Jerry, List,

The usual reason beauty and truth are taken to be teleological terms is that 
they are values. They can't be given a purely descriptive definition that 
doesn't require empirical justification. That means that they can't be given 
nontrivial definitions. The inability to define truth has been known for some 
time (it leads to paradoxes). I can provide references if you need. For beauty, 
suppose that I claim that beauty is harmony, and don't mean this trivially to 
mean that I will use the words in the same way, and that I claim harmony is a 
descriptive property. My claim would be open to various possible empirical 
counterexamples (dissonance used in contemporary music, for example). Peirce, 
of course, thought that both were values.

This isn't quite enough, since someone might be able to recognize truth or 
beauty, but not value it. Peirce argues, though, that if you want to pursue 
inquiry, then you must pursue truth, so there is a hypothetical imperative, not 
a categorical one. In Peirce's article, The Fixation of Belief, he offers the 
method of stubbornly holding on to what you believe, but you can do this only 
if you (at least implicitly) don't value truth. I doubt very much that one can 
legitimately hold that truth and beauty are required by reason alone to be 
valued (though many have claimed that), but this doesn't mean that they are not 
values. I may not value hatching eggs, but I can easily recognize that it is in 
the nature of eggs to be hatched, and that it is a value for eggs. Likewise, it 
is only in the context that truth an beauty are recognized as values (something 
to be pursued, and end) that they can be fully understood, hypothetically, as 
it were.

John

From: Jerry LR Chandler [mailto:jerry_lr_chand...@me.com]
Sent: September 28, 2014 6:05 AM
To: Stephen C. Rose
Cc: Peirce-L
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Re: [biosemiotics:6912] Re: Natural Propositions,

Stephen:

You simply state:
Beauty and truth are teleological terms
I wonder why.

Cheers

Jerry

On Sep 26, 2014, at 1:05 PM, Stephen C. Rose wrote:


Beauty and truth are teleological terms and valuable as objectives that 
continuity heads toward and fallibility clouds.

@stephencrose<https://twitter.com/stephencrose>

On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 1:58 PM, Gary Richmond 
<gary.richm...@gmail.com<mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Stefan, all,

I think that there's much to be said for your suggestion of our jettisoning 
'truth' and replacing it with 'knowledge', at least in science. There are, I 
believe, strong hints of this notion in Peirce as well, for example, here:

When our logic shall have paid its devoirs to Esthetics and the Ethics, it will 
be time for it to settle down to its regular business. That business is of a 
varied nature; but so far as I intend in this place to speak of it, it consists 
in ascertaining methods of sound reasoning, and of proving that they are sound, 
not by any instinctive guarantee, but because it can be shown by the kinds of 
reasoning already considered, especially the mathematical, of one class of 
reasonings that they follow methods which, persisted in, must eventually lead 
to the truth in regard to those problems to which they are applicable, or, if 
not to the absolute truth, to an indefinite approximation thereto, while in 
regard to another class of reasonings, although they are so insecure that no 
reliance can be placed upon them, it will be shown in a similar way that yet 
they afford the only means of attaining to a satisfactory knowledge of the 
truth, in case this knowledge is ever to be attained at all, doing so by 
putting problems into such form that the former class of reasonings become 
applicable to them. This prospectus of how I am to proceed is sufficient to 
show that there can be no ground of reasonable complaint that unwarranted 
assumptions are made in the course of the discussion. Nothing will be assumed 
beyond what every sincere and intelligent person will and must confess is 
perfectly evident and which, in point of fact, is not really doubted by any 
caviller (CP2.200, emphasis added).

These hints follow naturally from the principle of fallibility, and from the 
knowledge that pragmatism is offered by Peirce as but a method of 
asymptotically approaching the truth of any matter being inquired into, the 
communities of scientists correcting errors along the way. Still, on the way to 
scientific knowledge societies may discover laws invaluable for developing 
tools of at least potential value to humanity and to the earth and its 
inhabitants, for example, the technologies which led to the development of the 
internet or, my personal favorite, modern plumbing.

That we can misuse these tools and technologies, and do so today as we have 
throughout human history, is an ethical matter (quite distinct from the ethics 
of scientific inquiry which Peirce addresses).

Best,

Gary



.

