> On 15 Nov 2019, at 04:15, 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On 11/14/2019 6:30 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> On Thursday, November 14, 2019 at 7:18:02 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> On 11/14/2019 5:48 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Thursday, November 14, 2019 at 5:34:02 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 11/14/2019 4:20 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
>>>> Newton is considered superior, not just because his theory was more 
>>>> accurate, but because it had a universal application.  The greatest 
>>>> importance of Newton was that he broke the idea that the heavens went by 
>>>> different rules than the Earth.  So "truth" per se is not the distinction. 
>>>>  As Bill can tell you astronomers have no problem with regarding the Earth 
>>>> as stationary and the Sun going around it.  But they use Newton's 
>>>> equations to determine how it goes.  It's convenience...not truth.
>>>> 
>>>> Bill's failing, as I recall, was the belief and insistence that he's 
>>>> always right. No astronomer of sound mind would regard the Earth as 
>>>> stationary and the Sun going around it. AG 
>>> 
>>> Not at all.  They do it all the time, because when it comes to aiming your 
>>> telescope you do it relative                     to the Earth, not the Sun.
>>> 
>>> Brent
>>> 
>>> I was thinking of calculating the orbit of a planet. For stars apparently 
>>> fixed on the celestial sphere, Earth centered calculations are convenient. 
>>> AG
>> 
>> Which is the point.  There is no "true" center of the solar system, there 
>> are just more and less convenient coordinate systems in which to calculate 
>> things.  So you need to ask yourself what do you mean when you say it is 
>> more true that the Sun is the center of the solar system and the Earth 
>> orbits the Sun than the other way around?  If you're honest you will 
>> conclude that you mean it is easier to make good estimates of the future in 
>> that coordinate system.  Why is Einstein's gravity "truer" than Newton's.  
>> Why is the quantum atom better than the Bohr atom?  Why is Darwinian theory 
>> better than Lamarckian.  The reason one scientific theory is better than 
>> another is three dimensional:
>> 
>> 1. It gives more accurate predictions where the theories overlap and no 
>> emprically false ones.
>> 2. It has a wider domain of application.  It applies in more places or over 
>> a bigger range of parameters.
>> 3. It is consilient with our other best theories.  So it reduces the number 
>> of different things we must understand as independent.
>> 
>> A theory that is better on all three dimensions, we regard as truer.   Not 
>> the other way around: It is not the case that we judge it better because 
>> it's truer, because we don't, and can't, know where the truth is.
>> 
>> Brent
>> 
>> So when we see ~200 billion stars rotating around the galactic enter, it's 
>> equally true that each star can be           regarded as the center, with 
>> everything rotating about itself.
> 
> Sure.  You know there's no 'center of the universe' in any current model.  
> For such a center to have any operational meaning would require that momentum 
> not be conserved.
> 
>> This is a form of relativity, let's call it the relativity of truth, that 
>> find obscures the value of evolving models in better describing the external 
>> world. AG
> 
> Except that still invites looking at it backwards; as though there is 
> something called "the truth" but it's relative to what we know.  I'm saying 
> that there is a concept of "truer" that has an operational meaning, but there 
> is no operational meaning to "the truth" that we are approximating. 

Well, it is by definition the truth that we search.



> The only meaning I can give "the truth" is the collection of propositions 
> expressing the known empirical facts; but even those are ambiguous because 
> every observation depends on some theories.   

So let us find a theory which do not depend on the observation, but still 
predict them accurately (of course). Mathematical physics is a step in that 
direction (and plays already an important role in physics), but for the 
absolute truth, a theory of mind is simpler, and some determine entirely what 
the physical reality lust look like.

Bruno



>   
> 
> I've explicitly described how we define models as better ("truer") when we 
> evolve them.  Do you have some other criterion?  Something involving what's 
> true?
> 
> Brent
> 
> 
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