No, it isn't. — Banno
I disagree. It is both Collingwood's and Kant's understanding that you can't dispense with all underlying metaphysical assumptions. I agree with them. Science cannot proceed without them. — Clarky
Any claim that physics provides an inadequate understanding of the way things work, made via the internet, is a laughable performative contradiction. — Banno
Seems so as the OP stipulates a pre-1905 purview. — ZzzoneiroCosm
PS__Why do you limit this discussion to Classical Physics? Do you have an agenda? Just asking. — Gnomon
Dispensing with all underlying metaphysical assumptions is not the issue though. The issue is the consequences of science proceeding from false metaphysical assumptions. So it is not a matter of removing all such assumptions, and proceeding with none, it is a matter of subjecting them all to a rigorous form of skepticism, and proceeding only from those which pass. — Metaphysician Undercover
fooling yourself. — Banno
Materialism was the view that the universe consists in bits of matter banging into each other in a void. It was rejected after Newton made such effective use of action at a distance. What is being defended here might be better called physicalism - the notion that the laws of physics are adequate to explain the way things are - than materialism. — Banno
This thread is not for discussion of the validity of materialism — Clarky
1) Add to this list if it makes sense and 2) Discuss the various proposed assumptions and decide if they belong on the list. — Clarky
...phenomenology to tell us that such perceived regularities say nothing about an external world — Tom Storm
and point out that more interesting than the observation of patterns is the question of what we might do about them. Physics doesn't answer ethical questions. — Banno
Maybe 'billiard-ball materialism' was "rejected" in England by Newtonians but not by e.g. French scientists and the philosophes or German scientists and Young Hegelians. What you call physicalism, Banno, I think of as 'model-dependent materialism' (à la Hawking & Mlodinow).It was rejected after Newton made such effective use of action at a distance. — Banno
:100:The contentions part of this is not physicalism but reductionism, the issue of what can be explained using physics - that everything might eventually be reduced to physics. That is not presently the case –
… the error of dividing the world into the internal and the external.
… one cannot get an “ought” from an “is”
But again, since the contention of (1) is that we can explain some things, and not that we can explain everything, it is pretty irrelevant. — Banno
So we end up with that there are patterns in the world, and a conservation principle. — Banno
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