[image: Monkeys]

On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 11:39 PM, ChemE Stewart <[email protected]> wrote:

> [image: Monkeys]
>
>
> On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 11:22 PM, Bob Cook <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>>  Kevin--
>>
>> This is what is called the 100th monkey principle.
>>
>> Bob
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> *From:* Kevin O'Malley <[email protected]>
>> *To:* vortex-l <[email protected]>
>> *Sent:* Saturday, March 22, 2014 7:53 PM
>> *Subject:* Re: [Vo]:True Believers and Belief Networks
>>
>>  This is tantamount to portraying the scientific method as a "belief" on
>> the same par as someone who is impervious to experimental evidence.
>> ***Yup.  Scientism, which is rapidly becoming a world wide religion.  The
>> crazy thing is, when LENR breaks out, huge swaths of populations (fueled by
>> the ignorant press) will credit "science" and will take this as a cue to
>> further scientism.  Even though it was "scientists" who fought so hard
>> against the science of LENR.
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 9:39 AM, James Bowery <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> I just ran into trouble because I used the phrase "true believers"
>>> properly.  This is because the true "true believers" have captured the
>>> phrase "true believers" to refer to scientists.
>>>
>>> This kind of hypocritical projection is standard operating procedure in
>>> religious and political circles.
>>>
>>> To illustrate with mathematical rigor why the phrase "true believers" is
>>> more properly applied to folks often referred to as "skeptopaths" or,
>>> worse, "skeptics", let please note that the mathematical model of "belief"
>>> in relation to "theory" and "experiment" is well understood:
>>>
>>> http://www.aispace.org/bayes/index.shtml
>>>
>>> On the above link you will find a tool for the mathematical modeling of
>>> what is known as a "belief network" -- in particular with relation to
>>> "decision networks".  Decision networks are how rational actors go about
>>> deciding what experiments to invest in.  Note I said "invest in" rather
>>> than the more general "perform".  Investment must take into account the
>>> value of the information obtained by the experiment in ratio to the cost of
>>> the experiment.  This is why decision theory is taught in places like
>>> Harvard business school:  Business is largely about obtaining information
>>> and obtaining information has associated costs.  If you can't treat those
>>> costs rationally you go out of business in short order.
>>>
>>> Nowhere is this more the case than in resource constrained science
>>> targeting knowledge of potentially profound value.
>>>
>>> In belief networks, you have what is known as the "Bayesian Prior
>>> Probability Distribution" -- which amounts to the cumulative experience
>>> prior to the present, distilled in a model that tells you the probability
>>> of various outcomes based on various decisions.  This "Prior" (as it is
>>> often abbreviated) is, simply, "knowledge" -- recognizing that all
>>> "knowledge" is tentative.  The key word here is "tentative".  What does
>>> "tentative" mean in relation to "knowledge"?  It means all of your
>>> theoretic understanding of the world is mere "belief" subject to further
>>> experience.  The sin qua non of a "true believer", then, is a person in
>>> whom "knowledge" prevents experience from modifying their "Bayesian Prior
>>> Probability Distribution" because they refuse to knowledge that all
>>> knowledge is tentative -- that all knowledge is belief.  Such commitment to
>>> belief is the only reasonable criterion for applying the phrase "true
>>> believer".  If someone is open to questioning their beliefs based on new
>>> experience, then they are not "true believers".
>>>
>>> So how did the true believers in the currently dominant interpretation
>>> of physical theory successfully project their own pathology onto scientists
>>> who question the currently dominant interpretation of physical theory?
>>>
>>> Simple:
>>>
>>> The true believers focused on a "belief" in the _possibility_
>>> Fleischmann and Pons had not victimized the world with their "incompetence"
>>> and/or "delusion", to use the characterization now adopted as "knowledge"
>>> by the true believers.  This is tantamount to portraying the scientific
>>> method as a "belief" on the same par as someone who is impervious to
>>> experimental evidence.  Since they were powerful and the press ignorantly
>>> committed to fashion set by the powerful, they succeeded.
>>>
>>
>>
>

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