• Rank Amateur
    1.5k
    I don't need a method to know I have a headache.Banno

    How do I know it is true you have a headache? how do you make your truth, my truth?
  • Hanover
    14.2k
    I don't need a method to know I have a headache.Banno

    Interesting response. As noted in my listing of the scientific method steps above, all of the data gathered in step 2 ("Gather information and resources (observe)") would be accepted without formal method. You'd just have the phenomenal state and accept it as true, making phenomenal states foundational.

    Possibly the scientific method provides a basis for why we have these phenomenal states, but does not provide a basis to determine whether phenomenal states accurately reflect reality. That issue is within the purview of metaphysics, and just like that of morality, is not addressable through the scientific method.
  • unenlightened
    9.8k
    As if defining a question can be done without knowledge, as if information and resources are not knowledge...

    If I was being hardline about it, I would say that all knowledge comes exclusively from observation, and science as method is not in the business of accumulating knowledge but of organising it.
  • Hanover
    14.2k
    Sure, if the scientific method begins with a question, you can step back and ask where that curiosity came from, which is obviously from some prior observation and I suppose some hard wired rationality, intuition, and maybe emotion. But the question isn't where the method came from, but it's what it is. Otherwise, you're left with saying that every primitive culture engages in the firsr step of the scientific method every time they observe something. I would think it's a major step forward to pose a question for testing, and that's when you've engaged in a real method.
  • unenlightened
    9.8k
    Otherwise, you're left with saying that every primitive culture engages in the first step of the scientific method every time they observe something.Hanover

    No. I'm left with saying that every primitive culture knows that shit smells and doesn't need the scientific method to do so. Even Sap's cat knows it.
  • leo
    882


    That's all fine and dandy in theory, but then in practice how do you know when an hypothesis is untrue? You may say, if an observation doesn't match the hypothesis then the hypothesis is untrue or falsified, but how do you know if the observation doesn't match the hypothesis? You may say it's obvious whether it does or not, but how do you know whether the instruments of measurement you use work the way you believe them to work? How do you know there isn't some effect you haven't taken into account that is acting on what you are observing or on your instruments of measurement? In fact, you're never really sure whether your hypothesis in itself is untrue or not, that depends on a whole bunch of other hypotheses you make unconsciously when making an observation.

    Scientists use the theory of general relativity. Some observations about galaxies do not match the theory. Is it because the theory is untrue, or because of something they haven't taken into account? They went with the second option, they believe there is something they don't see, which they call dark matter, that is acting on the galaxies they see. They tried to detect it in other ways, they devised some huge experiments, and they still haven't found it. Is it because this dark matter doesn't exist, or because it has properties that makes it undetectable to the experiments carried out up to now? In fact if we never detect it, we can never really be sure whether it's because it doesn't exist or because we haven't yet conducted an experiment that can detect it. The range of possibilities is infinite, we can never rule them all out. So we end up realizing that science doesn't deal with truth or even probabilities, if we're being honest we're never really sure about anything, we can't prove a theory is true and we can't prove it is false. The prize at the end of the scientific inquiry is not truth, it's just the ability to predict the future to some extent.

    What's truth even? It's absolute certainty, something you can hold onto no matter what, but what fits that description? Scientific laws have a limited applicability, they're only laws as long as we blind ourselves to a whole bunch of observations and experiences that don't fit them. Maybe there is no such thing as absolute certainty. Maybe you're not just a passive being subjected to absolute laws, but a being that has the power to bring about change in the way you desire. The quest for truth seems like the quest of the individual who feels powerless and desperately needs to hang onto something to feel a bit safe.
  • Deleted User
    0
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  • Rank Amateur
    1.5k
    agree in total, the history of the scientific method is a long line error assumed correct until superseded, This also may be its highest praise that when shown false it easily lets go of the false belief. As a fact finding process, for those things that can be identified as fact, or so near fact as to be accepted as such, it has proved to be useful.
  • Baracca
    1
    Absolute truth is most probably unattainable. The scientific method along with logic are the best tools we have to make sense of our environment and utilize the knowledge to make our lives more confortable. Falsehood, on the other hand, can usually be proven (isn’t that what the scientific method is all about?) Ironically, isn’t the search for truth really the search for disproof?
  • Banno
    28.6k
    How do I know it is true you have a headache? how do you make your truth, my truth?Rank Amateur

    That's epistemology. The supposition in the OP is that the only way to truth is by the scientific method.

    There's lots going on here.

    Truth and belief are different things. Something can be true, and believed; true, yet not believed; false yet believed; or false and not believed.

    Then we have knowledge. Usually that's taken as true belief with a bit extra, a justification or some such.

    It seems to me that nine-tenths of the epistemic errors on this forum come from failing to differentiate these well.

    Your point about the difference between my knowing I have a headache, and your knowing I have a headache, is most important. Being true is something that statements do, and since belief and knowledge are about truth, they are also about statements. Statements are things we do with words, and hence essentially communal.

