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09-29-2003, 02:24 PM | #31 | |
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best, Peter Kirby |
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09-29-2003, 03:02 PM | #32 |
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Actually, before we go to far with this train of thought, I should point out the machine analogy was far from new. We find it in Pseudo-Dionysius well before 1000AD and it is current through out the Middle Ages. I would be interested if it could be linked to stuff like Hero of Alexandria's automata or the Byzantine fondness for mechanical marvals.
Do we buy Bruno claiming he believed in a moving earth and infinite universe for the mystical reasons he says? I can't see a reason to doubt him - do we really believe he was inventing dangerous heresies to hide his real scientific ideas. And if Bruno, why not Copernicus? Just because the Church disagreed with him (his model was neither simple nor accurate as it turns out) hardly proves he was engaged in post factum rationalisation. Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
09-29-2003, 03:22 PM | #33 | |
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To give you an answer to your post on EoG in response to me: Yes indeed my comments on Copernicus were wholly incorrect on a historical level. And that just shows once again the power of myth. The myth can be unfactual, if the import is genuinely held. I was following others in upholding Copernicus as a model of parsimony. Yet I still believe in the myth of Occam's Razor even if Nicolaus and William did not, at least not in the same way that I do. And Occam's Razor is validated in my experience, my reasoning, and by the body of practicing scientists. best, Peter Kirby |
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09-29-2003, 04:24 PM | #34 |
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The earth IS a machine! It is slowly computing the answer.... "42".
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09-29-2003, 11:43 PM | #35 | |
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Off-topic...
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09-30-2003, 12:23 AM | #36 |
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on second thought...
'tis would appear that Peter Kirby believes in the mythological account of Ockham's Razor. Thus he implicitly practices mythology himself!
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09-30-2003, 12:57 AM | #37 | |
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Re: on second thought...
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Hugo, I don't check EoG often. I will pop in. best, Peter Kirby |
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09-30-2003, 02:08 AM | #38 | |
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au contraire...
Were you to actually "demythologize" the history of science you would not swear fealty to Ockham, or champion parsimony, which is what I inferred from the following remarks of yours:
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The 'demythologization' of the history of science ends up somewhere on the left of P. K. Feyerabend and to the right of Imre Lakatos. |
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09-30-2003, 02:19 AM | #39 |
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OK at least you might understand where I'm going with this. I am saying that parsimony is good, that the stories about Copernicus being a champion of parsimony are historically false...and the tale of Copernicus overturning centuries of Ptolemaic epicircles with one swift cut of Ockham's razor can be good for reinforcing the general idea that 'parsimony is good', but we must realize it's not the letter but the spirit that is good about the mythology--the principle is right and expressed through fiction. The only historical core is that Copernicus was right about the Earth going around the sun, which original formulation is known to the devout as the Heliocentric Event. I think that Bultmann chose the word "demythologize" because if he were "mythologizing" he would be taking it literally like his opponents, while he tried to reduce the particulars of the tale to an essential form that is worthy of belief, and the mythological expression is thus exposed as unnecessary baggage in terms of what one has to believe, the point of the myth.
Because if it turns out that "the early scientists" were a bunch of theologically-based magically-inclined hermetically-influenced pseudo-scientists running around with wild guesses, that's not the way I want to do science! I have no need to know the details this historical Nicolaus Copernicus that we are all attempting to construct. He was right about the Earth going around the sun, and we need know no more to get the point of doing good science! I wonder what Bede thinks about myth. Good or bad? best, Peter Kirby |
09-30-2003, 03:48 AM | #40 |
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Peter,
Myth is sometimes good, sometimes bad and, as you agree, always necessary. Bad myths include those used by nationalist politicians to justify their policies, the great conflict between science and religion myth, the others I put in my (admittedly rather tongue- in-cheek) great atheist myths etc etc. Good myths include that humans are basically nice, that society can be improved indefinitely, that all humans are equally valuable. Necessary myths include that eating oysters with spirits will give you an upset stomach and that England rugby fans are arrogant sh*ts. But when I have my historian's hat on I am interested in 'what really happened'(TM) and why. As a realist I believe that this might be almost as helpful as what everyone thinks happened. Besides, as I am sure Hugo is itching to point out, your conception of how science is best practiced is as mythological as the Copernicus story. Occam's Razor is just another post factum rationalisation. As an a priori principle it is useless. Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
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