Does anyone know the source of the four orders of natural phenomenon structure? — Necuno
Out of the three posted in this thread (Case's, Comte's and Galuchat's), I prefer Case's as well for pretty much the same reasons you provided.I like Mr. Case's classifications because they are simple and intuitive and the audience can thus grasp them immediately. Artificial wasn't really a big issue in 1924, no one had yet thought of cloning, the technological singularity, even the atom bomb was just a theory, also, by definition, artificial can't be a 'natural phenomenon' and thus would not have a place in the four orders unless as a special extension of the fourth order (i.e. man made as a natural phenomenon of humanity). — Necuno
There are many ways to slice the pie, it just depends on what you want at the end, I have had many times to decide how to slice the pie in my project. — Necuno
Are there natural kinds, or are classifications merely cultural and/or linguistic conventions? — Galuchat
1) By 1924, intellectuals and scientists understood that astronomy, chemistry and physics were all part of the same continuum. — Necuno
Part of the issue is that interpretations have not been accepted as equally factual, instead they have been dismissed as non-objective, illusion, human fallacy. — Necuno
The fallacy has been to try to treat them as facts within the first order, whereas they are actually facts within the fourth order. — Necuno
The same fallacy occurs in reverse when you try to deny that first order facts are facts within the fourth order - i.e. treating physical facts as cultural/linguistic constructs - again, the Sokal Hoax. — Necuno
There is not exactly a symmetry in this arrangement, facts of lower orders cannot be denied by higher orders, but facts of higher orders are not facts in lower orders. — Necuno
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