Dear Ben, Gary R., Gary F., List

wich social constructivists with some reputation do hold the position "that the objects or findings of inquiry are unreal and mere figments"? Schütz, Berger & Luckmann, Piaget, von Foerster, Latour, Bloor or Knorr-Cetina? Foucault, Mannheim or Fleck? I wonder....

Best
Stefan



Am 21.09.14 23:10, schrieb Gary Richmond:
Ben, lists,

A most excellent post, and one of the strongest arguments against constructivist epistemology that I've read, having the added virtue of being succinct.

Best,

Gary


*Gary Richmond*
*Philosophy and Critical Thinking*
*Communication Studies*
*LaGuardia College of the City University of New York*
*C 745*
*718 482-5690*

On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 12:28 PM, Benjamin Udell <bud...@nyc.rr.com <mailto:bud...@nyc.rr.com>> wrote:

    Stan,

    If you think that five minutes' investigation would likely at best
    reach a trivial truth about a kind of phenomenon, then substitute
    'five days' or 'five months' or 'five decades', etc. The point is
    the sooner or later, not an incompletable long run.

    You're simply not distinguishing between truth and opinion.  If
    two traditions arrive at contrary conclusions about the same kind
    of phenomenon, the normal logical conclusion about the contrarity
    is that at most one of the conclusions is true and true for sound
    reasons, at most one is the result of sufficient investigation
    even though both traditions claim sufficiency. Peirce's semiotics
    is logic studied in terms of signs. You don't distinguish between
    sufficiency and claims of sufficiency, truth and claims of truth,
    and reality and claims of reality. Both traditions' conclusions
    might be false, results of insufficient investigation. They might
    both be mixes of truth and falsehood, various inaccuracies, and so
    on.

    Simply accepting contrary conclusions as reflecting two
    "realities" because two traditions arrived at them is a defeatist
    method of inquiry, a form of 'insuccessibilism'. Imagine the
    swelling mischief if courts treated widely discrepant testimony
    from various witnesses as reflecting different "realities" rather
    than different perspectives or mistaken or differently limited
    observations or memories, or lack of honesty or candor, and so on.
    Imagine being an accused defendant in such a court, with one's
    money, career, freedom, life, hanging in the balance.

    Waiting for the conflicting traditions to resolve their conflicts
    and hoping that their resultant conclusion will be the truth, is a
    method of inquiry of last resort, that to which a pure spectator
    is confined. To go further and _/define/_ truth as the conclusion
    of any actual tradition or actual dialogue among actual
    traditions, underlies the method of authority, a form of
    infallibilism. If two traditions don't resolve their argument and
    if you for your part have no way to investigate the question
    itself and arrive at a conclusion about the subject of their
    argument, then your normal logical conclusion would be that you
    won't know the answer to the question, not that there are
    conflicting true answers to the question.

    I disbelieve that you ever did physics in either way. I don't see
    why you'd want to impose such weak methods on philosophy, or have
    a semiotics in which contrary signs about the same object merely
    reflect different "realities"; such would turn logic and semiotics
    into mush. Peirce's theory of inquiry, which seems to reflect the
    attitude of scientific research, does not boil down to 'poll the
    experts' or 'poll the traditions', instead it boils down to 'do
    the science,' by a method actively motivated and shaped by the
    idea of putting into practice the fallibilist recognition that
    inquiry can go wrong (because the real is independent of actual
    opinion) and the 'successibilist' recognition that inquiry can go
    right (because the real is the cognizable). To argue about this,
    as you do, is to presuppose that there is a truth about this very
    matter under discussion, a truth that can be found and can be missed.

    Best, Ben

    On 9/20/2014 3:46 PM, Stanley N Salthe wrote:

    Ben -- Replying to:

    The main idea is not that of a long run. Instead the idea is that
    of sufficient investigation. Call it 'sufficiently long' or
    'sufficiently far-reaching' or 'sufficiently deep' or
    'sufficiently good' or 'sufficiently good for long enough', or
    the like, it's stlll the same basic idea.

    S: Then two different traditions might come up with differently
    sufficient understandings about one object.  I accept that, and
    it implies nominalism. Sufficiency might be quite different for
    different traditions.

    If in a given case you believe that you've reached the truth
    about a given kind of phenomenon after five minutes of
    investigation, then you believe that you have reached, after five
    minutes, the opinion that anybody sufficiently investigating,
    over whatever length of time, would reach about that kind of
    phenomenon. It's far from automatically preposterous to believe that.

    S: But, I think, pretty 'shallow' and unsophisticated.

    There is no absolute assurance that actual inquiry on a given
    question will not go wrong for millions of years, remaining
    insufficient for millions of years and leaving the actual
    inquirers not only ignorant but also erroneous all along the way.

    S: OK if the knowledge in question is not important to survival!

     But fallibilism implies not that the objects or findings of
    inquiry are unreal and mere figments, but only that they may be
    unreal and figments, insofar as the real does not depend on what
    any actual inquirers think of it.

    S: My position is that 'the real' either is not one thing, or
    that there might be several different traditions about it based
    on different approaches and knowledges.

