Bill’s absolutism gets the better of him as he fails
to see essential connections necessary for understanding the infinite universe
as he continues to review The Tenth Assumption of Science: Interconnection,
with respect to its demand for consupponibility.
I am ever so grateful to Bill Westmiller, whose
comments are marked "BW: ". The quotes marked TSW are
from "The Scientific Worldview" and my comments are marked "[GB:
".
TSW: The Necessary
Connection/ Consupponibility
"The inclusion of interconnection, relativism, and infinity
in a set of assumptions necessarily makes the reasoning somewhat
circular..."
BW: What you're doing is advocating for particular
features of the universe. As such, I don't think any of them are consupponible:
none of them logically require or preclude others.
[GB: Bill, you have to
follow the logic presented here, otherwise you are simply restating your belief
in the opposing assumptions. We have already assumed the Ninth Assumption of
Science, relativism (All
things have characteristics that make them similar to all other things as well
as characteristics that make them dissimilar to all other things). Obviously,
if you insist on assuming its opposite, absolutism,
you will be following a different
logical train. Instead of looking for connections, you would be looking for disconnection
and finity. That is just what you
find. You were well on your way to one of the best reviews of the book, but its
value will diminish if we need to continue debating its foundation after this
chapter.]
BW: One can have a connected, or disconnected,
infinity; a relative or an objective connection; an infinite or finite
relationship. However, any of these concepts can be construed as being
logically incoherent with determinism.
[GB: We have already slain
that dragon. We have chosen infinity
(The universe is infinite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions).
I guess that is what you mean by a “connected infinity,” while your
“disconnected infinity” is a sort of microcosmic finity necessary for your
Finite Particle Theory. I must admit that I cannot figure out what you mean by
the rest of this comment.]
BW: If "connection" asserts the absence of
"space", then there can be no "events", nor any effects
caused by collisions. If "relativism" asserts that nothing has a
distinct identity, then there is no novel identity for an effect that is
distinct from its causes. If "infinity" asserts that all space is
occupied, then it must be a Block Universe, that never interacts, because there
is nothing else to interact with, so there can never be events.
Without events, there can be
no causation. Without causation, there can be no determinism.
[GB: I believe we already
discussed this, but let me go through it again since it seems difficult to
comprehend. Review: This is the Tenth Assumption of Science: Interconnection (All things are
interconnected, that is, between any two objects exist other objects that
transmit matter and motion). This does not assert the absence of space
(containing still smaller microcosms). To have an object transmitting matter
and motion between two objects, there also must be “space,” otherwise the
connection would be solid matter. As you said, there then could be no events
and we would have your hypothesized “Block Universe,” which would never work.
Perhaps you are imagining that there could be an end to microcosmic infinity—a sort
of “Block Universe” for your hypothesized finite particle filled with solid
matter. But, as Newton and Leibnitz showed in the calculus, there can be no
“end” to infinity, as that would be a self-contradiction. The infinite universe
is infinitely subdividable at all scales. Every successive division produces
two things: matter and space, ad
infinitum.]
TSW: "One
might suppose that in the fantastic world of the compleat indeterminist there
are no causes and no effects ..."
BW: To some degree, you're fabricating a Straw Man: no mystic denies cause and effect, even if they assert that there is some supernatural cause for some effects. I don't think it's valid to assume that knocking down the Straw Man proves the merit of your arguments. Each of them may be "logically ridiculous", but that doesn't prove that the inverse is logically valid.
BW: To some degree, you're fabricating a Straw Man: no mystic denies cause and effect, even if they assert that there is some supernatural cause for some effects. I don't think it's valid to assume that knocking down the Straw Man proves the merit of your arguments. Each of them may be "logically ridiculous", but that doesn't prove that the inverse is logically valid.
