[FRIAM] Pragmaticism and puritanism

uǝlƃ ☣ gepropella at gmail.com
Wed Mar 11 13:44:18 EDT 2020


Scientific knowledge is more valid [†] because it travels across space and time better than other forms of knowledge.

I'd rank "artisanal knowledge" a close second. The apprentice, journey, master infrastructure worked pretty well, I think. But "financial knowledge" is a close competitor. I sometimes make the argument that the merchant class is primarily responsible for peace on earth because projection from the high-dimensional space of human relations down to a one-dimensional currency helps everyone get along ... just enough to do business with one another.

[†] Validity, in contrast with soundness. All types of knowledge are sound within their scope, where the scope is exogenous. But validity sets its own scope, like closure under an operator. Some may say validity is boolean, where a small system is valid or invalid and a large system is valid or invalid. But I'd argue that a smaller system is less valid than a larger system. A *universal* system will be the *most* valid. Or if that bugs you, it's easy to say, instead, that a valid but so small as to be useless system is *technically* valid, but nobody cares. What we want is a very large system that's valid.

On 3/11/20 10:00 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> Why is one view more valid than the others?  Because science (actually with engineering) has made it possible to send probes to Neptune?  Depends on your goals.  

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ



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