> On 15 Jun 2019, at 11:30, Bruce Kellett <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On Sat, Jun 15, 2019 at 6:37 PM Philip Thrift <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> On Saturday, June 15, 2019 at 3:09:41 AM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 15, 2019 at 6:02 PM Philip Thrift <[email protected] <>> wrote:
> On Saturday, June 15, 2019 at 2:43:29 AM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 15, 2019 at 5:29 PM Philip Thrift <[email protected] <>> wrote:
> 
> One thing I might try to convince people of:
> 
>     Physics is fiction.
> 
> Vic Stenger would have said "Physics is models".
> 
> There are always alternative models, and new ones likely coming in the future.
> 
> To find reality in a model (to make truth claims in the vocabulary of a 
> model) is a form of religious fundamentalism.
> 
> I've got nothing against models, or against thinking of physics as models. 
> But it does seem to me important that the models actually work. Or else you 
> are in la la land.
> 
> Bruce 
> 
> We know the Standard Model doesn't "work".
> 
> That will be news to the physics community. The thing about the Standard 
> Model is that it does work everywhere that it has been tested within its 
> domain. That does not mean that it is necessarily the last word, but it is 
> just stupid to say that it doesn't work.
>  
> Physics beyond the Standard Model (BSM) refers to the theoretical 
> developments needed to explain the deficiencies of the Standard Model 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Model> ...
> 
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physics_beyond_the_Standard_Model 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physics_beyond_the_Standard_Model>
> 
> Physicists seem to conflate "work" and "truth".
> 
> That's your misunderstand ing of what physics and models are about.
> 
> Bruce 
> 
> 
> Physicists find some model that works somewhere. And then they make make 
> truth statements in the vocabulary ("quantum states", for example) of a model 
> which claims the actual reality (existence) of entities those terms refer to 
> in the vocabulary.
> 
> That's what Vic called platonism.
> 
> Vic  was wrong if he called that platonism.

I agree. If Vic said that it is wrong in different sense. It is not the 
platonism of plato, nor the platonism in mathematics (which I prefer to call 
mathematical realism, and distinguish arithmetical realism from set theoretical 
realism, etc.).

Platonism in the sense of Plato is more general. It is the skepticism that 
Nature is the God. The feeling that there is a simpler explanation avoiding an 
ontological commitment in Nature.




> It is actually what is currently known as scientific realism.

Unfortunately it is sometimes presented as a scientific fact, when of course it 
is an hypothesis when real is defined by observable. So here, many scientists 
seems not to be aware that the existence of a primary physical universe is a 
metaphysical, or theological in the sense of the neoplatonists, hypothesis.

Physics does not truly aboard metaphysics, except that the difficulties of the 
interpretation of the physical laws can suggest that may be we need to refine 
the metaphysics, if possible in testable ways, which somehow is done in 
experiment like Aspect, etc.


> I do not go along with this totally, being somewhat more inclined to 
> instumentalism —

Instrumentalism is wise, but cannot be used as an authoritative argument in 
serious metaphysics, of course.
It is just a way to say that you are not interested in the metaphysical 
question. 
Unless you are a metaphysical instrumentalist defending the idea that we will 
never progressed in metaphysics, but that is of course a rather strong 
metaphysical assumption, especially at a time where we might changed of 
paradigm, and abandon weak materialism as a superstition, in case the physical 
appearance fit the observation, as it seems right now.



> the purpose of science is to find models that work.

Yes.
But it has to work in relation with both sharable experiences and the first 
person in sharable one, like consciousness, and in that case, the digital 
Mechanist assumption enforces the derivation of the physical appearance from a 
statistics (or credibility measure) on all computations in arithmetic. That is 
hard to compute, but the "measure one”’s logic has to be given by the 
modalities imposed by incompleteness, and that is enough to get a quantum like 
statistics where it was expected.



> 
> Anyway, all of this is just your attempt to divert attention from the fact 
> that your retrocausal ideas do not work in real experimental situations.

I agree. With the Many Histories, retrocausality either does not make sense, or 
becomes just an ad hoc one trivialising the notion.

Bruno





> 
> Bruce
> 
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