It is worth reflecting on what sort of answer might satisfy those who ask these "why" questions and whether there might be way of rephrasing them to exclude the "why". In other words, what is the actual question here? Are they asking how such things are made possible? Or are they simply expressing wonder at these facts? Or something else? — Luke
Can you think of any more examples of this sort of "why" question in philosophy? — Luke
I have noticed this particular "why" question crops up repeatedly in various guises in philosophy. — Luke
It is worth reflecting on what sort of answer might satisfy those who ask these "why" questions and whether there might be way of rephrasing them to exclude the "why". — Luke
Thinking in these terms might also highlight the impotence of the "answer" given by the fine tuning argument. The fine tuning argument answers the question of why there is life in the universe by saying, basically: because otherwise there wouldn't be life in the universe. Or, in its more general form that applies to all of these questions: because otherwise things would not be the way they are. — Luke
I think the 'why' is often enough lyrically indeterminate. It's not how but that the world is that fucks us up. Or fucks those up who're in a mood called 'wonder.' — lll
A version that occurs to me is the apparent inescapability of brute fact in any grand narrative. — lll
Even if we knew all the causes of how the brain produces conscious experiences, this still seems to leave untouched the question of why the brain produces conscious experiences. — Luke
Aristotle list the four general causes — apokrisis
Even if we knew all the causes of how the brain produces conscious experiences, this still seems to leave untouched the question of why the brain produces conscious experiences. — Luke
Furthermore, as Carl Sagan once put it, if you rewind the clock of evolution and let it run again, there's no guarantee that humans & intelligence would evolve. Something totally different could happen. — Agent Smith
Randomness plays an essential role — lll
Unless the dino-exterminator asteroid was a planned event. — Agent Smith
I was thinking of randomness on the level of particles, which must play a role in mutation and add up to whether a rock falls on the head of a critter or even (eventually) whether an asteroid smashes into our blue planet. — lll
Indeed, to understand randomness at all scales, one has to go its source, the level where it's most conspicuous, most apparent, most obvious - particles. — Agent Smith
Can you think of any more examples of this sort of "why" question in philosophy? — Luke
hubris where some leading scientists thought that reality was pretty much explained. — lll
There is nothing new to be discovered in physics now. All that remains is more and more precise measurement. — Lord Kelvin
How much does precision determine the validity of scientific theories? — Agent Smith
Any mathologers around here who could help? — Agent Smith
https://aether.lbl.gov/www/classes/p10/gr/PrecessionperihelionMercury.htmAs seen from Earth the precession of Mercury's orbit is measured to be 5600 seconds of arc per century (one second of arc=1/3600 degrees). Newton's equations, taking into account all the effects from the other planets (as well as a very slight deformation of the sun due to its rotation) and the fact that the Earth is not an inertial frame of reference, predicts a precession of 5557 seconds of arc per century. There is a discrepancy of 43 seconds of arc per century.
This discrepancy cannot be accounted for using Newton's formalism. Many ad-hoc fixes were devised (such as assuming there was a certain amount of dust between the Sun and Mercury) but none were consistent with other observations (for example, no evidence of dust was found when the region between Mercury and the Sun was carefully scrutinized). In contrast, Einstein was able to predict, without any adjustments whatsoever, that the orbit of Mercury should precess by an extra 43 seconds of arc per century should the General Theory of Relativity be correct.
. Every particular must be the product of something more general. — apokrisis
Whereas natural laws, principles and so on - could not have been other. That’s what makes them ‘laws’. — Wayfarer
But let me also observe that the notion of necessary truth is unpopular - because it seems to suggest, or be underwritten by, the notion of a necessary being, which is of course a no-go idea for naturalism. — Wayfarer
The facts are such that living beings have evolved. They could easily have been otherwise, but we would never have been around to discuss it. — Wayfarer
As the accuracy of measurement increases, do we have to switch between theories like it was done in your example with Mercury's precession? — Agent Smith
beauty — lll
I wonder why we're hell bent on finding linear correlations. — Agent Smith
Men are simple folk. Women, no, they remind me of Rube Goldberg machines, they do! — Agent Smith
I see how one can make a case that the law of gravity has held for centuries, but I don't see how that case can be extended to the future. — lll
Scientific laws exist where logical necessity meets physical causation. — Wayfarer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_law
Science distinguishes a law or theory from facts. Calling a law a fact is ambiguous, an overstatement, or an equivocation. The nature of scientific laws has been much discussed in philosophy, but in essence scientific laws are simply empirical conclusions reached by scientific method; they are intended to be neither laden with ontological commitments nor statements of logical absolutes.
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Laws differ from scientific theories in that they do not posit a mechanism or explanation of phenomena: they are merely distillations of the results of repeated observation. As such, the applicability of a law is limited to circumstances resembling those already observed, and the law may be found to be false when extrapolated.
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Like theories and hypotheses, laws make predictions; specifically, they predict that new observations will conform to the given law. Laws can be falsified if they are found in contradiction with new data.
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The fact that laws have never been observed to be violated does not preclude testing them at increased accuracy or in new kinds of conditions to confirm whether they continue to hold, or whether they break, and what can be discovered in the process. It is always possible for laws to be invalidated or proven to have limitations, by repeatable experimental evidence, should any be observed. Well-established laws have indeed been invalidated in some special cases, but the new formulations created to explain the discrepancies generalize upon, rather than overthrow, the originals. That is, the invalidated laws have been found to be only close approximations, to which other terms or factors must be added to cover previously unaccounted-for conditions, e.g. very large or very small scales of time or space, enormous speeds or masses, etc. Thus, rather than unchanging knowledge, physical laws are better viewed as a series of improving and more precise generalizations.
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