They certainly ought to constrain what would be considered credible.
Like after Darwin, you might quarrel about how humans arose from apes. But no longer do you need to worry about the mechanics of turning ribs into first wombs. — apokrisis
So, the two chess claims below are both true:
1. The bishop moves diagonally
2. The bishop moves orthogonally — Banno
All I was saying is that however we might interpret QM the interpretation is a physical, not a metaphysical one, at least in the sense of not positing something transcendent at work. — Janus
do you think the Bohr-Einstein debates were about physics or metaphysics? — Wayfarer
my question is as to whether we can even sensibly speak of the multiverse in terms of being actual or not actual. Intuitively, of course, it seems we can; but if that's right then we do think that untestable conjectures can be true or false. — Janus
It is the same problem that goes back to Kant's phenomenon and noumenon. Kant proposed that a phenomenon is a perceptive representation of an object existing in the mind of a perceiver, rather than the object in itself, the noumenon. Kant did not argue that the world of the noumenon does not exist, for there to be an appearance, there must be something for there to be an appearance of. It is just that human knowledge of the true nature of the noumenon is impossible, as the true nature of the noumenon is always mediated by the senses. In that, for example, we perceive the colour red, we don't perceive a wavelength of 700nm. — RussellA
A small point of jargon. But important where folk are mostly arguing rhetorically. — apokrisis
Anyway, the difference can be summed up that by saying the principle of bivalence is the logical claim that propositions are to be judged either true or false - true or not true. And a dialectical or dichotomous logic says that any "bivalent" division of metaphysical possibility has to obey the rule of being "mutually exclusive/jointly exhaustive". So to be "true", each has to stand as the logical negatation the other. Or to be more accurate, each has to be the formal inverse of reciprocal of the other. — apokrisis
A small point of jargon. But important where folk are mostly arguing rhetorically.
— apokrisis
I'm not sure "rhetoric" is the right word. They're not just trying to convince you of their position, they actually believe in the truth of what they say and are trying to present their position.
Anyway, the difference can be summed up that by saying the principle of bivalence is the logical claim that propositions are to be judged either true or false - true or not true. And a dialectical or dichotomous logic says that any "bivalent" division of metaphysical possibility has to obey the rule of being "mutually exclusive/jointly exhaustive". So to be "true", each has to stand as the logical negatation the other. Or to be more accurate, each has to be the formal inverse of reciprocal of the other.
— apokrisis — T Clark
Reductionism is fine too. It works really well if you want to build machinery or even mechanise human society and the human mind. Simple cause and effect thinking is neat little everyday tool of thought. — apokrisis
What do you think metaphysics ought to deliver as its social good? Does it have a purpose? I can't see any other reason to "do metaphysics" except to attempt to deduce the truth of reality from first principles ... and so set yourself up with clear hypotheses worth the effort of empirical test. — apokrisis
Although I agree with your point about how bivalence works, I think there is a place for it as long as you recognize that it is just a point of view, a choice, and not the fundamental basis of reality. — T Clark
Would it make more sense to you if I changed "values" to "preference" or "taste?" — T Clark
Seems to me we can assign "true" or "false" to the above sentence without contradiction, so the answer is "yes, there can be sentences that are true or false but undecidable".
— Banno
I don't agree, but I don't think we can resolve our differences. I think it's a question of values. — T Clark
But that makes no sense. — Banno
Seems to me we can assign "true" or "false" to the above sentence without contradiction, so the answer is "yes, there can be sentences that are true or false but undecidable". — Banno
Whether or not you want to assign truth value to the referenced sentence is a matter of your choice, taste, value, preference. It's not a matter of fact. — T Clark
1) Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle? — T Clark
"This statement is true or it is not possible to determine that this statement is true". — Banno
"If it is not possible to determine that this statement is true then it is true"... — Banno
Of course if this is some kind of Gödelian move, I'm willing to get on board. — TheMadFool
...pointing out that whether one assigns true or false to this sentence, it must be undecided, and hence it is a candidate for an example fo the sort of sentence you asked for. — Banno
If something's truth value is undecided that doesn't mean it isn't true or false, only that I don't know. — T Clark
On the other hand, if it's truth value is undecidable, I consider it either as having no truth value or as being meaningless. — T Clark
I think we've gone far enough with this. — T Clark
If this is to be argument by definition, then I’m happy with the usual position that metaphysics is an inquiry into the nature and causes of being, Then as a debate, transcendence vs immanence is one of its familiar organising dichotomies, — apokrisis
How can we talk about "multiverses" when multiverses are unknowable ? — RussellA
It doesn't matter anyway because either is imaginable as a possibility, but both would seem to be impossible to confirm or dis-confirm. — Janus
I don't see how "transcendence vs immanence" is relevant to debates about interpretations of QM. — Janus
All I was saying is that however we might interpret QM the interpretation is a physical, not a metaphysical one, at least in the sense of not positing something transcendent at work. — Janus
Quantum mechanics, like any physical theory, comes equipped with many metaphysical assumptions and implications. The line between metaphysics and physics is often blurry, but as a rough guide, one can think of a theory's metaphysics as those foundational assumptions made in its interpretation that are not usually directly tested in experiment.
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-540-70626-7_119
Quantum mechanics, like any physical theory, comes equipped with many metaphysical assumptions and implications. The line between metaphysics and physics is often blurry, but as a rough guide, one can think of a theory's metaphysics as those foundational assumptions made in its interpretation that are not usually directly tested in experiment.
If by metaphysical all that is meant is ' something not directly observable", which might be better termed 'metaempirical' then fine. — Janus
Discussion would be much better if you bothered to read what I wrote, rather than jumping to stupid conclusions about what I'm saying. — Janus
I'm advocating a distinction between metaphysical as a synonym for metaempirical., and metaphysical as a synonym for supernatural, that's all. — Janus
This is not intended to be a discussion about what constitutes justification. — T Clark
In my judgement, interpretations that are empirically indistinguishable are the same thing. Differences between them are meaningless — T Clark
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