— The Emergence and Development of Causal Representations by Xiang Chen in Philosophy and Cognitive Science II — Πετροκότσυφας
Whatever work you want this point to do, if you accept it you just argue against your own view. — Πετροκότσυφας
Right, but the point was that Kant saw a big problem with Hume's view of causation, which was that it led to widespread skepticism, and made science impossible. — Marchesk
Or to show how correlation differs from causation. — Marchesk
It's not that there are brute particulars that happen to always behave a certain way, it's that all the particulars are related in a way that necessitates their common behavior. And that's why physics has been so successful in unifying phenomena, such as electricity and magnetism. — Marchesk
In short, there are fundamental underlying relationships to the cosmos that explain the observed regularities. — Marchesk
History does not constrain possibility other than in the epistemological sense... — Magnus Anderson
That's exactly how I feel about what you're saying. — Magnus Anderson
Hume's view does not lead to skepticism and it does not make science impossible. — Magnus Anderson
It's precisely that there are only "brute particulars that happen to always behave a certain way". Laws are merely human inventions that are based on a selection of these brute particulars. Any other way of thinking is already a form of dogmatism and absolutism. — Magnus Anderson
Of course the past constrains the future in terms of what is possible. If you break your leg, you won't be running any races. History is the accumulation of a whole lot of events that limit the scope of the future in a definite way. — apokrisis
Then scientists are dogmatists and absolutists, because they certainly go beyond brute particulars just happening to behave a certain way to overarching theories explaining how living things came to exist, or starsy formed, or how stellar fusion results in heavier elements, which gravity acts upon to form rocky planets and so on. — Marchesk
The problem you have is that you cannot accept that predictions and theories are fallible. You cannot live with this fact. You think that if something is fallible it is necessarily useless. — Magnus Anderson
That's hilarious. How else do you think you can form a theory? By simply making shit up? That's what dogmatists do. They invent a theory and then they focus on the facts that support it and ignore those that contradict it. — Magnus Anderson
Now, to reason means to find some data set U that is a superset of this data set K. Our method of reasoning works by choosing the most similar data set. In other words, it goes through every data set within some category of data sets that are supersets of data set K in order to choose the one that is the most similar to K. That's all there is to reasoning. — Magnus Anderson
The future is under no obligation to mimic the past. — Magnus Anderson
The important thing is that the future is not compelled, forced, obliged, caused or otherwise constrained by what happened in the past to be a certain way. — Magnus Anderson
Rather, it is how our method of reasoning -- and reasoning is a process by which we guess the unknown -- works. It is based on the premise that the future will be maximally similar to the past. — Magnus Anderson
The reason our method of reasoning proves to be successful is because the environment we live in is sufficiently stable. — Magnus Anderson
Better yet, can you transform Evolutionary Biology into data sets? I'd love to see how natural selection falls out of that. — Marchesk
So now you show you don't get that to be constrained just means to be constrained, not to be determined?
Saying the past shapes the possibilities of the future is quite different from saying the past determines the future. — apokrisis
My point was that constraints-based causal thinking works better than talk about absolute laws or mechanical determinism. So my stress is on the evidence for a fundamental indeterminism in nature - the quantum facts. And then how that gets resolved by a constraints-based or contextual understanding of why the world seems classically determined on the whole. Classical regularity and predictability emerges due to large numbers and an emergent regularity that is probabilistic. — apokrisis
Well duh. Why is it sufficiently stable? Has change been regulated by a past that is an absolutely stable context? — apokrisis
My point being that it is strictly speaking incorrect to say that the past constrains the future. It does not. That might be how we speak. But that's not correct. — Magnus Anderson
But then you say something like this and I cannot help but think that you're doing something wrong. You need to understand what a "why" question means before you ask one. — Magnus Anderson
How is it sufficiently stable? Has change been regulated by a past that is an absolutely stable context? — apokrisis
You are just being ridiculous. Nothing can be conceived unless perceived.
Put a new born baby in a sensory deprivation chamber and see what you get.
You have not really used joined up thinking. — charleton
That sort of scientific theory, like natural selection in biology, goes very much farther beyond noticing similar behavior among particulars over time. — Marchesk
Not really. All science is based on evidence. We are just getting better at it. Newton gives way to Einstein, who in turn may well be shown to be inadequate. Einstein's work is observable. If not then its not valid. — charleton
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