[HN Gopher] Time Doesn't Belong to Physics - When Bergson met Ei...
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Time Doesn't Belong to Physics - When Bergson met Einstein
 
Author : mellosouls
Score  : 25 points
Date   : 2023-09-24 06:07 UTC (1 days ago)
 
web link (iai.tv)
w3m dump (iai.tv)
 
| Garlef wrote:
| Ever since reading some of Nick Bostrom's works, I find it
| advisable to be very sceptical when philosophers attempt to deal
| with mathematical thought.
 
| b450 wrote:
| It is very hard to read philosophy in this
| phenomenological/continental tradition. There is a real
| resistance in that tradition to plainly stating a core thesis.
| There may well be defensible reasons for this - maybe it
| preserves the subtleties, peculiar texture; the holistic, or even
| contradictory nature of thought or consciousness or what have
| you. But I think a lot of the time these philosophers won't come
| right out and say what they mean because they don't really know
| what they mean, and any sufficiently plain statement of their
| views would reveal itself as either trivially correct, or
| obviously wrong. Here is an example:
| 
| > Bergson seems to argue that even Einstein's concept of time, as
| what's measured by a clock, is based on some more fundamental,
| more real, non-mathematical view of time, time as we perceive it,
| which might defy exact mathematical expression. What sense of
| time does Bergson have in mind here?
| 
| > Consider, for example, how different pre-modern notions of time
| are from ours. When I write about the history of time in
| contemporary times, I always have in the back of my mind the
| image of Saturn devouring his son. In it, the passage, keeping
| and telling of time occurs be reference to love, violence,
| anthropophagy and reproduction. Throughout time, it is clear that
| we are dealing with radically different beasts. Bergson did not
| draw such stark distinctions, but in Duration and Simultaneity he
| asked us not to forget how time was a precondition for effective
| action. "Le temps est pour moi ce qu'il y a de plus reel et de
| plus necessaire ; c'est la condition fondamentale de l'action ; -
| que dis-je ? c'est l'action meme."
| 
| > Einstein's definition of time has none of these radical
| elements and might even be responsible for leading us to forget
| about them.
| 
| This question gets at the heart of the matter: what exactly is
| the disagreement between Bergson and Einstein? And we get a non-
| answer as far as I can tell. I have no idea what "radical
| elements" she is referencing. There some notion about ideas like
| "violence" or "reproduction" being stand-ins for the concept of
| time? and something about time being a precondition for, or even
| identical to, action? Violence and reproduction and action per se
| all take a non-zero amount of clock time, so I don't what the
| conflict is here.
| 
| ---
| 
| Ok, enough rambling. If anyone has a reaction similar to mine,
| they might find a more relatable exploration of this subject in
| Wilfrid Sellars' concepts of the the (naive, common-sensical,
| person-centric) "manifest image" and the "scientific image", and
| the role of philosophy in reconciling them.
 
| tessellated wrote:
| Sorry for Kaku's old age decline, but not gonna waste my time
| listening to this crank. Has he been officially diagnosed with
| dementia yet?
| 
| edit: you are right, I just flew over the article.
 
  | jakeinspace wrote:
  | This is not Michio Kaku, unless I'm very mistaken.
 
    | mannykannot wrote:
    | Kaku is mentioned just once, in a passing remark about an
    | upcoming event. Mentioning him here seems bizarrely out of
    | place.
 
  | mikhailfranco wrote:
  | Yes, Kaku is a crackpot grifter, but he is not relevant for
  | this article.
 
| mannykannot wrote:
| > Q: In one of your talks you mention that the correct way to
| understand Einstein's revolution is not as a theoretical, but as
| a technological revolution. Can you explain what you mean by
| that?
| 
| > A: ...A very interesting question is why and how Einstein's
| work was able to shed its mundane origins and parade itself as
| theoretical, cosmological and universal.
| 
| The "mundane origins" here are Einstein's uses of the mostly
| then-relatively-new technologies of clocks, trains, bullets and
| rulers. I feel that the view Canales is setting out here is a
| mistaken reading of the history, and that Einstein was addressing
| "theoretical, cosmological and universal" concepts from the
| beginning, only referring to mundane entities for pedagogical
| purposes. By the late 1880's it was becoming clear that some of
| the further implications of Maxwell's electromagnetic theory were
| at odds with cosmological assumptions, a tension made more
| pointed by Michelson and Morley's 1887 aether-wind experiment.
| 
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorentz_transformation#History
 
  | whatshisface wrote:
  | Science doesn't have a conflict with philosophy, knowledge in
  | any form has a conflict with people who can write an entire
  | book without learning anything about their subject.
 
| denton-scratch wrote:
| TFA is presented as an interview. It's not clear to me who is
| asking the questions, and who is answering.
 
  | munchler wrote:
  | Interviewee: Jimena Canales | Historian of science and author
  | of The Physicist and the Philosopher: Einstein, Bergson and the
  | Debate That Changed Our Understanding of Time (2015) as well as
  | Bedeviled: A Shadow History of Demons in Science (2020).
  | 
  | Interviewer: Alexis Papazoglou | Senior editor for IAI News,
  | the online magazine of the Institute of Art and Ideas, and
  | former philosophy lecturer at Cambridge and Royal Holloway.
 
    | denton-scratch wrote:
    | Thanks.
 