     On the other hand, do you really believe that there are no cases
    where we've reached truths about general characters of things,
    done good statistical studies on the distributions of such
    characters, and so on?

    S: I would not think NO cases, but, given different language
    traditions surviving simultaneously, the world will be
    constructed by each via different models.  So, given the learned
    fact one one must not tease certain snakes, different traditions
    will construct different mythologies about this.  Our own
    tradition, involving concepts of evolution and chemistry is
    particularly elaborate, requiring a highly educated priesthood to
    come up with an -- or even more than one -- understanding.

    STAN


    On Sat, Sep 20, 2014 at 2:31 PM, Benjamin Udell
    <bud...@nyc.rr.com <mailto:bud...@nyc.rr.com>> wrote:

        Stan, list,

        The main idea is not that of a long run. Instead the idea is
        that of sufficient investigation. Call it 'sufficiently long'
        or 'sufficiently far-reaching' or 'sufficiently deep' or
        'sufficiently good' or 'sufficiently good for long enough',
        or the like, it's stlll the same basic idea.

        If in a given case you believe that you've reached the truth
        about a given kind of phenomenon after five minutes of
        investigation, then you believe that you have reached, after
        five minutes, the opinion that anybody sufficiently
        investigating, over whatever length of time, would reach
        about that kind of phenomenon. It's far from automatically
        preposterous to believe that.

        There is no absolute assurance that actual inquiry on a given
        question will not go wrong for millions of years, remaining
        insufficient for millions of years and leaving the actual
        inquirers not only ignorant but also erroneous all along the
        way. But fallibilism implies not that the objects or findings
        of inquiry are unreal and mere figments, but only that they
        may be unreal and figments, insofar as the real does not
        depend on what any actual inquirers think of it. On the other
        hand, do you really believe that there are no cases where
        we've reached truths about general characters of things, done
        good statistical studies on the distributions of such
        characters, and so on?

        The idea that we can succeed in inquiry does not drive us to
        the idea that we can't fail in it. Peirce was both a
        fallibilist and, to coin a word, a successibilist (he opposed
        radical skepticism and held that the real is the cognizable).
        Peirce took these ideas as presuppositions to reasoning in
        general and shaping scientific method. He regarded such
        presuppositions as collectively taking on the aspect of hopes
        which, in practice, we hardly can doubt. Really, one can
        reasonably believe that sharks have a general character
        without knowing a great deal about sharks. They would be like
        other kinds of things where investigation revealed only over
        time certain definite characters common to members of a kind,
        some of which characters also distinguish the kind, the
        characters together parts of a complex character called the
        general nature of the kind.

        Best, Ben

        On 9/20/2014 10:03 AM, Stanley N Salthe wrote:

        Ben -- You asserted

        >But "real" in a Peircean context just means capable of being 
objectively
        investigated such that various intelligences would converge
        sooner or later,  but still inevitably, on the same
        conclusions, rather than on some set of mutually
        incompatible conclusions.

        Regarding suppositions about actual phenomena -- like, say,
        the nature of sharks -- since 'the long run' is NOT now, how
        can we know which version from different cultures is
        'real'?  This is the basic reason one must be a nominalist.

        STAN

        On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 10:31 PM, Benjamin Udell wrote:

        Howard, lists,

        Epistemologies are not claims about special concrete
        phenomena in the sense that they and their deductively
        implied conclusions would be directly testable for falsity
        by special concrete experiments or experiences. That's also
        true of principles of statistics and of statistical
        inference, yet such principles are not generally regarded
        as requiring a leap of faith. Mathematics is also not
        directly testable by special concrete experiments, yet
        mathematics, whether as theory or language, is not
        generally regarded as requiring a leap of faith. What
        mathematics requires is leaps of transformational
        imagination in honoring agreements (hypothetical
        assumptions) as binding. Two dots in the imagination are as
        good an example of two things as any two physical objects -
        better, even, since more amenable for mathematical study.
        Some sets of mathematical assumptions are nontrivial and
        lead inexorably, deductively, to nontrivial conclusions
        which compel the reasoner. If you think that mathematics is
        _/merely/ _ symbols, still that's to admit that
        mathematical symbols form structures that, by their
        transformabilities, model possibilities.

        Contrary to your claim, physical laws are not physical
        forces and do not depend like forces on time and rates.
        Instead physical laws _/are/ _ those dependences on time
        and rates and are expressed mathematically, which is to say
        that some mathematics is instantiated in the actual,
        although you think that mathematical limit ideas of
        absolute continuity and absolute discreteness should be
        instantiated like photons, rocks, trees, or Socrates in
        order for mathematics to be real. But "real" in a Peircean
        context just means capable of being objectively
        investigated such that various intelligences would converge
        sooner or later,  but still inevitably, on the same
        conclusions, rather than on some set of mutually
        incompatible conclusions. You think that some sort of
        dynamicism is a safer and more skeptical bet than realism
        about generals and modalities. But the idea that varied
        intelligences will not tend toward agreement about
        mathematical conclusions is no safe bet.

