On the other hand, there is a huge and highly charged debate going on in current physics and cosmology, as to whether string theory and the speculative multiverse that flows from it, is really a matter for science or not. On the Nay side are those who say that these ideas can never be falsified even in principle, as they concern matters which are by definition outside the universe. On the Yay side are those who say that, because of the compelling nature of the mathematics and the solutions that these models offer to many intractable problems, then such speculations should be regarded as within the ambit of science. — Wayfarer
Then, of course, there are the assumptions that other people do in fact exist, that there is actually a real, external world that continues to exist without our participation, that there are "laws" that are explicable mathematically, etc. — darthbarracuda
What Wayfarer says, above, is something I've thought about a lot. It does seem to me that if something can't be falsifiable, even in theory, it's not science. It's either metaphysics or meaningless. On the other hand, if the mathematics and the solutions that these models offer solutions to many intractable problems, why isn't that an example of falsifiability? — T Clark
Popper devised the criterion of falsifiability to distinguish empirical hypotheses from speculative ideas that could not in principle be tested against some observation. Mathematics is a different matter as it concerns purely mathematical or logical facts. — Wayfarer
I think what you're doing there is conflating metaphysical naturalism with metaphysics proper. — Wayfarer
I guess what I was trying to say is, if I can't directly observe a phenomenon, but it's existence explains things I can observe, which is what I thought you were describing, then it may be reasonable for me to infer it's existence. — T Clark
Collingwood is talking about... — T Clark
It sounds a simple principle - but what about 'bubble universes' or 'multiple worlds'? Is it 'reasonable' to posit the reality of those? That is the salient point here. — Wayfarer
If Collingwood is writing from within the Western philosophical tradition, then he's talking in terms of Aristotelian metaphysics, which has a definite domain of discourse. Sure it's 'general' in the sense of being a 'philosophy of first principles', but at the same time, it articulates the issues using a particular kind of vocabulary and set of concepts. — Wayfarer
3. Pluralism: Ontologies are dependent on theories that posit them, and they are all real just to the extent to which their respective theories are taken seriously. — SophistiCat
That seems question begging about how you would define "real" here. How does it not wind up sounding idealist or subjective - that is, anti-realist? — apokrisis
And an even greater difficulty. The least action principle is an example of how science does appear to discover a unity, rather than a pluralism, at the deepest ontic level. — apokrisis
what they are doing commits them to nothing other than constructing models — ProcastinationTomorrow
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