Gary Richmond
Philosophy and Critical Thinking
Communication Studies
LaGuardia College of the City University of New York
C 745
718 482-5690<tel:718%20482-5690>

On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 5:52 AM, sb 
<peirc...@semiotikon.de<mailto:peirc...@semiotikon.de>> wrote:

Ben, Garys, list,

seems i took some things down the wrong pipe (see my post to Gary). There is 
not much in what you say that I'd disagree with. But there is still the 
truth-problem, but maybe this is just a problem of labeling.

For me truth has no little errorbars, but i'm apodictic here like "god doesn't 
throw dices". What is true now, can't be false later. Yes, truth is not 
changeable. And we don't have this truth.

But by introducing the "distincton between opinion and true opinion" it seems 
to me you are trying to reintroduce truth under a new flag. Something is true 
or not true, do we know with absolute certainty that something is true or not 
true? No, we can't and therefore you have to introduce the errorbars. But 
errorbars and truth don't fit together, something is true or not and not 
possibly-maybe-a-little -less-than-true. Samples can have errorbars but not 
truth and hence true opinion as something actual existent doesn't seem sound to 
me.

This Foucault quote shows the paradox "Mendel said the truth but he wasn't 
within the biological truth of his time" you are already adressing. Now 
exchange Mendel with Newton. Is Newtons mechanics true or false? Hmm, i would 
say neither, it works under certain circumstances. So yes, inquiry can be 
succesful! In this little example we had three meanings of truth: as actual 
opinion, truth as better viable opinion and truth as true opinion at the end of 
all time.

That's the reason why i wouldn't use truth and opinion as opposites. I belief 
the better distinction is knowledge and opinion like the greece doxa and 
episteme. Important is wether you can give a sound justification for your 
belief or not. Knowledge is justified belief and opinion unjustified belief.

Is there much difference between what you and i said except not using the word 
"truth"?

Best
Stefan


P.S.: Introducing the errorbars into this topic is problematic, because it 
assumes bayesian statistics. But yes it is important to argue for the 
reasonableness of a knowledge claim and to point at possible shortcomings but 
this just means to justify.



Stefan, Gary R., Gary F., list,

I'm not sure how much there is in what you say that I'd disagree with.

I'd point out that I wasn't attempting to describe social influences on 
research in real depth, but just to indicate that I believe that they exist and 
that I had given them at least a little thought.

"Light pseudo-hallucinatory fun" was just my way of referring to fanciful fun 
in the mind. I wasn't jumping to the end of "the long run" or of sufficient 
investigation except in that sense in which every one of us does in asserting a 
proposition, making a declarative statement. To assert a proposition is to say 
that anybody who _were_ to investigate it far enough _would_ find it to be 
true. Note the conditional modal 'would' as per Peirce's repeated formulation 
of truth as the end of inquiry.

All this idea of truth as _only_ at the end of the longest run, as attainable 
_only_ by a perfect sign incorporating all possible perspectives at the end of 
all times, goes against Peirce's idea that inquiry can succeed without taking 
forever or almost forever. When you think that you've reached the truth about 
something, then you think that your actual opinion coincides with the final 
opinion that would be reached by sufficient investigation. That final opinion 
to which sufficient research would be destined is not affected by any person's 
or group's actual opinion. The idea of the final opinion is a way of defining 
truth pragmatically in relation to investigation. You can't have absolute 
theoretical certainty that your actual opinion coincides with the final opinion 
that would be reached; but you can have strong reasons to think that it does. 
But even then, being scientifically minded, you would not _define_ the truth as 
yours or anybody's actual opinion.

Now, statisticians add error bars to their graphs. One way, pointed out by 
Peirce, to close a suspected gap between actual opinion and the ideal final 
opinion is for one's actual opinion to include a confession of its own possible 
error, its being merely plausible, or likely, or whatever, so that, in 
asserting your opinion, you're asserting that anybody who were to investigate 
far enough would find it likely that such-and-such is the case; or even that 
anybody who were to investigate far enough would find it likely that anybody 
who were to investigate far enough would find it likely that such-&-such is the 
case.

The proposition that I asserted was that conflating the ideas of truth and 
opinion, making them the same thing in the mind, leads, like by having a drink 
or a toke or both, to fanciful fun in the mind, the thought of somehow having 
one's cake and eating it too, for example, some idea of people's conflicting 
opinions/truths as involving conflicting realities, various actual worlds, 
somehow intersecting, maybe in a somewhat magical way like in an old _Dr. 
Strange_ comic book. But maybe I'm wrong. Maybe some people never get any 
pleasurable sensation out of it at all.

