Clear5Indeed!!! Now someone is getting it (sort of)!And according to Popper's falsifiability criteria (and Popper himself) the Theory of Evolution itself is unfalsifiable (a better example, since i would argue that mathematics is not in the same categorey)!In fact, using Popper's falsifiability criteria the Theory of Gravity would not be falsifiabile either. Why? Because it yields no testable predictions that could be used to prove or disprove it. If I drop an apple and it doesn't fall, does that mean the theory of gravity is wrong? No. It might mean that there is an unobserved force stronger than gravity keeping the apple suspended. So does this make the theory of gravity unscientific?Except I would disagree with your conclusion that being "scientific" doesn't matter. If our definition of science excludes most of what we consider science, then why is that a good definition? So rather than scrapping our conception of science, what do you think we should do? Is there something Popper was missing? Can we save science?[Edited on July 8, 2005 at 2:29 AM. Reason : ``]
7/8/2005 2:26:50 AM
7/8/2005 2:30:15 AM
1)
7/8/2005 3:02:36 AM
are you people arguing about whether economics is merely scientific or not, or whether is it unuseful if it is not scientific? because although it may not be "scientific" according to the strict constraints placed on the word in this thread, it can still be very useful. The initial post relies on outrageous analogies to discredit utility, such as suicide, the point is that economics deals with FINANCIAL rational behavior. Yes, humans may not act rational all the time, but most large scale financial institutions, ones that shape the economy try to act in their best interest. For instance, I wouldn't expect a multi-national corporation to one day liquidate all their assets and set it on fire, i wouldn't expect a corporation to continually hire employees at an increasing rate well beyond the point of diminishing marginal returns, i mean mcdonalds on western is going to hire 10,000 students this year, a bank isn't going to loan out 100% of their assets to a man planning on buying all of earth's bananas, they are acting rationally....and from this assumption, although not 100% "scientific" USEFUL predictions can be made, and that is the point of economics, useful approximations, not innate truths. If everyone already knows this and you are just having a theoretical debate about whether it is scientific, then ok, but just thought i would make sure people weren't interpreting economics to be useless and silly simply because it isn't falsifiable
7/8/2005 9:00:14 AM
7/8/2005 12:58:24 PM
^lol, in attempting to show how math is falsifiable you choose pi. GG. I mean by your own statement you say we dont know what the number is and then claim that it can be proven. [Edited on July 8, 2005 at 1:31 PM. Reason : ]
7/8/2005 1:27:24 PM
Heh, I expected a bit more. You weren't even able to see that trap.pi/4 = 4 * arctan (1/5) - arctan (1/239)There are several ways to denote what pi is in the real world. I expected you not to fall into that repeating decimal trap.Math applies to and is proved in the real world, if it didn't, no one would use it
7/8/2005 1:40:48 PM
In factOne could say math is the only truly empirical science.
7/8/2005 1:48:03 PM
I'd put science there too.[Edited on July 8, 2005 at 1:50 PM. Reason : although it does jump to conclusions at time]
7/8/2005 1:50:02 PM
You'd put science there?
7/8/2005 1:50:48 PM
well, kind of depends on the kind of science, a lot of physics is empirical, but yeah I guess you're right, math really is the only purely empirical science
7/8/2005 1:54:51 PM
Well I view this way, physics is purely mathematical while chemistry is somewhat so.Biology might very well be but we aren't advanced enough to know for sure.
7/8/2005 2:00:48 PM
^x5 eh, I was wrong with the pi thing maybe I should think google more before I post. I still dont think mathematics is scientific according to popper because of its abstract nature and how mathematicians actually go about proving their ideas. Socks`` was right that biology would have been a better example. Besides Im surprised that through out this thread you have been supporting the philosophy of a guy who wrote one of the best and harshest criticisms of Marxism ever in "open society and its enemies." His priciple of falsifiability itself came about in part to be able to reject marxist ideas as being scientific.[Edited on July 8, 2005 at 2:13 PM. Reason : ]
7/8/2005 2:11:26 PM
Mathematics is not abstract in nature, it's nature is to represent the real world. Mathematicians solve their problems in theory because it allows them to use proofs and techniques that have already been proven to work in the real world by past mathematicians. It's the same reason an engineer would design a bridge before he starts just putting shit together.
7/8/2005 2:25:39 PM
communist still study economicscommunisim is not the end of money it just spreads the wealtheconomics is about money, money is something all humans value. To hava a value system is to be rational. As far a "self interested" means that you must a value for everything including yourself.Man is the measure of all thingsIt is his/ her self intrest that creates value and idea
7/8/2005 2:34:18 PM
Communism trancends economics. Economics tries to work around the problem of unlimited wants and limited resources. Communism has solved this problem, communism can control both supply and demand, thus rendering economics useless.But this thread isn't about communism, so let's not dwell on this.
7/8/2005 2:49:06 PM
7/8/2005 3:29:44 PM
7/8/2005 4:20:15 PM
Clear5, well i think you got a bit distracted from my question, so to bring it back to the original intent of this thread, let me sum up what I was hoping to convey. Falsifiability alone is not a good criteria for what is "scientific", because it is almost impossible to test a single hypothesis and get a result that rejects it. Using the falsifiability criteria most everything we consider science now would become unscientific. Instead we should realize, as philosopher of science Pierre Duhem did, that we test a "bundle" of hypothesis at the same time. When we drop the apple we don't only hypothesis that gravity will pull it down, but that no other force will push it up. In the same way, we cannot test the single hypothesis of whether people maximize their utility, but instead a group of hypothesis of what their utility functions will look like, trust, information, and whether they maximize their utility. And anytime we get a result we don't like, we can scrap one hypothesis all together (like whether people are "self interested") or we can adjust our other hypothesis to preserve our favored hypothesis. Like I told 1337, this really fucks up our middle school idea of what constitutes a scientific theory--iow: there is no such thing as the scientific method as it was taught to us in grammar school. So to preserve all of science we must come up with other criteria in addition to falsification and we must abandon the model of science we were presented in our high school textbooks. What other criteria should we add? I'm not sure yet. But the point is that our traditional conceptions of science are not adequate. THat was the point of this thread. That and maybe to teach some folks a little bit of what economics says and doesn't say.[Edited on July 8, 2005 at 4:23 PM. Reason : ``]
7/8/2005 4:22:17 PM
I might post more later but for now,
7/8/2005 4:30:35 PM
bttt
10/5/2005 10:11:14 PM