[FOM] methodological/rigorous systemization
Steven Ericsson-Zenith
steven at semeiosis.org
Sat May 3 15:55:25 EDT 2008
It was ironic that the thesis of Friedman was more clearly stated, in
my view, in a short phrase of plain English that applied some rigorous
systemization, than in the symbolic method he chose to use. That
sentence would have read:
"Papers that use rigorous systematization subsume informal
philosophical papers on equivalent subjects."
This irony is compounded by his restatement that is an attempt to
clarify with prose.
But I am not unsympathetic toward Friedman's objective. However, he
treats all communication as though the methodology of interaction were
purely symbolic and best combined by known formal mechanisms. His
thesis is then that all argument is reducible to symbolic logic and
that nothing is missing by such a reduction.
He asks for counter examples and those given contain much argument
that is qualitative. Friedman himself appeals to a qualitative measure
"intellectual progress" without proposing how such a measure can be
quantified. I suggest that such a measure can be quantified by simply
enumerating the accurate predictions that are made by rigorous
systemization against those made otherwise.
But it should be clear that the ambiguity of the qualitative argument
leaves many many more predictions for exploration that the rigorous
argument Friedman proposes. Hence, ambiguity stimulates creativity
while Friedman's approach potentially stifles it. Which is simply to
say that ambiguity is necessary for intellectual progress.
With respect,
Steven
On May 1, 2008, at 10:45 PM, Harvey Friedman wrote:
>
> 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.
...
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