The distinction between opinion and truth, which can also be formulated as the 
distincton between opinion and true opinion, is one that Peirce certainly held 
with; he strongly opposed James's idea of changeable truths. Peirce held that 
opinions, propositions, etc., can be true and can be false. He did not believe 
that truths can be false.

Sometimes it is hard to arrive at a firm conclusion about which opinion is 
true, and sometimes something that one firmly believed turns out false, it 
feels as if one's truth turned out to be false. As Robert Creeley wrote 
somewhere, "What I knew / wasn't true". That doesn't make the truth-opinion 
distinction spurious. But there won't be a 'constructive' definition of truth 
from philosophy that will empower philosophy to hand out warrants of truth, 
validity, soundness, etc., to particular conclusions claimed by researchers in 
the special sciences.

I certainly agree that it is good to approach the object from multiple 
perspectives. The idea of convergence is not just the idea of one person 
approaching every more closely to the truth from a single direction, but also 
of various researchers converging from various starting points (and zigzagging 
too) till things fit together like in a crossword puzzle, as Haack said.

Best, Ben
On 9/24/2014 8:36 AM, sb wrote:
Ben, Gary, R., Gary F.,

i've got to start from the end of your post. You speak of the society 
"rewarding diciplines" and this sheds a light on your idea of sociology in this 
discussion. Your sociology consists of conscious actors who reward, strive for 
power, wealth or status. This is more a rational choice approach which is not 
the thing i was trying to hint at with my Fleck example. And thats also not the 
thing sociology of knowlede is interested in. It's about the knowledge 
underlying societal habits. There are so many things we take for granted and we 
should explore why we (did) take them for granted. And this not only the case 
in society it is also the case in the sciences.

Why did microbiologist search for syphillis in the blood? They searched there 
because for centuries it was taken for granted that there is something like 
"syphillitic blood". Was it possible to reproduce the results? No, it was 
almost impossible to stabilize the results. Nowadays we would stop researching 
with results like this. But they kept on trying and trying until Wassermann 
found a way to stabilize the experiment. Why did the retry and retry? Because 
it was clear that it had to be there!

The snake example: The snake example is so trivial and easy to understand that 
we don't have to discuss it. Yes, it bites you -> you are dead in tradtion A or 
B. There is no incompatiblity. But this is not a real world example of a living 
science. Sciences are complex, they consist of assumptions, crafting in the 
lab/the field, cognitive training etc.. They are much more than the simple "if 
A then B" of logic. Much knowledge and training is needed to come to the point 
where one can  write down a proposition like "if A then B".

Nobody doubts that when you do exactly the same as another person that the same 
will happen. "Experiences whose conditions are the same will have the same 
general characters". But since scientific paradigms are such complex structures 
it is not an easy task to create the same conditions. You think its easy, just 
go to a lab and try to re-cook a Wassermann-test! You say opinion and truth are 
not the same thing. Yes, sure ,but how should we deal with the idea of the 
syphillitic blood? Is it opinion or truth? They found it in the blood! And the 
idea to find it in the blood is certainly a cultural import into science.

But there are different Problems: a) Can there be different truths about one 
object of investigation b) are there cultural imports into science that 
influences the content of science and not only the organizational context of 
research. What is organizational context? Org. context is for me all the stuff 
you named: funding, rewarding, strive for power, money etc.. An influence on 
the content instead is everything which is part of the "how we see the object" 
of investigation.

Karl Mannheim uses in "Ideology and Utopia" a good metaphor.  He says that we 
can look at a object from different perspectives and objectivation is for him 
to take different positions relative to the object. Trying to investigate the 
object beyond this is an absurdity like seeing without perspective.

You distinct between opinion and truth. Do you have the truth? No you don't, 
like i don't. We both have beliefs we are willing to put on test. But when you 
write somthing like:

"Conflating opinion with truth seems to produce some light pseudo-hallucinatory 
fun, at least that has been my consistent experience since I was a teenager (as 
I said I do look at other perspectives). It's the fun of absurdity. Yet, to 
build a theory on the acceptance of that conflation is to build on broken 
logic, inquiry with its bones broken, inquiry more susceptible than ever to 
social manipulation, inquiry less likely than ever to be fruitful."

it seems to me that you have the truth and you are able to destinct between 
pseudo-hallucinations and non-hallucinations. You talk like you are one of 
those who has left the cave and reached the light. Ben, i don't really 
insinuate this, because it was written by you in the heat of the moment. We are 
not far away from each other, but nonetheless this paragraph shows we are still 
standing on different sides of a water devide. There is a hair between us. My 
impression is you are trying to pull the long-run-perspective on truth into the 
now to safe some kind of non-perspective-truth in science.

