Ah, 'makes sense.Now, prediction itself is what brings in the money, so no one really cares about the description (hypothesis). And, the mathematics of probability is what enables prediction, so that's where the focus is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. I haven't even thought that finally someone could say this. To some description alone is inaccurate.The invasion of probability is due to the reliance on mathematics rather than description. — Metaphysician Undercover
Enough said.You may not have noticed that Merkwurdichliebe just above dismisses 700,000+ US Covid deaths - and presumably 4.5 million worldwide - as any sort of evidence in favor of any limitation on his personal "rights." His a deep dishonesty or craziness or both. Ordinary civility with such a person, imo, a fundamental error. — tim wood
:up:Yet here we are, on an Internet philosophy website, where you would expect to attract people with a modicum of education and thoughtfulness, debating six or seven (essentially) anti-vaxxers.
It's pretty sad, and scary for the future. They of course cannot see this, and never will, but they're in the same boat as these other people. Why? — Xtrix
It's cause the reductionist charge is yet another issue addressed by the critics. It goes like this, in three separate issues:I have seen criticism of QM mainly and relativity perhaps a bit and then that physics is reductionistic (though the reductionism charge I have tended to see aimed more at the biological sciences). — Bylaw
This is criticism number 4. If we go with the empiricists, on the other hand, the empiricists would like to rid of realism in scientific terms. Do you agree? There are things in the world that exists with or without us. Now the empiricists would then say, then who's doing the science, but humans themselves. So ultimately, realism is defective. See the point?But I am not sure how that relates to empirical critiques. Relativity has had many types of empirical confirmation, as has QM. In general. Specific interpretations of qm phenomena are seen as unjustified, but the data does not support seeing particles as tiny balls. — Bylaw
People understand different things when they talk about science. — Nickolasgaspar
Again, I agree.Since science is not a single"method" we need to find out what really is.
Science is a Philosophical Category (Natural Philosophy) with a set of empirical methodologies that is mainly interested in the evaluation of our knowledge claims.
What people do with those knowledge claims is a separate issue.(politics, economics etc). — Nickolasgaspar
Yes, I have now accepted that we should change our focus to the understanding of what science is about. Start with education.In my opinion the only decay related to science is the public understanding of what science is, their inability to distinguish technology from science and what elements make scientific knowledge so important and credible.
This decay is mainly product of the global system of education set to serve other priorities and the idea that knowledge is just an opinion. — Nickolasgaspar
What if I reject the narrative of law making process the same way you reject the scientific narrative?What about the constitutionally established process of lawmaking that protects the individual from possible forms of state tyranny. — Merkwurdichliebe
Were you forced to resign? I think it's implicit, no?I resigned the game! :grin: — TheMadFool
Okay, fair enough. No one can force you to accept facts or reality. But then, there's also the law, which could make a convincing narrative that you should be put in jail (as an example) for being a menace to society and ignoring facts.Are you aware of the "scientific method"? It does not dictate how individuals "should" behave. Narrative is entirely interpretive. — Merkwurdichliebe
Once in a while I peak in here to see what's been happening.The data must convince me. If it does not, it needs to do a better job of creating a believable narrative. If you are so gullible as to be easily convinced by a soft and rehashed narrative, so be it. — Merkwurdichliebe
This is an interesting take and well deserving of a mention.I've previously characterised my own view as realist. I've argued against typical examples of anti-realism such as pragmatic theory, logical positivism, transcendental idealism and Berkeley's form of idealism. I have however also defended a constructivist view of mathematics, an anti-realist position; and off-handedly rejected realism in ethics and aesthetics. — Banno
Many economic models are also just that, model -- not as easy to put to work in reality. And yes, while profit is the goal of doing business -- you don't spend money and workforce just to have losses -- this has been simplified too much. Rational economic principles include ethical business practices. But just because there exist rational economic principles, it doesn't mean we are not going to have the problem of bad business owners.Many economic theories are based on the assumption that businesses exist to maximize profits. Neoclassical economists (mainstream) use the profit motive as an axiom to build economic models. Making money is seen as the single purpose for all business. — Wheatley
:) welcome to the club.I'm venting due to experiences discussing things on this forum. If I try to present an unbiased view, I'm in everyone's shit list. — frank
If you notice in your reading that the physicists are mostly the culprit of the traditional science-decline sentiments, though they're not the only target of the critics. Quantum theory, relativity theory, reductionist physics, and oh, alternative knowing. I think the Germans promoted this alternative knowing. Not sure.So, the decay in science is coming from people who believe science is slighting (the existence of) things outside our perception? Can you give me a recent example of this? (and I am not saying this is not a significant phenomenon or that you are incorrect, I just find it hard to know exactly what is meant at this level of abstraction.) — Bylaw
"Accept" is the word we commonly use. But since we are here in this thread discussing it, you truly don't believe that resigning is accepting, right? You utter the word "accept", but really it's not intellectually coherent without understanding. By understanding we mean, rational and logical. If you can't justify something, you can't accept it. Acceptance is a choice. Resignation is giving up.See my reply to 180 Proof. To resign oneself to one's fate is to accept what's happening and what one thinks will happen. — TheMadFool