| empath-nirvana wrote:
| > Of course, one of the most successful aspects of science has
| been to describe the world in a sense that is true without
| relying on appearances. For example, Descartes very successfully
| describes the moon illusion (why it appears larger closer to the
| horizon) in his book on optics. As science progressed, it
| continued to correct for more and more illusions that were not
| limited to the realm of the visual. Thus Laplace corrected
| illusions of a mathematical nature, such as the commonly held
| belief that if a coin had landed heads many times in a row it
| will have a greater probability to land tails. Einstein was part
| if this tradition, taking it to a new level.
| 
| Very interesting quote, and I think in a sense that even hard
| sciences like physics are not only a study of the "external
| world", but also the "internal world" that our mind creates to
| represent it. So much of the conversation around quantum
| mechanics isn't really about the math or science, which really
| isn't that complicated, but around how it can be that what is
| _really_ happening is so different from what we perceive to be
| happening in our minds.
| 
| I think every break through in theoretical physics is sort of
| inextricably tied with a breakthrough in the study of
| consciousness. You have to understand both how the world works
| and also how the mind translates that to conscious experience of
| the world to really have something that most people will see as
| an explanation.
| 
| An understanding of light, for example, is not just an
| explanation of the math underlying electromagnetic waves, but
| also how the eye perceives those waves and translates that into
| vision.
 
  | lisper wrote:
  | Science is about explaining the data, and "the data" includes
  | our perceptions of the world. In fact, that is _all_ that we
  | have direct access to. So... our perceptions of the world
  | include a constant stream of overwhelming evidence that the
  | world is classical, a 3-D space inhabited by objects that exist
  | in particular places at particular times. So when evidence
  | comes along that this isn 't actually true, it can cause some
  | pretty severe cognitive dissonance, and _at best_ it demands an
  | explanation of why the world _appears_ classical even though it
  | isn 't. That has nothing to do with science being "about the
  | internal world as well as the external world." Science is about
  | explaining the data. The (hypothetical) existence of internal
  | and external worlds is part of one possible explanation.
 
    | circlefavshape wrote:
    | Science doesn't explain anything. Scientific "laws" are just
    | very efficiently compressed experimental/observational data
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | What do you think an explanation _is_?
 
    | empath-nirvana wrote:
    | > So... our perceptions of the world include a constant
    | stream of overwhelming evidence that the world is classical,
    | a 3-D space inhabited by objects that exist in particular
    | places at particular times. So when evidence comes along that
    | this isn't actually true, it can cause some pretty severe
    | cognitive dissonance, and at best it demands an explanation
    | of why the world appears classical even though it isn't.
    | 
    | It would be extremely difficult for anybody to accept the
    | evidence provided by quantum mechanics without some
    | additional explanation for how our mind constructs a
    | "classical" reality to go along with it. Modern physics
    | happened along with a materialistic explanation of the origin
    | of mind to go along with it, I don't think either could have
    | advanced without the other.
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | > It would be extremely difficult for anybody to accept the
      | evidence provided by quantum mechanics without some
      | additional explanation for how our mind constructs a
      | "classical" reality to go along with it.
      | 
      | No, that's not true. For a very long time an explanation of
      | how classical reality emerges from quantum mechanics was
      | lacking, and the prevailing view was essentially "a miracle
      | happens" (a.k.a. the wave function "collapses", whatever
      | that might actually mean). Quantum mechanics was accepted
      | as an explanation nonetheless simply because it explained
      | the data better than any available alternative, and it
      | still does.
 
    | 0thgen wrote:
    | well said. It might seem like semantics but I think getting
    | people to think of science using the way you defined it would
    | resolve a lot of these debates (plus many other other
    | fashionably nonsensical ideas)
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | Thanks. Just to give credit where it's due, this
      | characterization of the scientific method as being about
      | seeking explanations of data is not my idea, it's due to
      | Karl Popper. The best accessible exposition of Popper's
      | position IMHO is by David Deutsch in The Fabric of Reality,
      | chapter 7. Well worth a read.
 
  | theonlybutlet wrote:
  | Whilst it definitely helps being able to understand it I don't
  | think it's a prerequisite, you only have to look to what we
  | know of the quantum world to see that.
 
| KHRZ wrote:
| Well history doesn't belong to historians, people can believe any
| fan fic happened, as is tradition. Medicine doesn't belong to
| biology, there's a long traditional culture of alternatives. Art
| doesn't belong to artists, because anything is subjectively art.
| Philosophy doesn't belong to philosophers, who is to say some
| published philosophy is better than some drunken rant?
 
| SkeuomorphicBee wrote:
| > It has become a dominant view in the philosophy of time that
| Einstein's Theory of Relativity showed that the passage of time
| is an illusion, and that in fact the past, present, and future
| all coexist.
| 
| The first paragraph is already troubling for me, the "fact the
| past, present, and future all coexist" is a gross
| misinterpretation of general relativity, a borderline esoteric
| atrology-type view, and I can't believe that such mistaken view
| grew to be the "dominant view in the philosophy".
 
  | crazydoggers wrote:
  | I don't think it's a gross misinterpretation. General
  | relativity does show that what one observer would consider the
  | future can exists as the present of another observer, and vice
  | versa.
  | 
  | As time is part of the 4 dimensional Minkowski space, saying
  | that the future, past and present don't coexist would be like
  | saying left doesn't exists when you're going right.
 
| robertlagrant wrote:
| > Bergson emphasised the cultural and technological context in
| which Einstein formulated relativity and argued that a theory of
| time that relies on clocks but doesn't understand their history
| and significance, is incomplete
| 
| This is hard to get on board with. A theory of time is incomplete
| without a history of clocks? Have I misunderstood?
 
