Red wrote: ↑Thu Feb 07, 2019 7:56 pmDid you get that from an XKCD comic?
Ah, no, that would be from university indoctrination in the hard sciences.
Good comic though.
Red wrote: ↑Thu Feb 07, 2019 7:56 pm
Would you say anthropology in regards to Evolution is a harder science?
I'm not sure.
teo123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 08, 2019 3:00 pm
What do you mean by "epistemological"? It's more of a poorly defined claim about the empirical world.
The facts about science in practice may be empirical, but it's still based on fundamentally non-empirical principles.
teo123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 08, 2019 3:00 pmIs it possible for them to reach by reason alone that it exists and that it's a reliable science? I don't think so.
Based on biology it is. You know things eat and derive nutrition from those things. And that, based on chemistry, knowing how chemicals react, based on physics, and so on.
You would be able to derive a conceptual framework.
Now, whether the field was politicized and full of corruption or dogma you would not be able to deduce by reason alone.
A science can depart from its ideal in practice, but that doesn't say anything about the underlying potential.
We should be able to reason that chemistry is probably a softer science than physics merely by their relation to each other.
It could be in some world that physics is infested by quacks and pseudoscientists and that chemistry is not, but that's a different issue and does not speak to the underlying principles involved.
teo123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 08, 2019 3:00 pmHow could you determine how reliable that is by reason alone (as the word "epistemological" implies)?
Again, based on relationship to other sciences and dependencies on various variables those deal with.
teo123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 08, 2019 3:00 pmAll we can do is to say from the experience that it appears to be reliable, people who do that strive to make their theories coherent (both internally and with other well-accepted theories in linguistics) and sometimes they are confirmed later by other sciences (as in the case of the Antun Mayer's interpretation of the name "Asseria").
The latter case is concordance and that's what you want. That actually confirms something and hardens a science.
A mere framework that doesn't contradict itself isn't science, it's ad hoc hypothesizing. Again, the same deal with Flat-Earth models.
You *could* make a model that explains everything about the flat Earth, it would just take a lot of work and involve some very radical divergences from established theory. If you worked hard enough, you could even force compatibility with other things. That doesn't mean anything.
Softer sciences don't *have to* be filled with ad hoc hypotheses, it's a correlation, but humans being how they are they want to pretend to know things they don't and can't plausibly confirm so there we go.
teo123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 08, 2019 3:00 pmOK, the study you linked in the other thread talks about the supposed lack of a scientific consensus in social sciences.
That's a correlation that comes from the low hardness.
You could absolutely get nearly 100% consensus in a soft science, though. Just need enough group thinking. Look at the level of consensus in theology that a god exists, for example. There's also the bias that an atheist is unlikely to go to school to study theology.
This has actually been a problem in psychology for a while, with a lot of poor studies that have just been accepted for a long time *because* it's a soft science so it's hard to disprove them, but also because there's so much to "discover" that there isn't as much incentive to challenge existing ideas.
A high level of consensus, though, suggests we should look at something more deeply because there *may* be something there.
teo123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 08, 2019 3:00 pmWhere is that in linguistics? I don't quite see it.
It's not for you to subjectively analyze based on your feeling on the matter and claim, out of your ass, that there's high level of consensus.
If you *really* want to claim there's a higher or equal level of consensus in linguistics, then use the same methods that study used and apply them to linguistics (not just a niche within linguistics studying Croatian).
Remember when I told you to do your homework in the Flat-Earth thread and show the math for your model?
Well, do the same here. You can read that study and its methods, and apply it to the published papers in linguistics.
Show some proof that linguistics has a higher level of consensus than clinical psychology, for example. Your general feeling on the issue is not evidence.
I have no doubt that there are a few matters there's consensus on, like the historical existence of root languages, which could be predicted by biological genetics.
Obviously people dispersed from common ancestors, and we can trace lineage through genetics pretty reliably. We also have well established that languages diverge by drifting and mixing (based on good written evidence) and there's no reason to believe they're being completely replaced by constructed languages; although sometimes they might be replaced by conquest, a pidgin is more likely. There would also be genetic evidence of a foreign conquest.
Matters like root languages can be harder science because we can use a harder science to predict them (like biology).