With understanding comes acceptance. Acceptance can never happen without understanding. Resignation is as what you mused above -- one has no choice or lacks energy to quarrel.What's the difference between acceptance and resignation? — TheMadFool
Because you're mixing narratives. Power and corruption are both social and political terms. Why mix it with the point you're trying to make in the first place if it isn't what you mean? Don't contrast two ideas within the same context. It doesn't sound right.↪Caldwell
What is this 'power' and 'corruption' then? Are they the only points to consider here? — I like sushi
Alright. Let's get serious then....the second part of the question if our moral system likewise ascribes (not equal but rather) sufficient moral value to non-human animals. If not, the third and final part of the question asks us what is it that is true of humans that would have to be true of animals in order for us to ascribe sufficient moral value to condemn killing them for food. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
How did you come up with this conclusion? Read your question below again, please. Did I say there's no morality? Do not generalize.So, on your view, there should be no morality at all because there was none once upon a time in our evolutionary past? That is what is entailed by that logic. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I said none -- because there is nothing that is true of animals that if true of humans would justify killing them for food. So, let me rephrase that. There was no justification given before for eating animals. Humans just did. And there isn't gonna be one now. There is no justification that is sufficient that would allow eating humans for food, and nothing for animals either.“What is true of animals that if true of humans would justify killing them for food?” — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Nope. And that's the beauty of philosophy. You're not forced to accept anything. You accept it because it logically follows.↪Caldwell
Basically, that which you are forced to accept. — Cidat
Yes.In other words, reality just is and no amount of mental manipulation/acrobatics can/will alter/affect it. Reality then is that which you have to accept. — TheMadFool
You don't try to define reality. You prove or justify it. That's why philosophy is well equipped when it comes to this topic.Is it possible to give a rigorous definition of 'reality'? — Cidat
None. There was no deliberation or rationalization that took place when humans first started eating other animals for food. There was no justification, period. And there isn't' one now.“What is true of animals that if true of humans would justify killing them for food?” — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Start with current top notch datamining capability and computer recognition, lets say every comment here on PF and on other Philosophical discussion site (still, quite finite amount of discussion threads), then add a great English language program, and realistically you could have a program that would fool people most of the time. — ssu
Yes. It is called the agency. We have the innate agency to form a system that addresses moral concerns. At any given point in time, we have agency. But whether it's undeveloped, underdeveloped, or advanced is a condition brought about by time and civilization.But is it inevitable that humans with a complex language would always have constructed such formality? — David S
Animals have a different system of existence. We shouldn't be comparing human agency with animal existence. That we are able to extend this notion of agency and acknowledge that animals have intelligence, or whatever, is our own issue.Why when animals are able to form order and organisation without this does the human stand alone. — David S
The human examiner could not be fooled. The critics of Turing Test had already addressed its limitation -- the "test" is very limited to the basics to which both the human and computer subjects could say yes or no. So the test itself is not representative of what we, humans, would call adequate measure of human intelligence or consciousness. It is intentionally rigged so that not only the human subject, but also the computer could respond.This is interesting. I’m not sure either that a human would necessarily be fooled—it seems logically possible for an AI to be indiscernible from a human, but in reality a person could discern the two if they understood the limitations in the AI’s programming and exploited them to discover it. — AJJ
Dude, don't re-interpret the Turing test. Stick to what the Turing test says.You can't tell the difference and, ergo, by the Turing principle, the AI is a conscious (makes it a person) OR, intriguingly, if that's a hard pill to swallow... — TheMadFool
Which one to explain -- the meaning of instinct? Or the reaction of human to rain falling on him?explain — I love Chom-choms
Careful with the syllogism. Not that the computer, if it passes the test, is a person. It is that the computer is intelligent.If a machine can fool a person into believing that it itself is a person, it must be considered as AI. In other words, AI is a person. — TheMadFool
Correct.AI (and neural nets) is just a showy way of talking about laptops and PCs. — Daemon
The way I've heard them being described is like this, if you feel wet drops on your arm intelligence tells you its raining and wisdom tells you to go inside. — HardWorker
Interesting, Proof. Let's talk about this.It seems to me that 'intelligence' is an adaptive error-correcting / problem solving optimizer — 180 Proof
Because the guy had chosen the 'wrong' person to give compliments to. He should save it for someone deserving of that compliment. When he tells me I'm beautiful, I could almost cry. That's how strong it is to me. Because I know he's saying much more than the physical thing he's seeing -- he is saying something inside him that's also beautiful. And he's sharing it with me. That's vulnerability I wouldn't trade for the world. (Well, not the world, lol, but you get my point).When a guy tells a woman she's beautiful and she either says that she knows or gives an unmoved expression that indicates that the sentiment isn't worth much is this just straight up hubris? — TiredThinker
Could be. lol.Interestingly, is free will, if present, like the misbehaving toaster, a malfunction i.e. are we breaking the so-called laws of nature? That explains a lot, doesn't it? — TheMadFool
Random thoughts. No particular point to it. — TheMadFool