Now, truth is for me a perfect sign which incorporates all possible 
perspectives on an object. But we will be there only at the end of all times. 
As long as we are not there we only have beliefs we are willing to act upon. 
And as long we have not reached the all-perspectives-mode we take in positions 
on objects and phenomena that are influenced by our societal position, 
tradtions and our culture. The point is now that modern science with its 
non-prespective-truth tries to erase these influences in its representation. 
Part of this strategy is to make influences, where the cleaning has not been 
finished, to exceptions or to reduce the cultural influences to failed 
knowledge.

  *   Just take insulin shock therapy. How was it possible that psychic ill 
were tortured that way? It was only possible in a certain culture of medicine. 
A culture where a real phycicist had to cut or give drug. But psychatrist 
didn't have these instruments and so they were inferior to real phycicist. 
That's the reason why they were so eager to use insulin shocks, because when 
they used it they were real phycicists.
  *   Look at nazi science. It is widley branded as pseudo-science to clean 
science from this era. But there were nazi scientists whose experiments would 
hold our standards today. But people say: Huh, in the greater part it was 
pseudo science. Yes, so what? Just think of Feynmans great "Cargo Cult 
Science", it shows that a lot of science today is pseudo. How was nazi science 
possible? It was a child of nazi germany.
  *   Take the scientific revolution. Where did the knowledge of the scientific 
revolution come from like Steven Shapin asks? The "new scientists" laughed 
about the scholastics who discussed "how many angels can dance on top of a 
needle", but the logic of the new scientists grounded on the work of 
scholastics. In the field of chemistry the techniques of the bench work stemmed 
from alchemy. Newton himself was an alchemist.
All three examples are examples of the cleaning strategy.

But back to the two problems: a) Can there be different truths about one object 
of investigation? b) Are there cultural imports into science that influence the 
content of science?

  *   Ad a): No, this is not possible. If there are two truths about one 
object, then it is due to different perspectives. But since the perspectives 
are different there are not the same conditions and hence not the same 
conclusions. But within one perspective the results are intersubjective and 
reproducable.

  *   Ad b) Yes, there are such imports and there are less dramatic examples 
than those mentioned above. From my study time i knew at last 6 different soil 
classifications. I googled it now and found out there are even more and that 
pedologist have lost every confidence that there ever will be a universal 
classification. If you look at the classification you will reckon they are 
dependent on the soil usage and engeneering techniques. But these both vary 
greatly with different cultures.

But pedology, physics or chemistry are not the main battle field. We find 
examples there, they are insteresting and shed a light on the cleaning 
practices, but they are not of vital importance. Like Foucault identified it, 
the main battle field is anthropology. There are everywhere cultural and 
ideological components in the content of the sciences arround anthropology. And 
that is the reason why people in the 60ies and 70ies read his historical 
investigations, which ended in the 19th century, as critiques of the then 
contemporary psychatry, medicine and criminology. He showed what was implicitly 
taken for granted and people didn't like to see that.
All of this hasn't something to do with fallibilism. Fallibilism works only in 
one perspective, the tertium non datur works only in one perspective. It has to 
do with pluralism and the possibility of other world views. And therefore it is 
a legitimate endeavour to search for traces of culture, tradition, ideology 
within the content of sciences. They are not free of them. Its like Fleck 
writes in "Wissenschaftstheoretische Probleme": "It is an extraordinary 
interesting thing, how far scholars who dedicate their whole life to destinct 
hallucinations from reality, are unable to destinct their own dreams about 
science from the true form of science".


Best
Stefan





Stefan, Gary F., list,

I was indeed addressing the snakebite example, just not mentioning it by name. 
If two traditions, two people, two of anything, arrive at incompatible 
conclusions about snakebites, then at most one of their conclusions is true. 
That's what "incompatible conclusions" means. It doesn't take Peircean 
semiotics or pragmatism to see it, it's elementary definitions and logic.