  | uoaei wrote:
  | A theory of time is only complete without a history of clocks
  | if you believe a theory of time can be completely physically
  | correct, period.
  | 
  | Do you know of any completely physically correct theories?
 
    | whatshisface wrote:
    | Relativity isn't even about clocks, and is practically
    | difficult to verify with any but the absolute best... its
    | most common applications are related to radiation physics.
    | The only conflict science has with philosophers is its role
    | as a stumbling block for people with high verbal abilities
    | and a belief that they don't have to know anything about the
    | subject they're writing about. If they had the same attitude
    | towards glassblowing or archeology they would have the same
    | results.
 
    | croes wrote:
    | You wouldn't know if you would
 
  | CreateAccntAgn wrote:
  | It is incomplete in that it cannot replace older ideas of time
  | in all contexts. It is perfectly valid/complete for use in
  | scientific contexts. But the general population's use the idea
  | of time for other purposes as well where Einsteins purely
  | Relativistic formulation cannot be a stand in replacement is
  | how I read it.
 
    | robertlagrant wrote:
    | > It is incomplete in that it cannot replace older ideas of
    | time in all contexts. It is perfectly valid/complete for use
    | in scientific contexts.
    | 
    | It seems to just be saying: your theory uses clocks to
    | illustrate it but doesn't include the history of clocks. I
    | don't think that's quite what you're describing.
 
| [deleted]
 
| jerf wrote:
| I find myself becoming more and more sensitive to this basic
| mistake: We know relativity is wrong somehow. We know quantum
| mechanics is wrong somehow. They're both incredibly correct with
| their predictions but they don't go together, so they can't both
| be right and in the end they both have to be wrong somehow. Two
| of the places where they are both clearly somehow wrong are
| gravity (completely missing from QM, incompatible with
| quantization in relativity) and time (both theories having
| problems with them in the extreme cases).
| 
| Therefore, grand pronouncements about how the universe is
| "really" a static four-dimensional object "because that's what
| relativity says" are just wrong, for the exact same reasons.
| 
| Perhaps even in the "not even wrong" sense, on the grounds that
| it is no different than taking Newtonian physics and making
| ground pronouncements about the nature of the universe. Newtonian
| physics implies things like "there can be no absolute speed limit
| in the universe"; not just that there isn't one, but that there
| _can 't_ be one for the transforms it uses to be valid. There is
| such a speed limit and the transforms it uses _aren 't_ valid.
| Declaring the universe to have this or that characteristic based
| on relativity is no different than declaring it must not have a
| speed-of-light because that's what Newtonian physics says. The
| only difference is that "everybody" knows the latter is wrong;
| the former is just as wrong.
| 
| So in general getting too worked up over what Einstein's
| relativity says about the universe at this level is a waste of
| time, no pun intended.
| 
| Science history being what it is, it is quite likely that if we
| ever do penetrate down to what time "really" is it'll be even
| more mind-blowing than a static four-dimensional universe, but
| that's a problem for the future. (And the current leading
| contenders in that theory race I'm not sure are any more
| disruptive than QM already was. Total chaos space/time at scales
| so small that they are in some sense literally microscopically
| microscopically microscopically microscopic may be vaguely
| unsettling, but to my mind doesn't seem to add anything
| philosophically material that QM didn't already introduce.)
 
  | hetman wrote:
  | This was a well thought out post which deserved better than the
  | lazy downvotes from individuals who have nothing to contribute
  | to the conversation.
 
    | bee_rider wrote:
    | It doesn't look downvoted to me. I think this post of true
    | and nice, but I can't think of anything to discuss about it.
    | 
    | Because of the way the ranking system works here, spats like
    | the philosophy/physics thing will always rise to the top, I
    | think.
 
    | LegionMammal978 wrote:
    | By my reading, a lot of it just boils down to the "all models
    | are wrong, but some are useful" aphorism, but denigrating
    | models' usefulness in a philosophical context, calling the
    | implications of relativity and whatnot "a waste of time".
    | 
    | I think this is overly reductive. Indeed, many consequences
    | that follow from the nonexistence or impossibility of a
    | certain thing, event, or effect are brittle to the physical
    | model being refined to include additional effects. But plenty
    | of important consequences follow from existence or
    | possibility and can be directly supported through
    | experimental evidence.
    | 
    | For instance, Newtonian physics predict absolute
    | simultaneity: if one observer measures that two events
    | occurred at the same time, then all other observers will
    | measure likewise, regardless of their relative position or
    | velocity. But special relativity violates this, instead
    | predicting relativity of simultaneity. As long as special
    | relativity's predictions hold to any extent (which,
    | experimentally, they do), then simultaneity is definitely
    | relative and not absolute. There's no way to recover absolute
    | simultaneity short of postulating a grand cosmic conspiracy.
    | And learning that the arrow of time isn't absolute definitely
    | isn't a waste of time!
    | 
    | Also, I think it's unwarranted to say that just because some
    | consequences of nonexistence have historically been
    | invalidated in the past, all the consequences of nonexistence
    | in our current theories are inevitably going to fall over
    | with further evidence. Why should we expect a priori that we
    | haven't yet discovered a single true invariant of our
    | universe? After all, some observed invariants, such as the
    | conservation of energy, have withstood the numerous revisions
    | to our physical models, and it seems odd to blithely assert
    | that they'll be invalidated any year now. In the limit, to
    | say that exceptions will be discovered to every principle
    | ever is to say that the universe doesn't run on any kind of
    | laws.
    | 
    | And if we do concede that at least some of our current
    | models' invariants truly do hold in reality, then it's no
    | longer a waste of time to study their implications, since
    | some subset of our findings will remain just as accurate now
    | matter how far our models are revised.
 