[GB: Bill, I was being
facetious. In case you did not get it, I consider all of indeterminism to be a
“Straw Man.” That is why I enjoy knocking down each of your indeterministic
interpretations as they pop up, one by one. That little section on the
“compleat indeterminist” was just a fun illustration of how ridiculous extreme
indeterminism would be. Actually, it is not very far-fetched. Despite your
assertion, there actually are a few mystics who claim that the external world
does not exist, or that it is all consciousness instead. For them, material
causes and effects do not occur. As I mentioned in TSW, most forms of acausality are more moderate. For
instance, there is specific acausality, which is the complement to specific
causality. That is what you need to support your belief in free will or, for
others, to support a religious belief while pursuing a career in science. Then,
there is the finite universal causality of classical mechanics and classical
determinism, which stops the search for causes at the door of infinity. For
practical reasons, of course, we can only discover a finite number of causes
for any effect. At that point, we have a philosophical choice: either there are
more causes or there are not. Those who assume infinity say yes;
those who assume finity say no.
You are right that the
ridiculosity of an argument does not prove that the inverse is logically valid.
As I have always maintained, none of the Ten Assumptions of Science can be
proven true. Nothing, except logic prevents you from mixing and matching
fundamental deterministic and indeterministic assumptions. Except for logic,
you do not even have to believe in the necessity for consupponibility. Except
for logic, you can be like other indeterminists, who welcome contradictions.
Bill, you do not have to accept any of the Ten Assumptions of Science, but now
I think it is time for you to accept the logic of their consupponibility.]
BW: Even if your assumptions are logically coherent,
one doesn't require or preclude any of the others. Attempting to show they are
consupponible is a complex task. Ten assumptions have 90 cross-references
requiring validation, with many more to consider when you compare various sets
of assumptions. A messy "web of interconnections".
[GB: Let me demonstrate what
Collingwood[1] and I
mean by consupponibility. It is quite simple. Examine these three assumptions
and see if you can find any contradictions between them:
Eighth Assumption of
Science, infinity (The
universe is infinite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions.)
Second Assumption of
Science, causality (All
effects have an infinite number of material causes.)
Third Assumption of Science, uncertainty (It is
impossible to know everything about anything, but it is possible to know more
about anything.)
Now, you may wish to assume only one of them or none
of them. Each might stand or fall alone and you could logically exclude the
others. Each of them is not derivable from the others, particularly when we
wish to ignore that particular characteristic of the universe. In setting up
this constellation (a group of assumptions), I was not required to include
every assumption possible. I could have had only one, or I could have tried for
more than a million. As you know, I choose ten for pedagogical and historic
reasons. I chose the ones I did because they emphasized aspects of the universe
I thought most important and stimulated the most debate between determinists
and indeterminists. While that philosophical struggle rages on interminably,
all (including you) should agree that the three assumptions above are
consupponible. If these are the assumptions we wish to include in our
constellation, they certainly are consupponible. It is time for you to man up:
Logically, you must agree that, if the universe is infinitely subdividable, the
number of causes for even one effect is infinite, and if that is the case, then
it is impossible to know everything about even one thing.
Obviously, I am quite proud of "The Ten
Assumptions of Science," and consider it a major discovery. I challenge
anyone else to compile a constellation fulfilling Collingwood's criteria
without including infinity. The whole idea of consupponibility
infers interconnection.]
TSW: "The
existence of these disagreements proves that these statements are assumptions -
that is, matters of opinion."
BW: This is a huge concession to opposing views: they're all opinions. You seem to be saying that assumptions don't require evidence or logic, they are merely postulates. To say that ANY postulate is as good as another is to *diminish* the value of any scientific worldview, which is dependent on objective evidence and logical consistency with reality. To say that all assertions are *mitigated* by arbitrary, unsupported assertions to the contrary is to deny the basis for all knowledge.
BW: This is a huge concession to opposing views: they're all opinions. You seem to be saying that assumptions don't require evidence or logic, they are merely postulates. To say that ANY postulate is as good as another is to *diminish* the value of any scientific worldview, which is dependent on objective evidence and logical consistency with reality. To say that all assertions are *mitigated* by arbitrary, unsupported assertions to the contrary is to deny the basis for all knowledge.
[GB: I stand by that
statement. Fundamental assumptions and the debates about them are made
necessary by infinity. They can never be proven beyond a shred of
an indeterminist’s doubt. Believers in finity
cannot stomach the uncertainty.
