Sorry guys, I've been reclining rather than rebutting.
I kind of regret using my own 'Black Hole's Don’t Suck' example here. Really, I don't hold it in ANY esteem. It's a curiosity, and it's obviously it's wrong. It was originally meant as a stand-alone conversation starter, from which a general dialectical on philosophy-in-science might unfold. The only reason it's in caps is to have a gentle dig at a moderator who censored two very short posts I made using that title.
(But if you
do know which bit is broken I'd be grateful if you'd satisfy my curiosity. Otherwise I
will post it on a science forum down the track).
.... science originates in philosophy, and is (strictly speaking) a sub-discipline thereof. — NKBJ
The apparent paradoxical nature of something like a black hole is useful, though. It serves as a red flag saying "wait guys, we need to do some more research and theorizing here!" — NKBJ
Give that man a koala stamp!
Same reason I'm sceptical of any talk about quantum physics, btw. Someday scientists will have a reasonable explanation for the double slit experiment, but it won't be that a particle is in two absolutely separate places at the exact same time. IMO. — NKBJ
An orthodox interpretation is to invoke particle-wave duality. This proposes that the particle's wave nature is at play during the experiment, allowing the interference pattern to be produced, before the particle is observed in it's 'particle form' as it finally hits the screen.
I find this interesting. Is quantum 'particle-wave duality' just a
place-holder paradox being tolerated to make the numbers work? Or is this duality
really the quality of the world at the very smallest scale? Personally, I'd much
prefer the former.
But since this freaky duality idea has allowed the QM guys to go on and make stunningly accurate predictions - I have to doff my hat to them. This in turn raises very interesting questions on the relationships between theory and observation.
Science would say its all just models, so the paradigms only need to work. One view can only be better than another view in that pragmatic sense. Philosophy might then say it cares about what is actually the case. Which is where the two would be very strongly divided as practices. — apokrisis
I agree with this distinction of emphasis. The "paradigms only need to work view" of science is laudable in that it allows them to crack on and get a lot of work done. It would have been tragic if Newton had spent all his time on paradoxes rather than cracking on with
Principia Mathematica, especially it's Law of Universal Gravitation. At the very least this kicked off a golden age in astronomy, now the movement of the planets were
predictable. In fact the very existence and location of still unobserved planets could be predicted by perturbations on those we observed.
All good. Then the very innermost planet Vulcan was predicted from perturbations of Mercury's orbit. Being so close to the sun this would be difficult to observe. Funds were funnelled, contraptions were erected. Decades past. More money, more building, more cold nights in the dome. Vulcan was never seen.
Turns out that Mercury’s orbit was a bit off because it's time line was being stretched out by its close proximity to the Sun's mass. Who would have though it? Well, a couple of guys were way ahead of game and had a new paradigm all ready to go: General Relativity.
Historically, there have been a few great cases like this. Kudos to these guys. Not just for their ability spot a leaky paradigm
ahead of time, and then having the wits to jump out if it - but for their skills in building a new one that floats.
Me, I'm far too dim to do the maths. But the history of science is a great spectator sport!
Live long and prosper