Karl Popper's permissive take on the scientific method will end up granting scientific status to the prediction engines of the worst charlatans. Therefore, I must object to his views. — alcontali
I think the comparison with stock market pricing is completely unjustified. The predictive capacities of physics are an essential part of the science. — Wayfarer
Paul Dirac predicted the discovery of anti-matter on the basis of mathematical symmetries. I can’t see any justification for declaring his work non-scientific. And how else are you to validate the accuracy of physical theory but testing it against observation? ‘Oh, that looks like it ought to be right.’ — Wayfarer
Those opposing dismiss these criticisms by describing their proponents as ‘the Popperazi’, saying that their conservatism is stifling progress. — Wayfarer
So I think your definition of scientific method is far too restrictive. — Wayfarer
Not all predictive modelling is inaccurate. Still, the mere ability to predict future values should not be included in the definition of scientific method. — alcontali
The scientific method should only cover experimental testing. You must be freely able to choose the input I to feed into the theory F in order to receive output O, i.e. O = F(I). In other words, we must demand that the experimental tester demonstrates causality. He must be able to change I in order to produce changes in O. — alcontali
Especially in the current climate of rampant scientism, it is a necessity to deny scientific status to as much predictivity-seeking activity as possible. Denying scientific status to mere predictive modelling neatly expels activities such as stock-price prediction out of the epistemic domain of science. — alcontali
Agreed, but charlatans, such as the ones in the stock market, must not be able to repurpose that capacity to claim scientific status. Most physics is obviously beyond reproach. — alcontali
I would say that, if I can generate predictions of the behavior of complex systems on a consistent basis, i.e. significantly better than chance, I have applied a method that models the actual real-world conditions that lead to that behavior. — T Clark
"F = ma" is a model. — T Clark
No. The theory that you feed your input into is a model just as much as the technical analysis of stock markets you decry. — T Clark
Although no one has mentioned it, I keep waiting for the other shoe to drop - using your argument to undermine the credibility of climate science. — T Clark
If it works, they're not charlatans. — T Clark
I doubt they care whether you are willing to designate what they do as science. — T Clark
big data means anyone can find fake statistical relationships, since the spurious rises to the surface. This is because in large data sets, large deviations are vastly more attributable to variance (or noise) than to information (or signal). It’s a property of sampling: In real life there is no cherry-picking, but on the researcher’s computer, there is. Large deviations are likely to be bogus. — alcontali
... but that ought to be self-correcting. — T Clark
Predictive modelling is what science is about, making accurate predictions from past observations. If you exclude predictive modelling from science you remove pretty much everything from science. — leo
He said that theories cannot be verified. — leo
What you call "demonstrating causality" is predictive modelling just as well, it is assuming that the apparent causality will keep being valid in the future. — leo
Saying that some models are not "science" just because you don't like them is what scientists do already, calling 'scientific' the models they like and 'unscientific' the ones they don't. — leo
In this regard I expect that outside of computer-vision and speech recognition, where deep-learning as a strong inductive bias, the black-box neural network approaches in other problems domains will begin to take a back seat as transparent models of network logic come to the forefront. For you cannot easily inject human-readable logic clauses into a distributed neural network with positive and negative activations. — sime
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.