Dark matter is currently in that stage: we have observed that it is, even though we don't yet have a complete theoretical explanation of what it is. — Pfhorrest
Supernatural things have no physical effects to be observed at all. Paranormal things supposedly do, but the occurrence of the claimed phenomena has not yet been confirmed. — Pfhorrest
Science has no idea what 'it' is, or even if 'it' exists, and it's never observed any such thing. That would be a huge headline! — Wayfarer
Metaphysics, anyway, is not 'beyond explanation'. Strictly speaking it concerns 'first philosophy', — Wayfarer
You don't know this, it's a supposition. — Wayfarer
There's a lot of controversy in the field of PSI, but there's also a lot of goalpost shifting and arguments about statistical significance and the like. — Wayfarer
Dark matter is used to explain why the motion of galaxies varies from what is predicted. But it's possible there's something wrong with the prediction — Wayfarer
Now we know there's definitely some kind of stuff there, we just don't know much about it yet. — Pfhorrest
It's definitional. If something is supposed to have empirical, physical effects, then it's a supposed natural phenomenon, not supernatural. — Pfhorrest
What the hell are "direkt observations" anyways? It's not like the photons hitting your retina are a cat, a rock etc. Neither are the vibrations carried to your eardrums a guitar. — Echarmion
What the hell are "direkt observations" anyways? It's not like the photons hitting your retina are a cat, a rock etc. Neither are the vibrations carried to your eardrums a guitar. — Echarmion
The placebo effect doesn't have a naturalistic explanation, or at least a physical explanation. — Wayfarer
Just remember the meaning of 'phenomenon' - it's 'what appears'. And empiricism is always going to seek for explanations on the level of 'what appears', or extrapolations from 'what appears' on the basis of mathematical extrapolation. Empiricism excludes some kinds of explanatory models purely as a matter of principle, but then forgets that it's done so. — Wayfarer
You're confusing two kinds of explanation here. Of course one can question the nature of observation itself - that is the task of philosophical analysis. — Wayfarer
But when it comes to dark matter, it's proposing a natural explanation which consists of some kind of 'matter' the likes of which is completely unknown, to explain observational anomalies in cosmology. — Wayfarer
The key point, and where you entered the argument, is that nothing corresponding to dark matter has been directly observed, despite large and elaborate experimental apparatus having been set up for that purpose. — Wayfarer
We might agree or disagree on what it means, but the absence of direct observation is not a matter of opinion. — Wayfarer
This conversation seems to have veered way off the original topic, any chance you can do another thread split for us? — Pfhorrest
Everything is to some degree indirect, it's just a question of how much. — Pfhorrest
The existence of permanent objects in three-dimensional space is indirectly inferred from those patterns of light. — Pfhorrest
We know that the brain controls many aspects of the body, and that mental states correlate to brain states — Pfhorrest
What would a supernatural explanation even look like? — Pfhorrest
What I am saying is that, according to physics, everything we observe is indirect, an effect. — Echarmion
It's even less than an opinion if you can't explain what "direct observation" even is. — Echarmion
I don't know a lot of physics, I studied it formally up to high school level, and I've read quite a few books on physics, but that was never stated as part of physics. It might have been stated because of 'philosophical reflections on the nature of physics' but it's not something taught in physics per se. — Wayfarer
Direct observation = observing directly. — Wayfarer
Observing that movement of masses of air causes trees to bend, that germs cause disease, that radio waves can be detected with the appropriate instruments. Abductive inference = reasoning from effect to cause i.e. 'because this happened, then the cause must be X'. But in this case, 'X' stands for something that not only hasn't been observed, but may possibly never be observable in principle. — Wayfarer
How is "germs cause disease" not an abductive inference? You even reference instruments. "The instrument beeps, therefore it has detected a radiowave" is very clearly reasoning from effect to cause. — Echarmion
In line with language in general, the semantics of Physics is both under-determined and redundant; one Physicist's "natural" object is another Physicist's "metaphysical garbage", because they might each understand physics using different semantic foundations that are rooted in different ostensive definitions. — sime
The purported EFFECTS can be observed. — Wayfarer
How is "germs cause disease" not an abductive inference? — Echarmion
In the paradigm cases that have been brought up - radio waves, wind, and germs - there is a clear correlation in theory and observation between cause and effect. — Wayfarer
The cause of the associated phenomena is understood clearly and can be explained directly. — Wayfarer
But the statement that 'some unknown form of matter causes the discrepancy that is observed in the motion of galaxies' clearly is a metaphysical statement, because it posits the existence of some form of matter that can't even be detected by current physics, hence is beyond or above, 'meta', current physics. — Wayfarer
‘Abductive reasoning (also called abduction,[1] abductive inference,[1] or retroduction[2]) is a form of logical inference which starts with an observation or set of observations and then seeks to find the simplest and most likely explanation for the observations. This process, unlike deductive reasoning, yields a plausible conclusion but does not positively verify it.’
I believe the germ theory of disease has been verified. You don’t? — Wayfarer
If ‘dark matter’ is real, it means that either our notion of what constitutes ‘matter’ is radically insufficient’, or alternatively, that our understanding of current physics is. How is this *not* a metaphysical issue? — Wayfarer
All working physicists informally appeal to "directness" whenever they make an inference, even though Physics possess no theory of directness. For otherwise a physicist could not claim to learn anything from an experiment, nor for that matter could he find the sentences of physics intelligible. — sime
The purported EFFECTS can be observed. But dark matter itself cannot be and hasn’t been observed. This is fact. — Wayfarer
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