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Obvious Leo wrote:The spacetime paradigm, for instance is founded on a conclusion extrapolated from observation, a process Herr Kant would sniff at in haughty contempt.Not at all.
Despite being a well-known Philosopher, [Kant's] early works focused more on geology, astronomy, and physics. In his 1755 work, “The Universal Natural History and Theories of the Heavens,” Kant talks about astronomy and two noteworthy theories about the Heavens. The first is his “Nebular Hypothesis” on star and planetary formations, where he theorized that thin, dim clouds of dust and gas out in the cosmos would collapse in on themselves under the force of gravity, causing them to spin to form a disk. From this spinning disk, stars and planets would form, and from this type of formation, the rotation of Earth and the other planets would be explained.Kant always maintained that he was a 'transcendental idealist but empirical realist'.
Quotidian wrote: the notion that real facts can be deduced from a purely abstract mathematics is central to itI'd be interested to hear what Gottfried might have to say about this. I suspect the haughty sniff might have to give way to the apoplectic fit.
Leo wrote:Modern physics is not founded even slightly on a priori principles...I don't see how you can sustain that. The first web definition that I find says:
Leo wrote:A non-physical space can have no physical properties and thus spacetime must not be regarded as physically real. This was a point which Einstein made quite unambiguously after the publication of General Relativity and one which he repeatedly stressed throughout his life.What bearing does that have on the reality or otherwise of a priori knowledge?
Mlw wrote:Returning to the subject of this thread, namely whether a priori knowledge is a tenable hypothesis. Curiously, also a mosquito must have recourse to a "transcendental ego", according to the Kantian view of a priori categories as constitutive of the world. After all, it lives in a causal and temporal universe, too. This is baffling, in view of the mosquito's miniscule brain, which can hardly be responsible for the complex task of the ordering of existence. Thus, the transcendental ego must be a mind common to all living creatures, a kind of spirit enveloping existence, which the brain is capable of connecting with in order to extract its knowledge. It is a standpoint akin to New Age superstitions. It is curious that scholarly philosophers, even to this day, subscribe to such a theory.Well, it might be because this misrepresents what the theory means. A mosquito, or any other kind of sentient but non-rational intelligence, is obviously unable to bring into conscious reflection, what it means to be a mosquito, or to ponder the distinction between real and apparent, or to form theories of the world, or consider the meaning of things.
M. Winther 1
Quotidian wrote: a priori: relating to or denoting reasoning or knowledge which proceeds from theoretical deduction rather than from observation or experience.The spacetime paradigm derives from a single observation, namely that the speed of light is observed to be a constant. From this it was deduced that the speed of light actually IS a constant which is patently impossible and easily disprovable.
How can you say that mathematical physics is not reliant on that?
Quotidian wrote:So it is the interplay between logical speculation and observational results at every step, isn't it?Indeed it is but this is making a monstrous assumption that Kant would recoil in horror from. The observation does not exist in a conceptual vacuum and therefore must be interpreted by an observer. In his own words:
Quotidian wrote: Leo wrote:A non-physical space can have no physical properties and thus spacetime must not be regarded as physically real. This was a point which Einstein made quite unambiguously after the publication of General Relativity and one which he repeatedly stressed throughout his life.I have no problem at all with the reality of a priori knowledge and this is my entire point. If we make the wrong a priori assumption there be dragons lying in wait. Spacetime makes the a priori assumption that space is physically real. Space can evidently expand and contract and bend and twist and curve and do all manner of miraculous things, which is no mean feat for an entity with no physical properties. Has anybody ever seen space doing any of these things? If this assumption is false then the spacetime paradigm is false, which explains why it makes no sense. It is an "as if" model which means it models reality "as if" space could do these things. However I'm not anxious to chuck out the baby with the bathwater. It makes astonishingly accurate predictions about the behaviour of matter and energy and its utility is unquestionable. However it is a predictive model only and has no explanatory authority.
What bearing does that have on the reality or otherwise of a priori knowledge?
Quotidian wrote:n regards to non-rational animals, such as insects and so on,How dare you say this, you speciesist. Irrationality is an entirely human characteristic, as a brief stroll through some of the threads here will show you. Have you ever seen an insect do something that doesn't make sense? I'm a biologist by training and I can assure you that I never have, but I see humans do such things every day of the week and I don't exempt myself from this failing.
Leo wrote:Observer problems have been the curse of physics for a century and this is possibly because for a physicist to be caught reading a philosophy book would be tantamount to career suicide.There are some philosophically-inclined physicists, I think, but they are few in number. I daresay that by far the greatest number of physicists are employed in either industry or weapons research (at a guess) and for them, the whole game is simply 'shut up and calculate'.
Leo wrote:Irrationality is an entirely human characteristicPerhaps it is better to say that it is something only humans can recognize. I don't think that humans are fundamentally rational, or that reason always determines their actions, but at least they are capable of reason, which other creatures are generally not, apart from some primitive forms in the higher animals.
Quotidian wrote: There are some philosophically-inclined physicists, I think, but they are few in number. I daresay that by far the greatest number of physicists are employed in either industry or weapons research (at a guess) and for them, the whole game is simply 'shut up and calculate'.The tide is definitely turning quite quickly and the philosophy of physics is now being very seriously questioned in high places by most of the leaders in the field. The collapse of string theory brought this about and it's not before time.
Quotidian wrote:Nice to make your acquaintance, LeoDitto my friend.
Felix wrote:Well, would you call it sensible for a moth to fly into an open flame?Absolutely yes. Moths are not well known for their cognitive capabilities but they are attracted to light for a bloody good reason. They are nocturnal lepidoptera who navigate at night by using the light of the moon. The technique they use for doing this is called transverse orientation and it relies on them maintaining a constant angular momentum relative to the fixed light source. Artificial light sources interfere with this mechanism and send them into a contracting spiral of flight to the brightest local source. It is a perfectly logical behaviour and this means it can be explained. The behaviour of humans can't be explained in such a simple fashion, of course, but some human behaviours are irreducible to reason by any standards of logic whatsoever. Irrationality is a unique human feature which is not seen elsewhere in the animal world. This is the view of the mainstream behaviourists in biology and one with which I concur. My anecdotal experience confirms it.
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