — original2
A conscious entity would need to interpret the information flow. But what does interpret mean? In the broadest sense even a rock interprets the information flow in its form and position.
According to Fritjof Capra: "cognition is a reaction to a disturbance in a state." And it would seem everything is a system in a state. — Pop
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