Bodhi Dharma Zen
Advaitin
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2004
- Messages
- 3,926
Well they’re not competing theories as they don’t attempt to describe the same events. They are simply incompatible. We just don’t have an easily testable quantum theory of gravity at this time and so it remains outside the application of current quantum field theories. So your lack of problem with competing theories is similarly inapplicable to the problem at hand in this case. Basically we just don’t have enough facts about gravity at very small (on the Planck scale) distances or under extreme gravitational conditions at this time.
They are incompatible, but both, INCREDIBLE ACCURATE in their own fields... so much inconceivable accurate, that it is difficult not to believe they are really "pretty accurate descriptions of reality." Yet, if they are incompatible, one of them (at least) "should be wrong".
This problem of course, is only there if you need them to be a portrait of an imagined reality.
Wait, so now you do see some “need for ontological claims of” at least some sort? You didn’t seem to be conceptualizing it all that much or at all before?
They are implicit in language, this is why I choose my ontological minimalism.
Well since that “model” is “our current understanding of such” (that collection of facts). The only minor change would be “(consensually validated)”. That gets to be problematic both in the terms of ‘consensus’ and ‘validation’ a lack of falsification though potentially falsifiable seems a better approach to me and is ensconced (or at least intended to be) in the stated self and general consistency referred to before.
But who tests it? People.
Which isn’t a problem for me as long as we both get to the same place it really doesn’t matter what we call the road.
(I was talking about I didn't need a concept for any "underlying reality" behind our models).
To a point the results are exactly the same... the only difference, IMO, is that it is easier to have the mind open to new theories if we don't have the need to stick to any particular world view. If we choose to belief less and learn more.
Would pass as what, a fact or an assumption? Doesn’t “assumed fact” just try to lend some credence to the assumption that your memory or observation of the time was accurate by simply adding the word “fact”.?
Didn't get you there.. we have to assume myriads of things everyday. And yes, we are always assuming "facts", there is milk in the fridge, the sun will come out, the threes outside your house are still there when you return from vacations, and so on.
Out of sight out of mind, is that part of your minimalist ontology?
Could be see like that. But notice, out of your mind, does not mean it is not a potential fact.
What happens to the milk while it was just not being observed?
The question have no answer, because we can't know (if we were on a matrix, it would be bits on a computer simulation). So, i prefer to see the question as irrelevant.
Let’s say you put some milk in the fridge, go back and can’t find it. You go away for a few days while a power failure ruins everything in the fridge and you just dump it all without detailed observation. What happened to the milk? What theories about what happened to it are consistent with other facts?
There could be (potentially) thousands of "explanations" regarding what "happens" to the milk.. but in the end, what matters is that the so called "explanation" lead us to the fact.
That’s where your “consensus” comes from. Let’s just take the GPS you noted as an example. A constellation of satellites all placed (and remaining) in orbit by the facts of Newtonian mechanics and gravity. Timing signals that incorporate the facts of relativistic time dilation. Integrated circuits in both the satellites and receiver that, among other facts used in their construction, were at some points during production inspected with scanning tunneling electron microscopes and atomic force analyzers incorporating the facts of quantum mechanics . Just one simple device to you yet it requires that whole world of facts underlying the reality of its operation.
Where this is going? I'm kind of lost. What I mean is, that is supposed to be a problem?