I repeat, how might Solipsism be falsified in principle? — tom
Higher dimension, mysteries? Probably — tom
OK, so let's examine two claims, which are actually competing theories, which utilise identical equations:
1. Underlying reality does not exist. The equations are purely epistemic.
2. Underlying reality does exist. The equations correspond to elements of reality.
Here we have a genuine situation where your criterion of accuracy is both philosophically and scientifically useless.
And of course we have the age-old ideas:
1. Only my mind exists.
2. There exists a Reality independent of my mind.
Science can't help you with that one. — tom
Actually, infants have already solved this problem when they acquire Object Permanence. — Harry Hindu
If 1. is true, then you are saying that you only exist as words on a screen, as that is how you appear to me. Is that what you are saying? If 1. is true, I assure you that your mind doesn't exist and only mine does as I never experience another mind, only words on a screen. You, however would argue the opposite, so it seems that 1. defeats itself. Realism doesn't seem to have that problem. — Harry Hindu
Ah, but I existed before I joined this group, so your mind did not create me. — Mitchell
Ah, but I existed before I joined this group, so your mind did not create me. — Mitchell
you do not understand what he is saying, and never even take a book of transcendental epistemology to read
The materialism in the scientific method is just an axiom or something like that assumed for the purpose of investigating the physical world. It is not, as I understand it, the same as the materialism/physicalism of philosophical/intellectual movements that deny the existence of free will, say that consciousness is nothing more than neurological activity in the physical brain, etc. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I think that Realism underlies the scientific method. The idea that whatever is amenable to empirical testing is actually there and exists. Also that the solutions that science proposes to the problems it encounters are couched in terms of this reality.
There is, of course, a risk of descending into circularity, but I think it safe to say that now (not so during the time of Newton) science has in fact honed in on the idea of the physical, and has adopted that metaphysics. — tom
But, as I understand it, that is not the same as the materialism/physicalism of a naturalist worldview. It is not the same thing from which determinism and similar ideas are derived. It's just a practical starting point for investigating the world, not a statement about existence, experience, reality vs. perception, etc. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
You cannot escape, however, the fact that our best theories are fully deterministic. — tom
I don't think the notions of either determinism or randomness amounts to anything meaningful when describing 'nature in itself', because the 'necessary' truths of any physical theory are only the logical truths that defined as being true according to linguistic convention, with the convention being arbitrarily chosen and perpetually subject to revision. — sime
But, as I understand it, that is not the same as the materialism/physicalism of a naturalist worldview. It is not the same thing from which determinism and similar ideas are derived. It's just a practical starting point for investigating the world, not a statement about existence, experience, reality vs. perception, etc. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
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