      | jerf wrote:
      | I would characterize it more as "All models are wrong, some
      | are useful, but it is never useful to use a model in a
      | domain it is _known_ to be wrong in ".
      | 
      | We are extremely confident in the wrongness of relativity
      | and QM in this matter, so using them in that particular way
      | for philosophy is really a waste of time.
      | 
      | One could sensibly write philosophy of the form " _If_
      | string theory is true, then... " or " _If_ Loop Quantum
      | Gravity is true, then... ", because while those are not
      | proved, they are also not proved actively wrong in the
      | relevant ways.
 
    | dang wrote:
    | " _Please don 't comment about the voting on comments. It
    | never does any good, and it makes boring reading._"
    | 
    | https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
    | 
    | There's also the uncollected-garbage problem, which this case
    | is a good example of.
    | 
    | https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que.
    | ..
 
  | whatshisface wrote:
  | There could be a Newtonian speed limit if there was a drag
  | force with a vertical asymptote in v through the medium that
  | filled space.
 
    | jerf wrote:
    | I would call that something other than Newtonian physics,
    | since that would constitute adding a term of some sort to
    | some important equations, but I'm willing to agree this is
    | just arguing about definitions and it doesn't really matter
    | in the end since it still wouldn't be right. :)
 
      | whatshisface wrote:
      | Forces are terms added to the left hand side of 0 = ma.
 
  | mannykannot wrote:
  | Fair enough, though it's at least equally so for the intuitions
  | of Bergson et. al.
 
| theonlybutlet wrote:
| Perhaps it went over my head but in summary he wanted the
| scientific process of discovery in physics research to stop
| because his philosophy couldn't keep up?
 
  | lisper wrote:
  | Yep. Pretty much. This is a not-uncommon sentiment among
  | philosophers. It's the only way they can cope with the shift in
  | the societal power dynamic that has happened since Newton and
  | Darwin and Einstein and Turing and Bell. Science has subsumed
  | philosophy, and the philosophers really hate that.
 
    | AnimalMuppet wrote:
    | But hasn't it always been that way? Copernicus was a
    | revolution to philosophy. Newton was a revolution to
    | philosophy.
    | 
    | Is it just that we're more aware of the current philosophers,
    | who will be forgotten in a century or two? Or is the
    | philosophical opposition actually stronger now?
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | > But hasn't it always been that way? Copernicus was a
      | revolution to philosophy. Newton was a revolution to
      | philosophy.
      | 
      | Yes, that's why I specifically cited Newton. I could have
      | cited Copernicus as well, and Galileo, and a few dozen
      | others but I didn't want to get too long-winded.
      | 
      | > Is it just that we're more aware of the current
      | philosophers, who will be forgotten in a century or two? Or
      | is the philosophical opposition actually stronger now?
      | 
      | If anything I think it's weaker now than in the past
      | because the fruits of science are so evident to everyone.
      | It is plain to everyone that smart phones did not come out
      | of philosophy departments. The niches in which philosophers
      | can make meaningful contributions are getting narrower and
      | narrower, which makes them more and more desperate and
      | shrill. But I predict they will eventually go the way of
      | the alchemist. Or maybe the astrologer. Astrologers figured
      | out a way to eke out a living as charlatans. Maybe
      | philosophers will too. (Maybe they already have.)
 
    | uptheroots wrote:
    | Philosophy can approach many questions that currently feel
    | out of the realm of science
 
      | ajuc wrote:
      | And say nothing of value about them, but sound smart while
      | they do it ;)
 
        | whatshisface wrote:
        | Actual philosophers are not as bad at the false answers
        | thing as some people who rise to public attention,
        | instead they serve the useful purpose of making people
        | realize their preconceived notions about their own
        | thoughts and their relationship to reality are not as
        | sound as they may have thought, by virtue of the many
        | different ways others have self-consistently answered the
        | same questions.
        | 
        | I think you'll need some sense of metaphysics and
        | epistemology and maybe even ethics to function, most
        | people have one (they know what they think the word
        | "reality," means, they can distinguish between thoughts
        | and observations, they wouldn't kill unless they were
        | seriously threatened) but when that is extended into a
        | "let me tell you how the world works" thing it becomes
        | philosophy done bad, which can only be resisted by
        | knowing philosophy done right (the impassive if
        | frustrating collection of a lot of possible solutions).
        | It is a universal human trait to want to answer these
        | questions, even the so-called "rationalists" have a web
        | page with a list of doctrines. The only way to do it
        | wrong is to come up with one answer and think that it is
        | _the_ answer because it 's the only answer you know and
        | that is what learning philosophy is for.
 
      | makeitdouble wrote:
      | I think this is part of why there can be such a rejection
      | when research and experiments come knocking at philosophy's
      | door to refute past discussions.
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | Like what?
 
        | crazydoggers wrote:
        | Love this vsauce video for some examples
        | 
        | https://youtu.be/fXW-QjBsruE?si=FmgmYH8BDWrkIcMJ
        | 
        | There's still a lot of value in philosophy when we use it
        | to think about how we structure and rationalize the
        | world.
        | 
        | Even if science gives us ever better models of the
        | underlying reality of the universe, there's still the
        | understanding of how we conceptualize that reality and
        | what it means to us. Specifically in ways that don't
        | require religion or supernatural beings, nor in purely
        | psychological means of perception or physiology.
        | 
        | I think of it as the study of the emergent properties of
        | complex information processing. It can do things like
        | help us talk about the minds of others, for example
        | future AI, potential extraterrestrial intelligences, or
        | even other terrestrial intelligences (dolphins, octopus,
        | etc)
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | You might enjoy this:
        | 
        | https://blog.rongarret.info/2015/02/31-flavors-of-
        | ontology.h...
 
