Well, On Peirce’s account (yes I am still reading Peirce) Truth (or “solved”) 
is like “settled law”.  It could come undone any time, but usually doesn’t.   
(Actually, I have that wrong.  Truth is what wouldn’t come undone, but, of 
course, we never live to be sure that that’s what we got.  

 

N

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Carl Tollander
Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2012 10:16 PM
To: ERIC P. CHARLES
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Unsolved Problems in Psychology

 

Eric, 

Re: 1) humming makes my sinuses happy, generally.

Re: 2) I quite agree, it's not so simple.  Yet, one has to start somewhere, and 
the 'magical thinking' pejoration is, by my lights, kinda simple on the face of 
it.   I don't agree, by any stretch,  that all 'bright minds' are necessarily 
scientists.  Science, as I understand it, is a continuous process of 
intensively figuring out what are the right questions to ask and wondering how 
to interpret such data as one can find or generate.  I do not see that it is 
legitimate, even in science terms, to cast the folks who sincerely tried to 
make sense of their experience as living in cartoons because they did not 
choose to live in the context of one's decades of training in whatever 
discipline.

Re: Is there anything you think is a "solved scientific question" or do you 
think the category is incoherent?  Yes, since I think science is about 
rigorously evolving questions, yep, the notion of "solved scientific questions" 
is indeed, at the very least, incoherent.  Which is not at all to imply one 
can't aim one's canon, but that's a different world of discourse.

C

On 5/16/12 9:45 PM, ERIC P. CHARLES wrote: 

Well, to make two more general claims then:

1) I am not sure anyone is able to play the game in the order you suggest. Oh, 
some people can hum a few bars, but until you break out specific examples and 
dig into the details of them, it is just humming. 

2) The line between a tech problem and a science problem cannot possibly be as 
simple as you suggest. By my read, at one point the trajectory of a cannon ball 
was a scientific question, there was a genuine question of how a cannon ball 
flew, and bright minds - people we would now call scientists - wrestled with 
the possibilities (a startlingly large part of the population still think 
falling works like the roadrunner cartoons). I can't see how you think it is a 
"tech problem".... except.... in so much as it is a solved question, it is now 
something that it is fairly easy to do tech with it. 

Is there anything you think is a "solved scientific question" or do you think 
the category is incoherent?

Eric



On Wed, May 16, 2012 11:15 PM, Carl Tollander  <mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Eric, so you've got a tech problem, not a science problem, and sure, the tech 
problem of trajectories wrt local gravitation can be "solved".  How do I aim 
the cannon (or the canon) and better, how do I metabolize my error when my 
initial notion turns out to be a bit off.  Still, do we understand gravitation 
in the (apparently more general) context of quantum mechanics, well, no.  So 
there again is my worry about the notion of "solved a problem", which seems, 
um, problematic.

As to your idea of "the game", my text was in reply to Jochen and perhaps 
others who, perhaps, had weighed in on the idea of "magical thinking" as, 
somehow, a bad thing, rather than Nick's inner universe, specifically.

Carl

On 5/16/12 8:41 PM, ERIC P. CHARLES wrote: 

Carl,
My guess is that Nick can't play the game to anyone's satisfaction in the order 
you proposed. He could go down that road, but it will digress endlessly and 
readers will become sad. The only way to have things stay on topic is for 
someone to propose things until they find one Nick thinks has been solved.... 
and only then will he be able to explain in any satisfactory detail what it 
means (to him) for that particular problem to be solved. If five things are 
found that he thinks are solved, presumably some sort of general rule will 
emerge. 

Eric

P.S. To flip the question (and please rename the thread if you take this bait): 
As far as I am concerned the problem of the path of a cannon ball shot out of a 
cannon is solved. It was solved several hundred years ago, parabolic 
trajectory, a little wind resistance, blah, blah, blah. If you think that 
problem is not solved, I would love to know the sense in which it is not. 


On Wed, May 16, 2012 09:39 PM, Carl Tollander <[email protected]> wrote:

OK, what does it MEAN to you to have solved a problem in psychology?
Are there criteria you can state succinctly?
Where did those criteria come from?
 
If you really can't say, phlogiston will have to do.   Folks were 
grappling with how to describe their inner experiences coherently, given 
all the other things they were thinking about.  I'm not prepared to be 
snarky about how they were (or are) deluded, or ignorant, or dim.
 
All explanations worth their salt start out magical.   Somebody, 
somewhere, somehow, perceives that the best data they can access or the 
best conversations they can find, don't make sense in some newly 
understood context, and makes a leap.
 
C
 
On 5/16/12 4:25 PM, Jochen Fromm wrote:
> It is the task of science to replace magical explanations by
> scientific ones, isn't it? Chemistry has replaced alchemy,
> astronomy has replaced astrology, neuropsychology has
> replaced phrenology, etc
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/mysticpolitics/6333162973/
> 
> I must admit I was hoping we could lure Nick
> back to the list from his self-chosen exile by asking
> some provocative questions. What would Nick say,
> are there any unsolved problems in psychology?
> Is there still any phlogiston theory in it which is
> waiting to be replaced?
> 
> -J.
> 
> 
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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> 
 
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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
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Eric Charles

Professional Student and
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Penn State University
Altoona, PA 16601



Eric Charles

Professional Student and
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Penn State University
Altoona, PA 16601



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