I haven't ever argued or believed that judgments, that two given traditions' 
conclusions are incompatible, are infallible. I haven't ever argued or believed 
that society does not influence, help, or hinder inquiry, or contribute to 
focusing it in some directions rather than others. This sort of thing will 
result in society's influencing the opinions that result from actual inquiry.

But opinion and truth are not the same thing.

Conflating opinion with truth seems to produce some light pseudo-hallucinatory 
fun, at least that has been my consistent experience since I was a teenager (as 
I said I do look at other perspectives). It's the fun of absurdity.  Yet, to 
build a theory on the acceptance of that conflation is to build on broken 
logic, inquiry with its bones broken, inquiry more susceptible than ever to 
social manipulation, inquiry less likely than ever to be fruitful.

A challenge for inquiry and society is to overcome capricious or mischievous 
skews produced by society's influence on inquiry, without keeping society from 
helping inquiry thrive and vice versa. It's one thing for society to reward 
some disciplines more than others. In various cases there can be good reasons 
for that, bad reasons for that, and so on. The economy of inquiry itself may 
sometimes impoverish inquiries that would not have been all that costly and 
whose findings would have corrected and improved the inquiries that do proceed, 
but people can't know everything in advance, and people need to make choices. 
So inquiry will tend, even when going comparatively well, to have defects. But 
it can also correct and improve itself. It's another thing for society to 
reward disciplines with power, wealth, glamour, status, only for producing 
conclusions that suit society's preconceptions. And so on.

Best, Ben

On 9/23/2014 5:20 AM, sb wrote:
Gary F., Ben, List,

yes, it is an extremist position. Ludwik Fleck in some of his texts about the 
Denkkollektive (thought collectives) comes close to this point. But his 
microbiological bench research maybe prevented him to fall prey to such 
solipcism. Also Latours (maybe polemic) can be read this way, but even he says 
now, facing the threat of climate change deniers, that he has gone to far. 
Apart from these two (and alleged epigones of social constructivism of 
different strives) i would say this is a crude misrepresentation of social 
constructivism.

Yes, you may be right that you and Ben are just responding, but i have the 
imression that Stans polarization fell on just too fertile ground. Maybe it 
activated an already existent resentiment?! Now when Gary and Cathy applaud 
Bens post, i would follow them if it was not under the label of social 
constructivism. If we call it solipcism/relativism/culturalism i'd be fine. 
Nevertheless i feel uncomfortable with Bens post since it doesn't try to 
understand Stans position.

Stan braught up the example "one must not tease certain snakes". If you tease 
the snake, it bites you, injects enough poison and there are no lucky 
circumstances that safe you, then you will die! These are the plain facts. But 
there can be different mythologies/theories arround this snake type. At this 
point i always remember the end of Ecos "Name of the Rose" when Adson and 
William discuss retrospective what has happend. Adson says to William: "Over 
the whole investigation we had the false premisses and the false hypothesis' 
but we came up with the right conclusion". Important in this example is now 
that they start with predjudice which turns out to be false. In the same manner 
scientists start with personaly, socially or tradionally conditioned 
predjudices.

All scientific theories have a social import which is not forced upon us by 
reality.  E.g. Fleck shows in his book that until the 20th century and the 
discovery of the Wassermann-reaction the syphillis research was influenced by 
the religious idea of the syphillitic blood as a punishment of god. In an 
enlightment perspective it is important to understand and explore such imports. 
Ben argues in his response only from an epistemological standpoint and ignores 
the importance of the sociologcal view Stan brings in. Sociologically the 
"claim of truth" as "truth" and the will to act upon this truth is a 
interesting phenomenon. At the same time Stan mixes up the epistemological and 
the sociological perspective and thinks we can conclude from the sociology of 
knowledge to epistemology. Once again, i do follow Bens critique, but it should 
also pick up the sociological perspective.

Science is not only brought forward by empirical research and new theories, it 
is also brought forward by the critique of its own social boundedness. Sure, 
the sociological is from a different sphere but since it is from a different 
sphere it could and should inform science. From my point of view social 
constructivism/ sociology of knowledge and pragmatism are complementary, means 
pragmatism delivers the right epistemology for the sociology of knowledge.

Best
Stefan
Am 22.09.14 14:22, schrieb Gary Fuhrman:






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