And all of this is apples and oranges anyway because while there may be a limit to what inductive reasoning tells us about the actual world, deductive reasoning tells us nothing about the world. It tells us only about whether truth has been preserved from our premises, yet there is no suggestion (or requirement) that our premises be a truth about the world (e.g. all glurgs are gurps and all gurps are glomps, therefore all glurgs are glomps). So, you can talk about the limitations of inductive reasoning, but the limitations of deductive reasoning are more severe, as it tell us nothing at all other than whether we've correctly solved our Sudoku puzzle. — Hanover
My own thinking is informed by modern science and its efforts to build pattern recognising machines, as well as the efforts to understand the same in human brains. — apokrisis
The question is how do we know when these patterns are inherent in nature as opposed to arbitrary artefacts of our mode of perceiving? — Perplexed
So, you can talk about the limitations of inductive reasoning, but the limitations of deductive reasoning are more severe, as it tell us nothing at all other than whether we've correctly solved our Sudoku puzzle. — Hanover
Talk of inductive logic gives an undeserved legitimacy to making a guess. — Banno
None of which should be taken as disparaging Bayesian analysis and other legitimate and excellent work around this topic. Unlike the philosopher's notion of induction, and even worse, abduction, Bayesian approaches have a strong standing. — Banno
The question is: do you agree that abductive reasoning is a specific type of inductive reasoning? — Magnus Anderson
Here's an example of abductive reasoning:
1. The grass is wet.
2. If it rains, the grass gets wet.
3. Therefore, it rained. — Magnus Anderson
It is quite apparent to me that abductive reasoning is a very narrow form of reasoning. By definition, it only forms conclusions regarding events that took place in the past. This means that abductive reasoning is restricted to making "predictions" about the past. In other words, it can only be used to create retrodictions. This is unlike induction which can be used to form beliefs of any kind. This suggests to me the possibility of you defining the concept of induction narrowly as pertaining only to making assumptions about the future. — Magnus Anderson
When I guess that the next value in the sequence 1 2 3 4 is number 5 I do not necessarily do so because I am aware of the underlying pattern. Rather, in most cases, we do so because we know that the superset {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} has the highest degree of similarity to the superset {1, 2, 3, 4} among the supersets that have the form {1, 2, 3, 4, *}. — Magnus Anderson
Regarding AGI research, most of the research has been dedicated to modelling how the world works rather than to modelling how thinking works. I think that's the problem. Rather than having a programmer create a model of reality, an ontology, for the computer to think within, it is better for a programmer to create a model of thinking which will allow machines to create models of reality -- ontologies -- on their own from the data that is given to them. — Magnus Anderson
A graven image. It should have an all-seeing eye at its centre. Another odd example of the obsession with trinities that helped kept Pierce from mainstream approval.
None of which should be taken as disparaging Bayesian analysis and other legitimate and excellent work around this topic. Unlike the philosopher's notion of induction, and even worse, abduction, Bayesian approaches have a strong standing. — Banno
I'm not getting too hung up on the divisions. There is the more familiar dichotomy of deductive vs inductive argument - necessary inferences vs probable inferences. That kind of works in the sense that deduction proceeds from the general to the particular with syntactic certainty while induction does the reverse of going from the particular to the general with provisional hopefulness. — apokrisis
But then a triadic view - one where a dichotomistic separation resolves itself into a hierarchical structure - is the special twist that Peirce brings to everything. It is the next step which completes the metaphysics. — apokrisis
But is it?
The classical deductive syllogism is:
Major premise (or the general rule: All M are P.
Minor premise (or the particular case): All S are M.
Conclusion (or result): All S are P.
Abduction then rearranges the order so that the argument is: All Ms are Ps (rule); all Ss are Ps (result); therefore, all Ss are Ms (case).
So you would have to say something like:
- Rain makes things wet.
- This grass is wet.
- Therefore, the grass was (probably) left out in the rain last night. — apokrisis
I'm not sure why it seems a problem that abduction is retroductive - that the past is being assumed to hold the key to the future. — apokrisis
Abduction seeks out the constraints that must underly any observable regularity in the world. — apokrisis
I'm sure the rule you abduce is the simper one - 1+1=2. And so on, ad infinitum. — apokrisis
But instead of talking about induction, or more generally intelligence or thinking, you talk about abduction. — Magnus Anderson
And instead of speaking in terms of regularities or patterns, you speak in terms of constraints. — Magnus Anderson
I'm not following you. I've talked about all those things. You seem to want to make some campaign against abduction as a concept. And I am interested in how abduction fits into a holistic and naturalistic scheme of reasoning. — apokrisis
You will have to explain why I should be concerned by your problems with seeing a relevance in abduction. I've already explained why it would be relevant to a metaphysics that is irreducibly triadic (rather than dyadic or monadic). — apokrisis
I am just trying to understand why you place so much emphasis on it. — Magnus Anderson
I don't see why such a concept is relevant. — Magnus Anderson
And if what I say appears to be an attack then it's merely due to the possibility that some of the things you say are no more than smokes and mirrors. I have to entertain such a possibility. — Magnus Anderson
You don't have to if you don't want to. — Magnus Anderson
Fine. And yet you kept asking anyway. And I kept explaining why I do find it relevant. And so far you haven't rebutted my reasons for finding it relevant. And importantly so. Yet you want to keep telling me you don't find it relevant - despite offering no supporting reasons. — apokrisis
The best I can do in this case is to ask further questions for the purpose of clarification. — Magnus Anderson
Popper championed the role of abduction in science; conjectures just are abductions. — Janus
But I asked you for clarification about this "relevance" of yours. For me, there is a background metaphysics that explains the specific relevance. For you, there must be likewise some background metaphysics - given that it seems you must have some good reason to reject my metaphysics as a relevant grounding.
So what is this metaphysics exactly? Put it on the table. — apokrisis
Almost none of our beliefs are justified (in our mind) by science. So if you only accept reductive explanations as justification for beliefs, then you would have to conclude that almost all of our beliefs lack any justification whatsoever - and that cannot be true, because it is part of our usual understanding of the notion of "justified belief" that a large proportion of our beliefs is fairly justified. — SophistiCat
Whether or not I know of some scientific explanation for my feeling of hunger or my perception of the color of the sky is completely irrelevant to my warrant for holding the respective beliefs. — SophistiCat
It is perfectly possible that your brain could be in that state, but the part of your brain responsible for generating the epiphenomenon of concious awareness erroneously reports that you are not. In that sense you would be incorrect about your assertion 'I'm hungry'. — Pseudonym
logicians agree that deduction offers no new information, only clarify that which is know — charleton
Only if you accept that free will is defined as not compelled to act from external forces — charleton
This sounds like a psychological process — Perplexed
How can we tell the extend to which a pattern is created by the brain rather than inherent in world? — Perplexed
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