        | crazydoggers wrote:
        | Love it. I like that curve ball last paragraph..
        | unexpected yet follows perfectly.
 
        | spookthesunset wrote:
        | How do you believe the results you are getting? What
        | makes such a belief justified?
        | 
        | What is the nature of consciousness?
        | 
        | What are things beautiful? What makes something
        | ascetically pleasing.
        | 
        | Why any of this exists at all?
        | 
        | What is the purpose of this existence?
        | 
        | Is something ethical? Science can provide answer about
        | consequences of an action but cannot determine if said
        | action is moral or ethical.
        | 
        | ... science is not a book of facts. It is merely a
        | process for testing a hypothesis. It is not a replacement
        | for philosophy, it is underpinned by philosophy.
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | Those are all very good questions, and I can't do them
        | justice in an HN comment. But here's a first cut:
        | 
        | > How do you believe the results you are getting? What
        | makes such a belief justified?
        | 
        | Read David Deutsch "The Fabric of Reality" chapter 7.
        | 
        | > What is the nature of consciousness?
        | 
        | Read Daniel Dennett, "Consciousness Explained".
        | 
        | > What are things beautiful? What makes something
        | ascetically pleasing.
        | 
        | Read Richard Dawkins, "The Selfish Gene" (and, if you
        | want to get deep into these weeds, "The Extended
        | Phenotype").
        | 
        | > Why any of this exists at all?
        | 
        | What makes you think that any of this does exist at all?
        | 
        | > What is the purpose of this existence?
        | 
        | What makes you think that this existence has a purpose?
        | 
        | > Is something ethical? Science can provide answer about
        | consequences of an action but cannot determine if said
        | action is moral or ethical.
        | 
        | Read "The Evolution of Cooperation" by Robert Axelrod.
        | (The Selfish Gene addresses this as well.)
        | 
        | > science is not a book of facts.
        | 
        | That's true.
        | 
        | > It is merely a process for testing a hypothesis.
        | 
        | No, it's not "merely" that. It is a process for producing
        | good explanations that account for observations. That
        | turns out to be tremendously powerful.
        | 
        | > It is not a replacement for philosophy, it is
        | underpinned by philosophy.
        | 
        | No, it isn't. The existence of philosophy (and
        | philosophers!) can be explained by science.
 
        | dventimi wrote:
        | Few scientists try to answer these questions for me. I
        | expect philosophers to have as much humility.
 
        | username332211 wrote:
        | On your last question ethics in particular is rather
        | interesting. I think it's the field where the decline of
        | philosophy is most obvious.
        | 
        | Ethics is supposed to answer real-life questions, like
        | "How do I live a moral life?".
        | 
        | Yet philosophical movements, that actually tired to
        | answer such questions, like the stoics and the epicureans
        | are long gone. When you read on the actual writings of
        | contemporary philosophers you'd see impossible moral
        | standards - "It takes 5 dollars to save a starving
        | African child, a night out with friends is the equivalent
        | to abandoning a bus of drowning children to their
        | deaths"[1]
        | 
        | It's impossible to live by such philosophy, except for
        | those that think of themselves as some sort of creature
        | of pure evil who cares nothing of right and wrong.
        | 
        | Because philosophy is useless as a guidance to life,
        | right and wrong are now decided by the encyclical, the
        | fatwa and the resolutions at the party congress,
        | depending on your religion.
        | 
        | [1] https://daily-philosophy.com/peter-singers-drowning-
        | child/
 
        | whatshisface wrote:
        | Maybe living impassively at the top of a rich world
        | hegemony while children are starving is wrong but we are
        | too used to it to notice.
 
        | username332211 wrote:
        | Ohh, it's not just the rich world that's guilty. Do you
        | think there are no bars in Haiti? Do you think they don't
        | waste stuff on "personal luxuries" in Bangladesh? Do you
        | think they don't waste their time and resources on
        | shopping malls in Ethiopia? They waste resources that
        | could have gone to the malnourished children of their own
        | country!
        | 
        | Monsters, the lot of them, just as bad as the rich-
        | worlders. _Ethics demands_ we _all_ live joyless lives of
        | endless toil until every child is fed.
 
        | esafak wrote:
        | > "It takes 5 dollars to save a starving African child, a
        | night out with friends is the equivalent to abandoning a
        | bus of drowning children to their deaths".
        | 
        | These philosophical thought experiments are too
        | simplistic to offer any guidance. Five dollars does not
        | save any starving child; he will need food for the rest
        | of his childhood. And they also neglect the social aspect
        | of the problem. What if the whole neighborhood or country
        | is poor? It is more sensible to attack this problem using
        | the tools of developmental economics; how can we
        | alleviate the problem for everyone over time?
 
        | username332211 wrote:
        | I completely agree. Funnily enough, the first published
        | work of economics Glasgow professor of moral philosophy
        | wrote a book about systemic issues. Before that,
        | philosophers from Aristotle to Hume dealt with matters
        | like credit and currency as ethical issues.
        | 
        | The only think I'd have to add is I don't think the
        | thought experiment is merely "too simplistic". It's an
        | evil sophistry designed to make people believe ethical
        | conduct is unattainable.
 
