For me, it can easily be disposed of as an non-necessary hypothesis. We don't know for a fact, and will never know, if everything in the universe is predetermined or not. It shouldn't bother people, therefore. — Olivier5
Indeed, determinism cannot be a scientific theory if it is not falsifiable. It is a matter of belief, and your belief in the matter seems quite strong. — Olivier5
Fully known? You have any example of something that can be fully known?only takes one observation where the initial state is fully known — Kenosha Kid
Or it could just be throwing a ball in the air and seeing it change trajectory mid-flight — Kenosha Kid
It only takes one observation where the initial state is fully known, and where the assumption of determinism leads to a single expected outcome, and to not achieve that regularity of outcome, for that assumption of determinism to be ruled out. — Kenosha Kid
Fully known? You have any example of something that can be fully known? — Olivier5
Balls have been thrown up and down before, and we do seem to have difficulties predicting their trajectory. You've heard of the Galton box? — Olivier5
This actually happens all the time. An outcome is predicted, the experiment is done, and the outcome is not what has been predicted. It's the basic scientific process. — Echarmion
It only takes one observation where the initial state is fully known, and where the assumption of determinism leads to a single expected outcome, and to not achieve that regularity of outcome, for that assumption of determinism to be ruled out. — Kenosha Kid
high precision. — Kenosha Kid
So, 1) you propose throwing a ball as an attempt to falsify determinism, 2) I show you some balls being thrown and landing on the ground haphazardly, and 3) you say: "no no no this doesn't count".Balls have been thrown up and down before, and we do seem to have difficulties predicting their trajectory. You've heard of the Galton box?
— Olivier5
Yes, and that is a great example of unknowability in a chaotic system yielding unpredictable behaviour at a classical scale, but it is not shown to be an example of non-deterministic behaviour. — Kenosha Kid
High precision is different from full precision, and you know it. Or you should know it. Perfect precision of measurement of initial conditions is impossible. So you will have to think a bit more creatively than starting with "fully known initial conditions". That's never going to happen. — Olivier5
So, 1) you propose throwing a ball as an attempt to falsify determinism, 2) I show you some balls being thrown and landing on the ground haphazardly, and 3) you say: "no no no this doesn't count". — Olivier5
But effects on the micro scale do exhibit constantly changing results. — Echarmion
If you don't know exactly what the original conditions are, how can you expect your predictions to be exact?It only has to be known to the requisite precision of the experiment. — Kenosha Kid
Yes. Let's do a little bit of analytical work here on your criteria for falsification. Especially since I've never come across those criteria before, and yet have read 90% of Popper's opus, and he's the guy who came up with the criterion of falsifiability in the first place... which means that your criteria appear very much to be your criteria. So let's see some definitions.Do you want to refer back to my criteria for falsification? — Kenosha Kid
information), tractable (we can make sufficiently accurate predictions of expected deterministic behaviour), and unpredictable (regular behaviour is not manifest). That is required in order to discern deterministic behaviour from non-deterministic behaviour. Anything else is irrelevant.relevant
Agreed, but it's important to be aware of why, and not lump unknowns, intractability, and genuine non-determinism into one catch-all. Otherwise you get Olivier5's claim that randomly chucking balls about demonstrates non-determinism. — Kenosha Kid
One must measure this against claims that the Universe is fundamentally random and ask: which seems to explain my experience? — Kenosha Kid
Especially since I've never come across those criteria before, and yet have read 90% of Popper's opus, and he's the guy who came up with the criterion of falsifiability in the first place... which means that your criteria appear very much to be your criteria. So let's see some definitions. — Olivier5
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