    While it is an excellent rhetorical device, the line "how do you make your truth, my truth?" will not do. If something is true for you, but false for me, then either one of us has mis-stated what is going on, or one of us is wrong. There is no "my truth" and "your truth". Relativism cannot be made coherent.

    While we might believe that someone is in pain by an application of the rigid scientific method @hanover quoted, there wold be something quite pathological about doing so. Picture a man with a protruding tibia, writhing in agony. What would one think of someone who said "first we must define the question: Is this man in pain?; then we gather information and resources: google 'fractured tibia'; then we form a hypothesis..." and so on. There would be something quite inhumane in the lack of empathy of this reaction.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    But observation is not the whole of the myth of scientific method. Science is a social activity.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    Interesting response. As noted in my listing of the scientific method steps above, all of the data gathered in step 2 ("Gather information and resources (observe)") would be accepted without formal method. You'd just have the phenomenal state and accept it as true, making phenomenal states foundational.Hanover

    Cheers.

    It's more complex than that. One's own phenomenal state ought be checked against the phenomenal states of others; do they see what I see? And doing this is already interpreting that one sees.

    The world is always, already interpreted. Its' already theoretical.

    And doing metaphysics would be a poor way of checking our agreement here.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    I basically agree. The main change I would make is to clearly differentiate truth from belief. it's not what is true that changes over time, but what is believed. The Earth went around the sun before Galileo.

    That is, I reject the notion that what is true is relative to the conceptual schema within which one works. And I would do this by pointing out that some explanations are just wrong.
  • Rank Amateur
    1.5k
    While it is an excellent rhetorical device, the line "how do you make your truth, my truth?" will not do. If something is true for you, but false for me, then either one of us has mis-stated what is going on, or one of us is wrong. There is no "my truth" and "your truth". Relativism cannot be made coherent.Banno

    Point taken, thought it sounded cool.

    Here is the issue behind the question. I put forward an idea for a workable definition of truth as, a belief one has, that one tries to act in accordance with. It was quickly defeated by the example that what if I was delusional. And I agreed. The point is, is there any difference between your headache and my delusion? We both have a personal truth, that we are acting in accordance with.

    If we are to share our personal truths, are all we are left with is our ability to communicate them effectively and their acceptance by the audience?
  • Banno
    28.6k
    What's truth even? It's absolute certainty,leo

    Well, no. Truth doesn't care if you believe it or not. Being certain is a state of mind, not a state of affairs.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    Best not to try to define truth. Something has to remain fundamental. I suspect you know how to use "true" correctly - leave it at that. Any further theorising is just going to be confusing.

    Is truth personal? I don't see how it could be. Again, what is true or false are statements, and statements are not private.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    Absolute truth is most probably unattainable.Baracca

    So let's get long with plain ordinary truth. Like that this is a sentence of English, in a philosophy forum, responding to your post.

    Doubting that would be absurd.
  • Deleted User
    0
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  • Banno
    28.6k
    Then you have two trues.tim wood

    No.

    Asking for a criteria for right and wrong is asking for reasons to believe. Belief is not truth.

    Words. Keep 'em clean.
  • Rank Amateur
    1.5k
    I feel we are now in violent agreement on this. Just passing each other in communication. Pretty sure I agree completely with you.
  • Deleted User
    0
    This user has been deleted and all their posts removed.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    Are you asking about truth or belief? Seems to me you have asked about why we might believe this or that, but using the word "truth". That is, "obtaining truth" is deciding what to believe.

    And why would you think that there might be only a limited set of criteria for why one should believe this or that? I don't believe I have a headache because I have set out and met some criteria, but because I have a headache.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    And which scientific test would you subject the truth of this claim to?StreetlightX

    The only truths science can be involved in are empirical truths and that too in a way different from what the OP suggests.

    We don't find truths with science unless you call measurement a truth. What science does is generate hypotheses to explain observation.and these are considered only provisional.

    Also the scientific method is a derivative of the broader concept of rationality.

    If I were you @Scribble, I'd try to understand rationality or logic first and then take the step towards the scientific method.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    Consider the postulate: The only tool we have available to provide support or not for the truth of anything is application of the scientific method.Scribble

    So the answer to this is that it is using "truth" to ask about belief; and hence it is asking what other reasons we might have for accepting one belief over another.

    And the answer is that we believe things for all sorts of reasons, and sometimes for no reason at all. And that's OK.
  • Deleted User
    0
    This user has been deleted and all their posts removed.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    We ought also consider the converse: as well as asking when it is reasonable to believe, we ought ask when it is reasonable to doubt.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    Yet what ultimately underpins the law of non-contradiction? Only that it holds because it had better hold!tim wood

    Not at all. If you find yourself inclined to accept a contradiction, you're saying it wrong. Take another look.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    And truth generally does not acknowledge its own provisional nature.tim wood

    It's belief that is provisional, not truth.
  • Deleted User
    0
    This user has been deleted and all their posts removed.
  • Banno
    28.6k
    that’s not twosorts of truth. That’s truth and belief.
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