Why the objectivists will never win!

Status
Not open for further replies.
The men and women of science beg the question of bivalence, assume the point at issue, climb the ladder of bivalence and forget they stand on it. The practice looks far more like religion than science. They turn their assumption of bivalence into an entrance exam and fail those who dissent, and they banish them with all the intimidation modern science can marshal: sloppy reasoning, not rigorous enough, unscientific measurement, untrained eye, poor experimental design, won’t fit in a computer, commonsensical, folk psychology, would know better if you knew more math.

I had lost my faith in establishment science and found myself in a type of reverse atheism. I had passed the bivalent entrance exams but in my heart and head still failed them. I learned how to apply the rules of science but did not believe they were true.

...

I looked for an alternative that could challenge bivalent science on its own terms. If science rests on math, so should the alternative. Criticism fails without a working alternative. Fuzzy logic provided that alternative. It had the same math flavor that probability had, it worked with percentages between 0% and 100%, but it described events happening to some degree, not whether “random” events happened all or none.


--Fuzzy Thinking, Bart Kosko, Dr. Kosko is an EE Professor, IEEE Fellow, and Professor of Law
https://sipi.usc.edu/~kosko/profile_1.html
 
Last edited:
@mark4w wrote, “Scientists didn't necessarily say things are simple, but they often did say things like we do know this, we don't know that. They didn't usually say we maybe know 40% about some particular thing. Some of them could have sometimes, but in an argument usually the verify-abilty principle and bivalence would win (e.g. "you have insufficient proof of that" or "a lion is not a tiger" type of thinking)”

>>Works for me! (just joking around)
 
Hi Bill,
I get what Kosko is talking about. If you look for it, its there to see.

If you first look for reasons to discount/dismiss it, then you will never comprehend his point. At least Spinoza had a conjecture to that effect:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/adams-maxim-and-spinozas-conjecture-mar-08/#:~:text=“Several psychological studies appear to,collaborators on the study in

“Several psychological studies appear to support [17th-century Dutch philosopher Benedict] Spinoza’s conjecture that the mere comprehension of a statement entails the tacit acceptance of its being true, whereas disbelief requires a subsequent process of rejection,” report Harris and his collaborators on the study in their paper, published in the December 2007 Annals of Neurology. “Understanding a proposition may be analogous to perceiving an object in physical space: We seem to accept appearances as reality until they prove otherwise.” So subjects assessed true statements as believable faster than they judged them as unbelievable or undecidable. Further, because the brain appears to process false or uncertain statements in regions linked to pain and disgust, especially in judging tastes and odors, this study gives new meaning to a claim passing the “taste test” or the “smell test.”

EDIT: Or maybe its that you are parsing every sentence to see if there is any logical exception to it being true, and thus finding some reason to give a sentence a bivalent judgment of false?
 
Last edited:
what level of science textbook? I have maths textbooks that say the square root of -1 is impossible, which is a simplification until you hit a level where the teacher says 'ok we lied' and teaches you complex numbers.

Yet the square root of -1 ("j") can follow the rules of mathematics and give us repeatable and useful answers. You can plug a complex number into an algebraic equation and get real world results.
 
Where does that claim come from? Is it your own idea, or maybe there is a link?

I exaggerated. It may not be the “strongest” or “definite”, but it is a significant factor.

The work of Leon Festinger is the reference in that domain.

“The Fox and the Grapes” is one illustration of it.

A more amusing example is this one: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seekers_(rapturists)

This blog post also covers some ground:

http://freelancemd.com/blog/2011/2/25/pricing-cognitive-dissonance-how-to-charge-more.html
 
Yet the square root of -1 ("j") can follow the rules of mathematics and give us repeatable and useful answers. You can plug a complex number into an algebraic equation and get real world results.
Again, math is not the same thing as the physical world. Math is a set of rules and symbols. The physical world is not so cut and dried.

Hold an apple in your hand. Is it an apple? Yes. The object in your hand belongs to the clumps of space-time we call the set of apples—all apples anywhere ever. Now take a bite, chew it, swallow it. Let your digestive tract take apart the apple’s molecules. Is the object in your hand still an apple? Yes or no? Take another bite. Is the new object still an apple? Take another bite, and so on down to void.

The apple changes from thing to nonthing, to nothing. But where does it cross the line from apple to nonapple?


Fuzzy Thinking, Bart Kosko
 
May be of interest, https://interestingengineering.com/science/how-smell-affects-the-colors-we-see

Seems that smell may influence the colours we see, i expect it will be found that it affects what we hear as well.
Just to add things in the fire, few know that in physiology the senses work one at a time and listening with your eyes closed makes sense to improve the way you listen to.
I didn't look for scientific references for this because it was handed down to me from ancient knowledge that I don't know if it is scientifically accepted today, though.
Just found a reference that the senses work one at a time from U.S. National Institutes of Healt (although the topic is Synesthesia).
Closing your eyes for a better listening experience seems to have a scientific explanation.
On the opposite side I had already noticed that muting audio off during the vision of a film made me immediately realize the pretense of the actors and the fiction of the scene, just as a non-mediated vision, not "disturbed" by music or dialogue.

https://newsinhealth.nih.gov/2019/05/mingling-senses
 
Just few hours ago I really wondered if in any possible way this thread, or rather the great amount of opinions [and Ego(s)] contained within this thread, could somehow contribute to improving the sound of even one single amplifier only.
I would still have considered it a (great) success.
Because what matters, in my opinion, is the impact that a scientific fact brings or does not bring to the product that the "average" buyer is interested in buying.
I then thought it might even make it worse though. 🙂
But since I'm an inveterate optimist I immediately told myself that it wasn't possible to make things any even worse... 😀


Edit to add: @ElArte
 
Last edited:
Math is a set of logical rules and symbols. The problem is when we try to describe the physical world as though it is exactly as precise and well defined as the mathematical models.

About 5% of the physical things we want to model mathematically fit into the above mold. The other 95% is chaos/complexity theory. I guess the mathematical equivalent to fuzzy logic, something that i first ran into in Uni in the 70s.

dave
 
Status
Not open for further replies.