What is the relationship between science and philosophy?
Do you think science has philosophical presuppositions?
The only presupposition I can think of is that the universe is consistant.
I believe that when I drop a piece of wood it's always going to hit the ground. Would you consider this a presupposition?
I believe that when I drop a piece of wood it's always going to hit the ground. Would you consider this a presupposition?
1. Metaphysical Naturalism: The material Universe is what exists, or if there is a more fundamental level of reality, it cannot be determined by observation.
No; that's a conclusion reached by inductive logic.
There are two basic assumptions in science:
1. Metaphysical Naturalism: The material Universe is what exists, or if there is a more fundamental level of reality, it cannot be determined by observation.*
2. The Principle of Uniformity: The Universe follows laws that apply uniformly and universally.
Of course there are absolutes in science.Well let's not forget that there are no absolutes in science.
Of course there are absolutes in science.
"No supernatural things exist", for example.
Don't we also need something like:Pixy said:There are two basic assumptions in science:
1. Metaphysical Naturalism: The material Universe is what exists, or if there is a more fundamental level of reality, it cannot be determined by observation.*
2. The Principle of Uniformity: The Universe follows laws that apply uniformly and universally.
Don't we also need something like:
3. We can determine the laws that govern the universe through observation of cause and effect.
Or does that go without saying?
~~ Paul
Even these are, strictly speaking, conclusions reached by inductive reasoning.
My mistake. I did not mean to refer to any mechanism of cause and effect. Let me try this:Epepke said:No; it doesn't go without saying, and it's also wrong. As is Number 2, of course. Only Number 1 comes close, but it's still mostly wrong.
Exist: to interact with, directly or indirectly, an observer. That's the quick-and-easy version.I guess you'll have to define "supernatural" and "exist".
My mistake. I did not mean to refer to any mechanism of cause and effect. Let me try this:
3. We can determine the laws that govern the universe through observation of the effects that material events have.
So Epepke, give us your idea of the axioms of science.
~~ Paul
Number 2 is often a problem for people. It is not a conclusion, it is an assumption. And it is an assumption that is necessary to the application of science. The way I view number 2, as a mathematician, is that the universe as a function of time, at least right now, where humans investigate it, is a "nice function".
Exist: to interact with, directly or indirectly, an observer. That's the quick-and-easy version.
Supernatural: being outside of the natural world.
Natural: part of the world; included within the bounds of the descriptions generated from observations of existing things.
When science discovers something new, something its currently-existing principles cannot explain, it changes its working definition of 'natural' to include the new data. Thus, science can never discover anything 'supernatural' because it does not include the concept.
This suggests that science makes no ontological assumptions. Still seems to me that it makes some epistemological ones, even if they are potentially falsifiable. Perhaps you're right in that the epistemological framework is something we describe after the fact, that is, after we've done a pile of science and found that it basically works. Yet that framework allows us to keep going without too much concern that the universe is an inscrutable mess or that it is tampered with by some capricious entity. Doesn't that make the framework axiomatic?Epepke said:Let's throw a monkey wrench into it. Let's say that solipsism were correct. It would still be possible to do science, only, those other people would be figments of one's imagination. It would still be possible to do science in the Matrix.
Not relative to me, they don't.So things you can't interact with cannot exist?
In a sense, we can guarantee that there are - such a statement has no truth value within our universe. It is neither true nor false, and simultaneously true AND false.What if there was another universe out there completely separate from our own?
Yes! That is, they would if they existed, which they don't.Would its inhabitants have a right to say that you don't exist?
At this point, I can't prove that science doesn't have axioms. But if it does have an axiom or a metaphysical assumption, then it is this:
1) Whatever works, works, and maybe it's sometimes possible to tell if it works.
The same is true of science. If you have some reality, and you have some tools (even if you just make up the tools, which happens all the time), then you might be able to make a nice theory, and the only sine qua non is that it has to work.
Note that this doesn't mean that it has to work, only that it sometimes does, and when it does, you might be able to tell that it works, and if you can, great. However, there's no axiom or set of logical steps that leads to the conclusion that it has to happen. It so happens that it has, at least to such a degree that a lot of people can conclude that it works.
Let's throw a monkey wrench into it. Let's say that solipsism were correct. It would still be possible to do science