That is a brilliant account of the debates. It makes it look as if it just a question of different ways of saying the same thing. The catch is that it's hard to see why it matters which way one jumps.A realist may think the different perspectives we have on the world are different ways of viewing the same thing, an anti-realist may say those same perspectives block knowledge of the thing in and of itself. A realist may say theories are approximately true, an anti-realist may say the notion of "approximately true" is arbitrary and just highlights that the theory does not explain all of the data. — Apustimelogist
That may well be true. But that makes his use of "translation" very different from what translation between languages involves. Word-for-word translation is almost always a mistake. Perhaps it would be better to talk about "equivalence"; but then the concepts of a theory are inter-related, not defined one by one. Perhaps we should just stick to "incommensurable".Yes, I think when it comes to Kuhn at least, his mention of translation is not talking about languages generically but about words thats constitute specific scientific theories. — Apustimelogist
For what evidence is there empirically for "conceptual schema" to be a "thing" as applied to language use itself (not necessarily as a meta-theory of differences in scientific frameworks aka "incommensurability"). — schopenhauer1
That question reads a bit convoluted to me. Can you rephrase the question?
I am tempted to say that any notion of conceptual scheme would claim that putting empirical evidence prior to determining the scheme is the wrong way about: in the strong version the scheme determines evidence, in the weak version the scheme is part-and-parcel to the evidence. At the very least there are beliefs around empirical evidence which can be questioned from a non-evidential standpoint -- there's a certain sense in which we have to delimit what evidence even is. — Moliere
Thank you for expressing so much more adroitly the view I had attempted to set out previously. — Banno
I've re-read Feyerabend - Against Method and Science in a Free Society - with a view to tying down his notion of commensurable and incommensurable, and decided that his view changed over time. I think he started with something like Wittgenstein's language games in mind - he had gone to England with the intent of studying with Wittgenstein, but the latter's illness and death led him to Popper. I think he carried something of "language games", or perhaps a "forms of life", into his dealings with Lakatos. In Against Method Feyerabend emphasises incommensurability, but plays it down in later writings, even I racal, denying that incommensurability meant that there could be no comparison. — Banno
Seems to me that, that we understand dolphins to be social and communicative shows us that they inhabit the same world we do. If their songs are showing rather then saying, then they are not subject to Davidson's considerations of sentential language. — Banno
Contrary to ↪Joshs, if we commence by assuming that there is no possibility of communication on important issues, then we are throwing out the possibility of "ameliorating" the "violent breakdown in communication".
Again, we can come to understand that the rabbit is a duck-rabbit, and hence to see the point of view of those who only see the duck. Only where there is some potential for agreement is there also potential to avoid violence.
That is a brilliant account of the debates. It makes it look as if it just a question of different ways of saying the same thing. The catch is that it's hard to see why it matters which way one jumps — Ludwig V
That may well be true. But that makes his use of "translation" very different from what translation between languages involves. — Ludwig V
but then the concepts of a theory are inter-related, not defined one by one. — Ludwig V
I would reply that the claim needs to be backed up by a demonstration of the difference. Mere assertion won't cut any ice.Aha I think this would create a regress of the same problem as someone else would come along and say that it isn't just different ways of the same thing. — Apustimelogist
Yes, it's a common difficulty when one wants/needs to deny the validity of a distinction.But yes, I have thought about ways of kind of possibly ignoring labels of "real" or "non-real". Ironically, I feel like its very difficult to do this in a way that doesn't just look like normal anti-realism. — Apustimelogist
Yes. One either picks a specific theory, but then has to interpret it correctly. But that's open to "strawman" claims, or devises one's own statement of the issue, which is also open to the same claim. There's no third alternative that I can think of.But I think insofar as Davidson mentions Kuhn as an originator of the idea he is attacking, he has constructed a strawman since Kuhn isn't representative of the idea he attacks — Apustimelogist
You can then match the networks of concepts together. — Apustimelogist
I would reply that the claim needs to be backed up by a demonstration of the difference. Mere assertion won't cut any ice. — Ludwig V
I saw a suggestion somewhere that a third possibility that one adjusts one or other concept (or network of concepts) so that there is sufficient overlap to enable the theories to be compared. That would sometimes be helpful because it would enable people to conduct experiments that will support one theory or the other. — Ludwig V
Well sure, I'm just saying that I think if that discussion were opened there would be disagreements, — Apustimelogist
Yes, Kuhn mentions this — Apustimelogist
Ah, that's different. The infinite meta- debates. Quite so. That's why I very suspicious of the meta-concept.the realism/anti-realism debate might lead to a meta-realism debate. — Apustimelogist
The referee is not a player, but is just as much on the field as any player. They are not somehow separate and above the game, but immersed in it. Ditto judges.
A dictionary uses the same language that it describes, but is just as much a book as any other.
My line would be that the debate doesn't pay attention to the actual use of "real" vs its many opposites and the muddled idea that "real" is somehow equivalent to ontology. — Ludwig V
Rather, I would want explanations of how science works, how people's cognition works, how brains work, how language works and let those things speak for themselves. — Apustimelogist
So because they are no more than where they fit as part of our experiences, their ontological significance is kind of deflated somewhat — Apustimelogist
the words / concepts we use as part of "explanations" and "knowledge" are effectively just moving parts embedded in the stream of the very thing trying be explained — Apustimelogist
Yes, that sounds sensible. But that's an ideal and there may never be answers that are more than provision (see philosophy of science). Can you suspend all judgement while people work out all those answers? And can people work out all those answers without negotiating the issues we are bothered by - just without us? What do we do with our confusions while we are waiting? — Ludwig V
Well, I would go further than that. — Ludwig V
about why I think its good to let those explanations speak for themselves, — Apustimelogist
I think of myself as a kind of instrumentalist about everything which most would say is just anti-realism. — Apustimelogist
But how about a more radical position? Avoid speaking about "reality", just as one avoids speaking about "existence". (I don't remember whether you ever looked in on the thread about Austin's "Sense and Sensibilia", but the argument is in there.) Suppose we treat concepts as instruments (cf. telescope, microscope, galvanometer, etc.). Instruments do not make claims about particular empirical truths (or the generalizations we derive from particular truths). They enable us to establish empirical truths. You would be a realist and an anti-realist at the same time. — Ludwig V
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