        | whatshisface wrote:
        | Rich people living in third world countries would
        | definitely be included in that especially because rather
        | than some vague "foreign policy" being the causal link
        | for culpability they can often be the corrupt individuals
        | creating the problem themselves. Saying "people who live
        | in penthouses next to Indian slums might be living their
        | life wrong too" is not exactly an expression of
        | disagreement.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | username332211 wrote:
        | Perhaps I was unclear. I wasn't talking about rich
        | people. Poor people need to enjoy life just as much as
        | rich people, if not more. Who spends more time at bars,
        | the rich or the poor?
        | 
        | Do you think an Ethiopian community is immoral because it
        | puts effort into having enjoyable festivals, dignified
        | funerals and large weddings? Think of all the effort that
        | could have gone to the starving children!
        | 
        | Here's a more practical question for you. There's a
        | homeless guy who hangs around my place. He's definitely
        | not malnourished, in fact he's somewhat fat. If I give
        | him a dollar, should he return it to me with instructions
        | to give it to African children instead?
 
        | whatshisface wrote:
        | Having a party when there are people starving outside may
        | actually be immoral, yes, even in Ethiopia. I'm not
        | basing my argument on "Americans bad" so much as
        | admitting there could be something to this whole "how are
        | you so able to ignore the extreme suffering of others?"
        | question... Maybe we would be better if none of us could
        | do that.
 
    | uoaei wrote:
    | On the other hand, the hubris of physicists to call their
    | trade a replacement for philosophy exposes the fatal flaw in
    | scientism.
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | Why is that a fatal flaw?
 
        | hetman wrote:
        | It's also worth adding that the scientific method is
        | fundamentally based on unprovable axiomatic assumptions.
        | In other words it's still philosophy all the way down. To
        | be clear, I don't think all philosophical ideas are
        | equally valid and this particular set of axioms has
        | proven quite useful in practice, but at best all we can
        | really say is that it provides a user window for
        | examining reality. We don't know how wide that window
        | happens to be and how much of reality we can see through
        | it.
        | 
        | We don't even know if the scientific method is the best
        | it could be in what we use it for. After all, it was only
        | expanded with the idea of falsification in the 20th
        | century yet we were still doing useful science before
        | than.
 
        | mannykannot wrote:
        | In practice, science is, and has been, rather flexible
        | about its assumptions, and, ironically, has been
        | criticized for that by philosophers - and yet it has been
        | remarkably successful, arguably because it gives a lot of
        | weight to empiricism and not so much to debating axioms.
        | 
        | > We don't know how wide that window happens to be and
        | how much of reality we can see through it... We don't
        | even know if the scientific method is the best it could
        | be in what we use it for.
        | 
        | It is telling that these sentiments are not followed by
        | something beginning "analytical philosophy, in
        | contrast..."
        | 
        | > [Science] was only expanded with the idea of
        | falsification in the 20th century yet we were still doing
        | useful science before than.
        | 
        | It was doing de facto, though somewhat ad hoc,
        | falsification long before Popper focused his attention
        | it. The philosophy of science is much more descriptive
        | than prescriptive.
        | 
        | Having said this, you may be surprised to learn that I
        | spend a some of my free time reading and thinking about
        | various aspects of philosophy. I must say, however, that
        | I feel that western metaphysics lost its way in its
        | attempt to address fundamental questions through the
        | analysis of language.
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | > It's also worth adding that the scientific method is
        | fundamentally based on unprovable axiomatic assumptions.
        | 
        | No, it isn't. This is a very common myth, but it is in
        | fact a myth. Science has no axioms.
        | 
        | > We don't even know if the scientific method is the best
        | it could be in what we use it for.
        | 
        | That's true. But what we do know is that the scientific
        | method is _vastly_ more effective than anything else
        | humans have come up with in helping us navigate our
        | existence and exercise some degree of control over our
        | destiny.
        | 
        | > After all, it was only expanded with the idea of
        | falsification in the 20th century yet we were still doing
        | useful science before than.
        | 
        | That is also true, and that is one of the reasons to
        | believe that the scientific method is special and
        | unlikely to be improved upon. It's not just an arbitrary
        | choice. It is privileged, and there is actually reason to
        | believe that this privileged status is a reflection of
        | some underlying reality. But this is not an _axiom_ ,
        | it's a _result_.
 
        | rz2k wrote:
        | Isn't scientism the idea that we have a set of knowledge
        | that is conclusively known along with a heavy reliance on
        | authority, while science is about inquiry,
        | experimentation and searching for theories?
        | 
        | A physicists dismissing philosophy as out of date implies
        | that we are already on the optimum path to discovering
        | the remaining knowledge about the universe to be learned.
 