        So the question is, again, do you think that numbers can be
        objectively investigated as numbers? - such that
        (individually, biologically, etc.) various intelligences,
        proceeding from the same assumptions, would reach the same
        conclusions. If you do think so, then you are a nominalist
        or anti-realist in name only.


        *One man, two votes,
        for Dominic Frontiere*

        Rigid bodies, and incompletely but sufficiently rigid
        bodies, although able to go through transformations that
        leave them, e.g., rotated 180 degrees, and so on, still
        cannot change their chirality or handedness in that manner
        (except in an eldritch elder Outer Limits episode).
        Opposite-handed but otherwise equivalent objects conform to
        the mathematics of their mirror-style equivalence as
        inexorably as a dynamic process follows dynamic laws.
        Phenomenologically, forces are like sheriffs enforcing the
        physical laws. Yet there are mathematical rules that
        physical phenomena respect without forces pushing one
        around when one attempts to defy them, such as the lack of
        a non-deformative continuous transformation into a chiral
        opposite. Sometimes mathematics rules by 'smart power'.

        The idea that mathematics' real end is to help physics,
        with which your wording suggests agreement, was put forth
        by some positivists, one of whom went so far as to say that
        mathematicians who thought themselves to have some other or
        broader purpose should discount their subjective feelings
        about it as merely illusory and due to their choice of
        profession.

        I could go on, but the question is, do you think that
        numbers can be objectively investigated as numbers? If so,
        then you are a nominalist or anti-realist in name only, and
        a realist in the Peircean sense. If not, then you do not
        believe that there is a reliable mathematical expression of
        physical phenomena.

        Best, Ben

        On 9/18/2014 11:42 PM, Howard Pattee wrote:

        At 10:39 AM 9/18/2014, Benjamin wrote:

        Only humans (at least here on Earth) do sociology,
        psychology, biology, chemistry, or physics. I have no
        evidence that elementary nature does even simple physics,
or even wears a lab coat.

        HP: I agree. These are all fields in which humans make
        models of their experiences. They may agree on their models
        but still disagree on different epistemologies, realism,
        nominalism, eliminative materialism, and so on. These
        epistemologies are /interpretations / of their models with
        respect to what they believe exists or what they believe is
        real.

        Epistemologies are not empirically decidable, e.g., not
        falsifiable. True belief in any epistemology requires a
        leap of faith. There are degrees of faith, skepticism being
        at the low end. In my own view as a physicist, nominalism
        requires a much safer leap of faith than realism. However,
        I often think realistically. I see no harm in it as long as
        I don't  see it as the one true belief.

        BU: Being alive, instantiating life, is far from enough to
        do biology. Instantiating mathematical structure is far
from enough to do mathematics.

        HP: Again, I agree. That does not mean that "doing math" is
        the same as "doing physics". Mathematics is the best
        /language/ that we use to describe physical laws. There is
        an inexorability in physical laws that does not exist in
        the great variety of mathematical concepts and rules.

            > [HP] No one has discovered a point or a triangle or a number, the
            infinite or the infinitesimal, in Nature

        BU: In your sense, nobody has discovered a physical law in
        nature either. Rules, constraints, norms, distributions,
        etc., are not animals, vegetables, minerals, or particles.
Therefore by your standards they are not real.

        HP: Here I disagree. You are not distinguishing
        mathematical /rules/ from physical /laws/ . Mathematics
        provides the most exact /symbolic language/ in which the
        laws are described. Symbolic rules are not like physical
        material forces. Specifically, laws are inexorably time and
        rate-dependent. Logic and mathematics do not involve time
        and rates. That is why I say that "only humans do
        mathematics" (manipulate symbols), which they do at their
        own rates. Humans cannot "do forces and laws". Forces act
        at the lawful rates whether we like it or not.

        By saying that X is "real," Peirce means that X is
        objectively investigable as X. You won't use the word
        "real" in that way.

        HP: I do not understand. What I call real depends only on
        my epistemic assumptions, and I am not at all sure that
        defining "real" is important to have a good model. What we
        need to understand is what Wigner called the "unreasonable
        effectiveness" of our mathematics in describing laws. There
        is no good reason for this effectiveness. Wigner quotes**
        Peirce: " . . . and it is probable that there is some
        secret here which remains to be discovered."

        Peirce, as a chemist (1887) also agreed with Hertz's
        epistemology (1884):
        “The result that the chemist /observes/ is brought about
        by/nature/ [Hertz: “the image of the consequents of
        nature”]; the result that the mathematician observes is
        brought about by the associations of the/mind/ . [Hertz:
        “consequents of images in the mind”] . . . the power that
        connects the conditions of the mathematicians diagram with
        the relations he /observes/ in it is just as occult and
        mysterious to us as the power of Nature that brings about
        the results of the chemical experiment." [W:6, 37, Letter
        to Noble on the Nature of Reasoning, May 28, 1987. (1897)]

        Hertz: "As a matter of fact, we do not know, nor have we
        any means of knowing, whether our conception of things are
        in conformity with them in any other than this /one/
        fundamental respect [Peirce's "power that connects"].

        Howard





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