[FOM] methodological/rigorous systemization
Harvey Friedman
friedman at math.ohio-state.edu
Fri May 2 01:45:37 EDT 2008
I don't think that the phrase "formal methods" is a good one for what
I mean. What I have in mind is far broader than the current narrow -
and incorrect - image that "formal methods" has among philosophers.
Philosophers have a narrow image of "formal methods" largely because
so many attempts to employ formal methods lack sufficient imagination
and technical skill. This has given the phrase "formal methods" a bad
name, and caused it to be grossly undervalued - and misunderstood.
So I now prefer to use the phrase "rigorous systemization".
THESIS. Suppose that a philosophical paper P, in any part of
philosophy, consisting of informal prose, without rigorous
systemization, represents intellectual progress. Then there exists a
paper Q with the following properties.
1. Q focuses on rigorous systemization.
2. Q has a relatively small amount of informal prose.
3. Q can be written using the current level of practice in rigorous
systemization and foundational thinking.
4. P is fully subsumed by Q.
Now obviously any important paper Q is going to leave a large number
of issues unresolved. In fact, it may raise more issues than it
resolves. So what is to be done with these remaining issues?
Here is what I do, under the methodology I have in mind. I don't
publish a paper P on the remaining issues. Instead I wait until I can
publish a paper Q on the remaining issues. And then the process
iterates.
HOWEVER, there is a place in the methodology that I have in mind for
informal communications IC of type P. They take the form "here are
some issues and here are some approaches that have not yet
materialized". Under this methodology, the main effort is NOT spent on
publishing polished versions of IC. INSTEAD, the serious effort is
spent on (doing the research needed for, and) publishing the
associated Q.
An example of such an IC of type P is this posting. It will be
subsumed by an appropriate Q, which, as expected, will take some
serious effort to research and write. As a special case of what I have
just said, a determined effort to publish a polished form of this
posting would NOT be in keeping with the general methodology.
In particular, SOME of the objections that have appeared here on the
FOM to this THESIS certainly have some merit - but only rhetorically -
and nothing of intellectual value would be attained in reformulating
the THESIS to meet those objections. At least, nothing compared to the
effort involved. Surely the THESIS could be modified appropriately -
with real effort - to meet these particular kinds of objection, but
this is not going to be of high value.
HOWEVER, SOME of the objections that have appeared - though rather
unspecifically - do go to the heart of the matter. And these, of
course, I do want to draw out and comment on.
Harvey Friedman
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