Now, on a possible anti-realist view of things, if there are no hidden factors, then some kids succeed and some fail, and there are a bunch of observations we can make. But there is nothing beyond that explaining the success and failure. Nothing beyond what we measure. — Marchesk
Why would factor analysis work unless there really are unobservables explaining the results of observations? — Marchesk
It's not a philosophical question until a particular factor analysis has been performed. Then one can have a philosophical discussion about the interpretation and implications of the results.The philosophical question is whether FA demonstrates that realism (of whatever sort) is the case. — Marchesk
My understanding of the role of unobservables is that they are well-understood concepts that cannot be directly quantified, — andrewk
What would you call phenomena that we're not even aware of, so that there's no concept of it, etc.? — Terrapin Station
That's the "unobservable" part.I'd assume they'd be called "unobserved — Michael
Well, assuming that there are such things, I'd assume they'd be called "unobserved and unconceived phenomena". — Michael
My understanding of the role of unobservables is that they are well-understood concepts that cannot be directly quantified, and for which proxies are used. For example IQ test results are used as a proxy for intelligence, or life expectancy may be used as a proxy for quality of life. — andrewk
Latent variables are inferred, a mental construct, part of a mental model. Thus, consistent with an anti-realist metaphysics. — Brainglitch
Or are you simply asking whether there "really are" unobservables? — Terrapin Station
Kris Kelvin arrives aboard Solaris Station, a scientific research station hovering near the oceanic surface of the planet Solaris. The scientists there have studied the planet and its ocean for many decades, a scientific discipline known as Solaristics, which over the years has degenerated to simply observing, recording and categorizing the complex phenomena that occur upon the surface of the ocean.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solaris_(novel)#Plot_summary
Thus far, they have only compiled an elaborate nomenclature of the phenomena — yet do not understand what such activities really mean.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solaris_(novel)#Plot_summary
That's stated as the motivation for the people who invented factor analysis. — Marchesk
(1) We can treat them simply as instrumental utilities where it doesn't matter if they're real in any sense beyond being useful for the theories in question (and one might say that's "real enough"), — Terrapin Station
Well, yeah, depending on the specific example and context, you might want to not just settle on stage (1) or (2) of that. I'm just noting that the question of whether unobservables are real can be taken and answered in different ways. — Terrapin Station
Yes, especially in theoretical physics. — Marchesk
Yes, in the model of doing factor analysis. But the fact that it works suggest something more. You can't use the mental construct, as I mentioned above, to explain why the model works on real data.
IOW, this isn't just a mathematical concept. It's use to get at unobserved factors in real data. That's the reason statisticians came up with it. The theory being that there really are such things explaining the data. — Marchesk
That's the "unobservable" part. — Terrapin Station
Why add "unconceived" to the mix? — Marchesk
If it's not observed, then it's an unobservable, period. — Marchesk
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