On Mon, 06 Aug 2012 15:10:17 -0700, Michael Britt wrote:
>
>Great quote Chris: "Everything is physics, or it is stamp collecting."

Rutherford's quote prompts for me a memory of something that Noam
Chomsky said about Bloomfieldian linguistics which I think can be
characterized as being primarily empirical, descriptive, and behaviorist.
Chomsky, in characteristic form, I believe dismissed most of this type
of linguistic analysis and research (as he would Skinnerian analysis
a la "Verbal Behavior" and information theory models of sentence, both
of which can be considered types of associate chain models).
Chomsky emphasized the role of theory over empirical research,
a position that he seems to maintain today.

Chomsky's syntactic theories were to be an advance over Bloomfieldian
linguistics in that he had formulated a mathematical theory (based
on concepts from automata theory) that allegedly showed how the
infinite number of sentences humans can produce could be explained
by a relatively simple theory.  The Chomsky was wrong in this has
been shown by his rejection of his own early theories and the modifications
he has had to make to his later theories -- all to keep his theory of
language deterministic (instead of probabilistic) and uniquely human.

Anyway, more to the point, I recall Chomsky saying something like
linguistics before his theories were like stamp collecting while his
work was, well, real science.  I don't remember where I had read this
since this was easily a couple of decades ago but a Google search
does turn up a comparable statement by Chomsky in the context of
a rather interesting article by Peter Norvig; see:
http://norvig.com/chomsky.html

I quote a relevant passage:

|On the other side, Ernest Rutherford (physicist, 1871–1937) disdained
|mere description, saying "All science is either physics or stamp collecting."
|Chomsky stands with him: "You can also collect butterflies and make
|many observations. If you like butterflies, that's fine; but such work must
|not be confounded with research, which is concerned to discover explanatory
|principles."

However, as Norvig points out, there is much more going on than is
dreamt of in Chomsky's philosophy, some of which is widely if
unknowingly used, say, when we use Google.  Read the article
for indications.

And there are a couple of great uses of the "Two Cultures" metaphor,
specifically by Leo Berman.

-MIke Palij
New York University
[email protected]

On Aug 6, 2012, at 5:14 PM, Christopher Green wrote:
> On 2012-08-06, at 8:28 AM, Michael Britt wrote:
>>  Seems like psychology has become quite the easy target these days.  Sad.
>>
>> http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinion-la/la-ol-blowback-pscyhology-science-20120713,0,1641705.story
>
> Kiss up. Kick down. No accident it was a biologist. Each discipline most
> despises the one just below it on the putative hierarchy of the sciences.
> That's how they maintain their own status.  (Psychologists do it to
> sociologists too, for the same reason.) I wonder what this guy has to say
> about Ernest Rutherford's (in-)famous claim: "Everything is physics, or it is
> stamp collecting."

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