I believe most physicists would interpret the extraordinary success of the predictions to count as empirical evidence ( the only kind of evidence in this kind of connection we could ever have) that the 'extra-empirical' (causal) 'realm' is ( more or less) as we have modeled it. — John
You still haven't explained how any other position would render 'e=mc2' as an intelligible sentence in ordinary language.
You haven't explained, that is. how a (philosophical) adoption of instrumentalism or model-dependence could be really, as opposed to merely superficially appearing to be, coherent. — John
It's a statement that describes (and predicts) empirical phenomena. — Michael
Right, so as I said before you're adopting scientific realism. But the internal realist wouldn't adopt scientific realism. They'd adopt something like instrumentalism or model-dependent realism. — Michael
In the context of scientific laws and theories, it's more a matter of rationalism vs empiricism, where empiricism alone can't get you to something like e=mc2. And it also goes back to Plato and the universalism debate. The shadows on the cave wall don't give you the forms. In scientific terms, the empirical data doesn't provide the theory. That's something humans add to make sense of the data. The realist question is whether that addition exists independent of us, or is made up by us, or is due to our constitution as cognitive agents (Kantian categories). — Marchesk
Relationships like e=mc2 are an expression of the functioning empirical world. To ask whether, for example, e=mc2 exists doesn't make sense. It's not a state of the world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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