        | uoaei wrote:
        | > A physicists dismissing philosophy as out of date
        | implies that we are already on the optimum path to
        | discovering the remaining knowledge about the universe to
        | be learned.
        | 
        | It implies they _believe_ that. Which is ultimately a
        | dogmatic ideology. That is why I call it scientism and
        | not science. Obviously we cannot know if that is the case
        | or not because of the nature of time (the future holds
        | answers that the past cannot, yet remains inaccessible to
        | beings such as us). There is no good reason to believe
        | that our theories aren 't missing some crucial aspects
        | which were already understood and subsequently lost.
        | 
        | I myself am a physicist. I once had the confidence to
        | assert that physics is the One True Way to understand
        | life, the universe, and everything and that progress is
        | inevitable (Newton's "shoulders of giants"). I no longer
        | believe this is the case because of my explorations
        | through the traditions of thought present in philosophy.
        | For sure I can cram the lines of discourse that most
        | interest me into quasi-physics-based theories (post-
        | structuralism is especially interesting as a systems
        | person) but that's not to say that physics can represent
        | everything there is to know. Physics is a language just
        | like any other and there are some ideas that physics
        | simply cannot express.
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | No, scientism is simply the belief that the scientific
        | method is applicable to all areas of intellectual
        | inquiry, and that it's the most productive such method.
        | The dismissal of philosophy is a straightforward
        | corollary to that belief.
        | 
        | Note that the scientific method is self-correcting even
        | in this regard: if someone can demonstrate a more
        | productive method of inquiry, someone following the
        | scientific method would accept that new method, just as
        | they would accept _any_ hypothesis that is demonstrably
        | superior to the current state of the art.
 
        | AnimalMuppet wrote:
        | Because even if you have experimental results in your
        | favor, you still need epistemology to tell you why you
        | can believe the results of the experiments. And you can't
        | derive epistemology _from_ experiments.
        | 
        | Logical positivism tried to do this, and failed. Michael
        | Polanyi's _Personal Knowledge_ pretty much killed logical
        | positivism, because he showed that no scientist is in the
        | fully objective position that was required to set up and
        | evaluate the experiments.
 
        | bee_rider wrote:
        | Why is that flaw fatal? Just borrow epistemology from the
        | philosophers of whatever. Purity and inter-field spats
        | are stupid, scientists just want the results.
 
        | shellac wrote:
        | > Michael Polanyi's _Personal Knowledge_ pretty much
        | killed logical positivism, because he showed that no
        | scientist is in the fully objective position that was
        | required to set up and evaluate the experiments.
        | 
        | That's an unusual claim. It's typically attributed to the
        | criticisms of Popper and Quine, after which the
        | foundations were undermined.
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | > you still need epistemology to tell you why you can
        | believe the results of the experiments
        | 
        | No, you don't. This is a common mistake. Science is not
        | about _knowledge_ , it's about _explanations_. The whole
        | idea of  "knowledge" is just part of a vast web of
        | _explanations_ that turn out to be exceptionally good at
        | accounting for the data.
        | 
        | > logical positivism
        | 
        | The mistake of logical positivism is the unjustified
        | assumption that there exists such a thing as "truth", and
        | that this thing is accessible to us by thinking. It
        | isn't. It's a consequence of the empirical observation
        | that the scientific method converges towards something.
        | "Truth" is just a label that we attach to the thing that
        | it's converging to (or at least appears to be converging
        | to -- we won't know if that limit actually exists until
        | we get there).
 
        | uoaei wrote:
        | Then it's a common mistake that many scientists and
        | technologists make, which further informs their
        | worldviews and ideologies.
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | Yes, that's true. Many people, including scientists,
        | don't actually understand how the scientific method
        | works.
        | 
        | However, there is also another possibility, and that is
        | that the word "knowledge" is being used in two different
        | ways. "Knowledge" in science is often used as a shorthand
        | for "The best explanation we currently have in hand, one
        | which has so far withstood all attempts to falsify it."
        | This is different from the kind of knowledge studied by
        | epistemology, but it is a not-entirely-unreasonable use
        | of the word.
 
        | hetman wrote:
        | How do you define "explanation"?
 
        | dventimi wrote:
        | Speech which conjures in the mind of the listener a model
        | of the world with which they can make deductions about
        | their sensory experiences
 
        | lisper wrote:
        | https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-
        | explanation/
 
        | dventimi wrote:
        | Explain "believe."
 
        | borlanco wrote:
        | "Believe" means you are willing to consider some results
        | as premises for your next deduction.
 
        | dventimi wrote:
        | What I'm willing to do is very personal. Personally, I
        | don't need epistemology to judge whether I'm willing to
        | consider some results for my next deduction, and no
        | philosopher is in a position to tell me otherwise.
 
        | borlanco wrote:
        | What you say means you're a philosopher too!
        | 
        | Seriously, philosophy is a personal endeavor. You derive
        | your own, make your own deductions, and you believe in
        | them. That makes it valid for you.
        | 
        | But ... if your philosophy is about how the world works,
        | about some aspects of reality, and you want to ensure
        | that both your philosophy and reality agree, then you can
        | choose to do science:
        | 
        | 1. From your philosophy, derive some hypothesis.
        | 
        | 2. Check you hypothesis with some experiment.
 
        | dventimi wrote:
        | Not to me, it doesn't. To me, philosophy is a profession
        | inhabited by professionals working in academic
        | departments, teaching students, and publishing in
        | journals. That's not me. I'm just a human doing human
        | things. We've existed for millions of years before
        | philosophers and their departments and their journals
        | came along.
 
      | ajuc wrote:
      | We've seen countless subjects on which philosophers argued
      | for centuries solved by physicists and mathematicians.
      | 
      | We've yet to see one example going the other way.
      | 
      | At best philosophers provide interesting questions. At
      | worst they are just paperpushers categorizing the work
      | others did into pointless and arbitrary categories and
      | arguing about them :)
 
      | bee_rider wrote:
      | What's scientism?
 