They may have given up religious absolutes, but still look for them in science.
I called them “matters of opinion” to call attention to the mechanism by which
we get these unprovable assumptions over which we have so much debate. Sorry
Bill, but neither determinists nor indeterminists eschew evidence or logic when
they develop their opinions or assumptions. Each of us has a distinct
“worldview” caused by our interactions with the macrocosm. Each of us has a
different idea about what constitutes valid “objective evidence and logical
consistency with reality.” The parishioner considers the holy book and the
claims of relatives and friends to be “objective evidence.” The cosmologist
considers the cosmic redshift to be “objective evidence.” By using the same
presupposition (finity), both come to
the same conclusion: the creation of the universe out of nothing.
Sorry Bill, but I never said
that “all assertions are *mitigated* by arbitrary, unsupported assertions to
the contrary.” Where did you ever get that idea? My main point always has been
that we need to choose wisely between opposing assumptions. I am aware of how
we do this. I consider all indeterministic assumptions to be unsupported and
all deterministic assumptions to be supported. I do not consider holy books and
religious pronouncements to be suitable
evidence. And as you saw in laboring over "The Ten Assumptions of
Science," I have a lot of evidence to support my choice. I certainly do
not think that any of these deterministic assumptions should be “mitigated” by
any of the indeterministic assumptions. I agree that determinism is the basis
for all knowledge—it is the only philosophy supported by observation and
experiment. Too bad that the infinite universe cannot provide absolute proof
for that assertion.]
TSW: "Presuppositions become assumptions just
as soon as they are stated—a process likely to occur only when results are not
so pleasing."
BW: You're overlooking the intermediate step, which is what science is all about: validation of hypotheticals. There may be logical consequences implicit in any assumption, but the only relevant *results* are a consequence of experiment and objective confirmation. Absent evidence and its logical interpretation, all views are just flat assertions.
BW: You're overlooking the intermediate step, which is what science is all about: validation of hypotheticals. There may be logical consequences implicit in any assumption, but the only relevant *results* are a consequence of experiment and objective confirmation. Absent evidence and its logical interpretation, all views are just flat assertions.
[GB: You missed the point.
“When results are not so pleasing” implies that the particular hypothesis under
consideration has been falsified (i.e., the evidence disproves it). It then
behooves us to find out what went wrong. We need to backtrack the train of
thought, checking our calculations and reexamining the various components of
that hypothesis. Usually, it involves some minor detail, but breakthroughs
normally involve an entirely new way of looking at things. Hugh breakthroughs,
such as major paradigm shifts, require foundational changes. But, as Kuhn[2]
pointed out, this is not likely to be done by the usual practitioners of
“normal” science. After decades of successful practice, people tend to forget
the assumptions underlying their interpretive approach. Instead of being overt,
the foundational assumptions become covert—people can no longer state what they
are. Collingwood referred to these unconscious assumptions as
“presuppositions.” They do not become assumptions again until we bring
them into the light of day. Once we write them down and debate them, new
choices can be made. That is why I knew I was on to something big with the
discovery of "The Ten Assumptions of Science." The revolutionary
shift from the Big Bang Theory to the Infinite Universe Theory required a
revolutionary shift in fundamental assumptions.]
Next: Consupponibility continued
cotsw 028
[2]
Kuhn, T. S., 1962, The structure of scientific revolutions: Chicago, the
University of Chicago Press.
2 comments:
GB: "... To have an object transmitting matter and motion between two objects, there also must be "space," otherwise the connection would be solid matter ... which would never work."
I'm pleased that you agree with my point, which seems in conflict with your prior assertion that there can be no empty space.
GB: "... For practical reasons, of course, we can only discover a finite number of causes for any effect. At that point, we have a philosophical choice: either there are more causes or there are not. Those who assume infinity say yes; those who assume finity say no."
A good scientist varies all the variables to discover whether they influence the particular effect being studied. If they don't modify the effect, then they are excluded from the causes.
For example, Galileo considered dozens of variations that might affect the periodicity of a pendulum, discarding all of them by testing their effects.
