The Fabric of Reality David Deutch
participants — the ‘Floater’ — decides to descend by jumping over the side
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The Fabric of Reality
participants — the ‘Floater’ — decides to descend by jumping over the side instead of using the lift in the usual way. The others try to persuade the Floater that jumping off means certain death. They use the best available scientific and philosophical arguments. But the infuriating Floater still expects to float down safely, and keeps pointing out that no rival expectation can logically be proved to be preferable on the basis of past experience. I believe that we can justify our expectation that the Floater would be killed. The justification (always tentative, of course) comes from the explanations provided by the relevant scientific theories. To the extent that those explanations are good, it is rationally justified to rely on the predictions of corresponding theories. So, in reply to Worrall, I now present a dialogue of my own, set in the same place. DAVID: Since I read what Popper has to say about induction, I have believed that he did indeed, as he claimed, solve the problem of induction. But few philosophers agree. Why? CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: Because Popper never addressed the problem of induction as we understand it. What he did was present a critique of inductivism. Inductivism said that there is an ‘inductive’ form of reasoning which can derive, and justify the use of, general theories about the future, given evidence in the form of individual observations made in the past. It held that there was a principle of nature, the principle of induction, which said something like ‘observations made in the future are likely to resemble observations made under similar circumstances in the past’. Attempts were made to formulate this in such a way that it would indeed allow one to derive, or justify, general theories from individual observations. They all failed. Popper’s critique, though influential among scientists (especially in conjunction with his other work, elucidating the methodology of science), was hardly original. The unsoundness of inductivism had been known almost since it was invented, and certainly since David Hume’s critique of it in the early eighteenth century. The problem of induction is not how to justify or refute the principle of induction, but rather, taking for granted that it is invalid, how to justify any conclusion about the future from past evidence. And before you say that one doesn’t need to … DAVID: One doesn’t need to. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: But one does. This is what is so irritating about you Popperians: you deny the obvious. Obviously the reason why you are not even now leaping over this railing is, in part, that you consider it justified to rely on our best theory of gravity and unjustified to rely on certain other theories. (Of course, by ‘our best theory of gravity’ in this case I mean more than just general relativity. I am also referring to a complex set of theories about such things as air resistance, human physiology, the elasticity of concrete and the availability of mid-air rescue devices.) DAVID: Yes, I would consider it justified to rely on that theory. According to Popperian methodology, one should in these cases rely on the best- corroborated theory — that is, the one that has been subjected to the most stringent tests and has survived them while its rivals have been refuted. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: You say ‘one should’ rely on the best-corroborated theory, but why, exactly? Presumably because, according to Popper, the process of corroboration has justified the theory, in the sense that its predictions are more likely to be true than the predictions of other theories. DAVID: Well, not more likely than all other theories, because no doubt one day we’ll have even better theories of gravity … CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: Now look. Please let’s agree not to trip each other up with quibbles that do not bear on the substance of what we are discussing. Of course there may be a better theory of gravity one day, but you have to decide whether to jump now, now. And given the evidence available to you now, you have chosen a certain theory to act upon. And you have chosen it according to Popperian criteria because you believe that those criteria are the ones most likely to select theories which make true predictions. DAVID: Yes. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: So to summarize, you believe that the evidence currently available to you justifies the prediction that you would be killed if you leapt over the railing. DAVID: No, it doesn’t. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: But dammit, you are contradicting yourself. Just now you said that that prediction is justified. DAVID: It is justified. But it was not justified by the evidence, if by ‘the evidence’ you mean all the experiments whose outcomes the theory correctly predicted in the past. As we all know, that evidence is consistent with an infinity of theories, including theories predicting every logically possible outcome of my jumping over the railing. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: So in view of that, I repeat, the whole problem is to find what does justify the prediction. That is the problem of induction. DAVID: Well, that is the problem that Popper solved. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: That’s news to me, and I’ve studied Popper extensively. But anyway, what is the solution? I’m eager to hear it. What justifies the prediction, if it isn’t the evidence? DAVID: Argument. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: Argument? DAVID: Only argument ever justifies anything — tentatively, of course. All theorizing is subject to error, and all that. But still, argument can sometimes justify theories. That is what argument is for. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: I think this is another of your quibbles. You can’t mean that the theory was justified by pure argument, like a mathematical theorem.[2] The evidence played some role, surely. DAVID: Of course. This is an empirical theory, so, according to Popperian scientific methodology, crucial experiments play a pivotal role in deciding between it and its rivals. The rivals were refuted; it survived. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: And in consequence of that refuting and surviving, all of which happened in the past, the practical use of the theory to predict the future is now justified. DAVID: I suppose so, though it seems misleading to say ‘in consequence of’ when we are not talking about a logical deduction. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: Well that’s the whole point again: what sort of consequence was it? Let me try to pin you down here. You admit that it was both argument and the outcomes of experiments that justified the theory. If the experiments had gone differently, the argument would have justified a different theory. So do you accept that in that sense — yes, via the argument, but I don’t want to keep repeating that proviso — the outcomes of past experiments did justify the prediction? DAVID: Yes. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: So what exactly was it about those actual past outcomes that justified the prediction, as opposed to other possible past outcomes which might well have justified the contrary prediction? DAVID: It was that the actual outcomes refuted all the rival theories, and corroborated the theory that now prevails. CRYPTO-INDUCTIVIST: Good. Now listen carefully, because you have just said something which is not only provably untrue, but which you yourself conceded was untrue only moments ago. You say that the outcomes of experiments ‘refuted all the rival theories’. But you know very well that no set of outcomes of experiments can refute all possible rivals to a general theory. You said yourself that any set of past outcomes is (I quote) ‘consistent with an infinity of theories, including theories predicting every logically possible outcome of my jumping over the railing’. It follows inexorably that the prediction you favour was not justified by the experimental outcomes, because there are infinitely many other rivals to your theory, also unrefuted as yet, which make the opposite prediction. DAVID: I’m glad I listened carefully, as you asked, for now I see that at least Download 1.42 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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