        | mellosouls wrote:
        | It has a couple of definitions but the relevant one here
        | is a blinkered, complacent over-confident belief in the
        | power of science to explain everything, often accompanied
        | by an ignorant dismissal of philosophy.
        | 
        | More here:
        | 
        | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientism
 
        | RichardCA wrote:
        | It's nearly always a strawman, waiting for someone to
        | come along and rescue it with a steelman. And that seems
        | to be what Bergson is trying to do.
        | 
        | I mean yes, of course, the undergraduate Physics student
        | is being handed a packet of metaphysics when they get the
        | Einstein lectures on SR and GR. And it's very seductive,
        | if you can crack through enough of the math to hear the
        | music in it. The idea that Einstein is a "continuator of
        | Descartes" just means you can learn all that stuff, get
        | A's in every single class at Cal Tech or someplace else,
        | and in the end you are still left with the exact same
        | Dualism.
        | 
        | That might be a valid critique of Science in general, but
        | I don't see how it attacks Einstein. There is also a more
        | subtle point about the history of measurement. We started
        | to depend on accurate measurement of time when we needed
        | it to circumnavigate the planet. Even without Einstein we
        | still needed the Lorentz and Fitzgerald corrections to
        | the classic Newton equations. It would have happened
        | without Einstein, and maybe we'd have different
        | metaphysics in that case. That idea is more interesting
        | to me than what Bergson seems to be offering.
 
    | johnnyworker wrote:
    | If scientists had the slightest bit of societal power, our
    | response to climate change wouldn't be this shameful, and
    | climate activists wouldn't be so successfully marked for the
    | daily sessions of "5 minutes of hate".
    | 
    | What did gain societal power is capitalism is brute-forcing
    | its way into everything via "tech" that then pats the people
    | in gold-plated cages, who allow their genius to be used for
    | that on the back, while feeding them crumbs. Where nothing
    | that can't be counted matters and destroying the environment
    | -- both physical and that of society, that which minds get
    | formed in -- is perfectly rational, as long as there is a
    | cent of profit to be made.
    | 
    | Some people get really high on it, think someone's "won"
    | (what?) and it might even be them, but let's not pretend
    | _any_ of the great scientists that get name-dropped so easily
    | have anything to do with that, or haven 't even spoken
    | against it at length.
    | 
    | > Our entire much-praised technological progress, and
    | civilization generally, could be compared to an axe in the
    | hand of a pathological criminal.
    | 
    | -- Albert Einstein
    | 
    | > Let us not forget that human knowledge and skills alone
    | cannot lead humanity to a happy and dignified life. Humanity
    | has every reason to place the proclaimers of high moral
    | standards and values above the discoverers of objective
    | truth. What humanity owes to personalities like Buddha,
    | Moses, and Jesus ranks for me higher than all the
    | achievements of the enquiring and constructive mind.
    | 
    | > What these blessed men have given us we must guard and try
    | to keep alive with all our strength if humanity is not to
    | lose its dignity, the security of its existence, and its joy
    | in living.
    | 
    | -- Albert Einstein
    | 
    | > As man advances in civilisation, and small tribes are
    | united into larger communities, the simplest reason would
    | tell each individual that he ought to extend his social
    | instincts and sympathies to all the members of the same
    | nation, though personally unknown to him. [..] This virtue,
    | one of the noblest with which man is endowed, seems to arise
    | incidentally from our sympathies becoming more tender and
    | more widely diffused, until they are extended to all sentient
    | beings.
    | 
    | -- Charles Darwin, "The Descent of Man" (1871)
    | 
    | > It would not be much of a universe if it wasn't home to the
    | people you love.
    | 
    | -- Stephen Hawking
    | 
    | Science is a tool. More precisely, it's a _method_ to make
    | and improve and gauge tools. But those tools can 't ask
    | questions (we didn't somehow put there first), they cannot
    | judge. They can tell you if something is fair according to
    | your parameters and heuristics, but they know nothing of the
    | inherent value in being fair, they can't answer "should I be
    | fair?", and the same for everything else that actually
    | matters.
 
      | lisper wrote:
      | > Science is a tool. More precisely, it's a method to make
      | and improve and gauge tools. But those tools can't ask
      | questions (we didn't somehow put there first), they cannot
      | judge. They can tell you if something is fair according to
      | your parameters and heuristics, but they know nothing of
      | the inherent value in being fair, they can't answer "should
      | I be fair?", and the same for everything else that actually
      | matters.
      | 
      | And do you think that philosophy has shed any light on the
      | answer to the question, "Should I be fair?" Or indeed on
      | what the word "fair" actually _means_?
      | 
      | You're not wrong that science can't answer these questions,
      | but what science _can_ do is demonstrate that, for example,
      | different people want different things, and have different
      | ideas of what words like  "fair" mean. We can then go one
      | to (say) devise systems that maximize value according to
      | some quality metric, but that's the best we can do. We
      | cannot somehow derive some universal standard of "fairness"
      | because no such thing exists. And we don't need
      | philosophers to tell us that.
 
  | 725686 wrote:
  | Anytime this philosophy vs. science comes up I like to quote
  | Richard Feynman:
  | 
  | "Philosophy of science is about as useful to scientists as
  | ornithology is to birds."
 
| lisper wrote:
| > We have first order knowledge of things
| 
| No, we don't. We only have first-order knowledge of our
| _perceptions_ of things. And quantum mechanics shows us that
| those perceptions can be radically different from the underlying
| reality.
| 
| Of course, Einstein can be forgiven for making this mistake
| because he didn't know about the Bell inequality and the
| subsequent experiments, so it is understandable that he would
| cling to the hope that something would come along and rescue QM
| from the EPR paradox by somehow extracting classical reality from
| the Schroedinger equation. But modern thinkers cannot be so
| readily absolved.
 
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