Granted, he only considered comprehensible and testable causes, but he didn't have to test every possible substance and an infinite variety of variations in mass, to conclude that those variables did not modify the periodicity. In essence, he accepted that there was an infinite variability of composition and mass, but concluded that there were a finite number of causes affecting periodicity.
So, I reject the philosophical proposition that "infinity" requires that there be other causes for any specific effect.
GB: "... you do not have to accept any of the Ten Assumptions of Science, but now I think it is time for you to accept the logic of their consupponibility."
Re-read my argument: I only doubt 1/20th of your assumptions. I also agree that they are consupponible, as you've defined them. My only point was that consupponibility is merely proof that they are not logically contradictory, not proof that any of the assumptions are true in reality: that requires evidence.
GB: "... The parishioner considers the holy book and the claims of relatives and friends to be "objective evidence."
But, those beliefs clearly aren't objective, they are matters of blind faith; they are merely assumptions, without evidence or logic. Hell, most of those beliefs aren't even consupponible!
GB: "... It is time for you to man up: Logically, you must agree that, if the universe is infinitely subdividable, the number of causes for even one effect is infinite, and if that is the case, then it is impossible to know everything about even one thing."
Actually, I agree with that proposition, which includes a big "IF", which I don't think is necessarily true: microcosmic infinity (the 1/20th). Of course, I'll have to justify a claim of microcosmic finity, but that's a topic for my own treatise.
Comment 20140526
GB: "... To have an object transmitting matter and motion between two objects, there also must be "space," otherwise the connection would be solid matter ... which would never work."
BW: I'm pleased that you agree with my point, which seems in conflict with your prior assertion that there can be no empty space.
[GB: I am a bit disappointed, Bill. By now you should be getting it. Solid matter and space are idealizations; they don’t exist. That is why I put quotes around “space.” There is no space in the universe that is perfectly empty. Space always contains matter and matter always contains space. What we call space is an area in which the contained matter is too feeble to prevent entry by more dense, larger, faster microcosms.]
GB: "... For practical reasons, of course, we can only discover a finite number of causes for any effect. At that point, we have a philosophical choice: either there are more causes or there are not. Those who assume infinity say yes; those who assume finity say no."
[GB: You are correct that scientists only report on the most significant variables. It is impossible to include all of them, for they are infinite. That is why there always is a plus or minus and you never get exactly the same result two times in a row. You can claim, as did Galileo and the classical mechanists, that there were a finite number of causes, but you would be wrong. Such hubris is not necessary and is not supported by the facts (the plus or minus). Are any of the undiscovered variables significant? Probably not, but there is no reason other than naivety or indeterminism to “reject the philosophical proposition that "infinity" requires that there be other causes for any specific effect.”
GB: "... The parishioner considers the holy book and the claims of relatives and friends to be "objective evidence."
BW: But, those beliefs clearly aren't objective, they are matters of blind faith; they are merely assumptions, without evidence or logic. Hell, most of those beliefs aren't even consupponible!
[GB: Careful now Bill, I tend to agree, but I do not think that the distinction between objective and nonobjective evidence is that simple. Plenty of religious folks believe that they are being just as objective as you are when you express “blind faith” in a finite particle. We only can get our objectivity through our five senses, which sometimes fail us. The schizophrenic who “talks to god” may report that as an objective experience—maybe start yet another religion. If objectivity was so easy, we would never have disagreements, at least in science. Big Bangers see the cosmic redshift as evidence for universal expansion, while others see it as evidence for tired light. Climate scientists consider carbon dioxide to be a cause, while geologists consider it to be an effect. Data that support a particular paradigm are solid, objective, and worthy of publication, while data that contradict a particular paradigm are suspect, nonobjective, and subject to instant dismissal.
My main point is that what we happen to choose as “objective evidence” from among the infinite number of microcosms available to us, is highly dependent on our initial assumptions. People tend to choose the evidence that fits their story; they tend to ignore the evidence that does not. They brag about the times they won at Vegas and forget about the times they lost. They remember the times prayer worked and forget about the times it did not. Some even think that there is objective evidence for microcosmic finity.]
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