I wonder if computability and epistemology are ultimately not one and the same thing? — alcontali
Is consistent and incomplete supposed to be any better than inconsistent and complete? They look kind of the same to me, like partial truth is still a lie, in a sense that it can misguide you just the same. — Zelebg
I can't spell the danged thing, but I know what it is. — god must be atheist
That strikes me as over reach. How is "the cat is on the mat" computable, that we might believe, or even know, that it is true? — Banno
You can't establish any degree of certainty on solipsism vs. accepting that what you experience is actually the physical world. — god must be atheist
Is "the cat is on the mat" formally justifiable (=epistemology)? — alcontali
So the word "formally" bugs me. What precisely is the difference between a formal justification and any other justification? — Banno
Moreover, does an insistence on formal justification simple rule out empirical justification? — Banno
I had understood that what is to count as "objectively verifiable" is itself one of the main issues in epistemology. — Banno
When ought one believe such-and-such? — Banno
But... verifiable is exactly what a falsifiable hypothesis is not. — Banno
I do not agree that the scientific process is algorithmic in the way you describe; nor, even, that it ought be. — Banno
The first point is about the history of science; and I would point to, say, Feyerbend as showing how science is a human, indeed a political process. — Banno
In his books Against Method and Science in a Free Society Feyerabend defended the idea that there are no methodological rules which are always used by scientists. He objected to any single prescriptive scientific method on the grounds that any such method would limit the activities of scientists, and hence restrict scientific progress. In his view, science would benefit most from a "dose" of theoretical anarchism.
Feyerabend was also critical of falsificationism. He argued that no interesting theory is ever consistent with all the relevant facts. This would rule out using a naïve falsificationist rule which says that scientific theories should be rejected if they do not agree with known facts. — Wikipedia on Feyerabend
In my opinion, Feyerabend's epistemological anarchism is a dangerous point of view. It would prevent us from determining whether a proposition is scientific or not, because there would no longer exist a benchmark for that. Hence, it is his approach that would restrict scientific progress, simply, by removing the restrictions on the progress of snake oil. Feyerabend's view on science is a dangerous throwback in time because it reopens the door for accepting mere alchemy as science. — alcontali
If scientific evidence -- represented by its paperwork -- is objective then there exists a mechanical procedure to verify such paperwork. One step in this procedure must indeed consist in repeating its experimental test. Even though that step is necessarily a physical activity, there must also exist a procedure for carrying it out. Hence, the verification of the paperwork is entirely objective, deterministic, and procedural. Otherwise, it is not even legitimate scientific evidence. — alcontali
We no longer follow visual procedures in mathematics. — alcontali
The second point is logical. That a proposition is falsifiable is not the same as it's being true; and hence, there will be verifiably falsifiable propositions that are false, yet unfalsified. — Banno
Falsified theories are replaced by theories of greater explanatory power. — Banno
there is a component of choice involved in accepting any hypothesis ... That is, the process is not algorithmic. — Banno
Like I said, you weren't born knowing 3+0=3 because you needed to observe this rule in order to know there is a rule and then observe how such a rule is useful in the world. The rule itself stems from our own observations of individual things and the need to quantify those individual things that share similarities. So these "axiomatic" domains themselves require at least two observations - one to learn the rule and the other to learn what the rule is for. — Harry Hindu
How do you decide what goes into an "axiom pack"? — fdrake
Aah, so I can stipulate {alacontail is wrong about the significance of axioms to justifications in natural language} and derive that and have it be true because axioms arbitrarily stipulated and nothing more can be said. Right? — fdrake
It will obviously be true within the model that satisfies your axiomatization. — alcontali
The existence of such "component of choice" points to the fact that the body of statements, i.e. the discipline, is in fact not legitimate knowledge. — alcontali
all derived theories from the formal specification of computability are not legitimate knowledge — fdrake
Sentence X can be utterly useless, and probably also meaningless, but it is nevertheless a justified (true) belief, with the term "true" referring to the fact that it is logically true in the model(s) for the theory embodying axiom A. — alcontali
The axioms of formal systems are not immune to these consideration, and are not arbitrarily chosen — fdrake
and moreover are not choosable algorithmically — fdrake
Why would a computer choose the Turing machine formalism over the arbitrary decision procedure formalism to talk about computation? It couldn't, without having some criterion. — fdrake
Is that criterion arbitrary? — fdrake
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