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"Underdetermination and truth"

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Blogger Larry Hamelin said...

Other than restating a survey of philosophical opinions about underdetermination, it's difficult to see what point you're making.

In general, I find philosophical concerns about underdetermination at best parochial. Science does not give us the One True Theory of anything. So what? Even narrowing things down is of incalculable value. Science does not and will never gives us certainty, but the desire for certainty is itself arguably a vice.

"I suppose one possible approach is to minimize the scope of "truth" when it comes to the social sciences."

One can suppose most anything. I enjoy and apprehend the social power of literary fiction, but one expects more from a discipline that labels itself a science.

I think it's clear that the social sciences, despite a domain vastly the vastly more complex than that of the physical sciences, has done an admirable scientific job, especially when social scientists ignore postmodernist hand-wringing. The job is not giving us the One True Theory of social behavior, but rather slowly but surely falsifying the more foolish and fantastical imaginations, especially of religion, Modernism, and exceptionalism.

As Sherlock Holmes said, "When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." It may take a thousand years to eliminate just the most egregious social fantasies, but where would be the fun if it were too easy?

May 16, 2010 at 4:07 PM

Blogger Donald Pretari said...

That's why I said the following about this paper...

Summerhill, William (2010): Colonial Institutions, Slavery, Inequality, and Development: Evidence from São Paulo, Brazil. Unpublished.

http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/22162/

...on Marginal Revolution:

"Inequality, when it is not persistent, does not necessarily indicate dire circumstances that favor
later underdevelopment. Nor is it the case that unfavorable outcomes can be pinned mechanically on earlier inequality."

I would find a Mechanical Explanation dubious in any case, so I'm predisposed to agree. But, even though I'm impressed with how scholars try and determine these connections, it's hard for me to believe these connections can truly be determined.

Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat at May 16, 2010 5:18:18 PM

http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2010/05/assorted-links-14.html#comments

The paper was very interesting, but, to me, it read heavily laden with assumptions. I don't think there's an alternative to that, but it leaves me believing that such deep issues are beyond resolution. At most, we can clear up a few important matters around the edges of these problems.

I'm fine with that, but many people aren't.

Don the libertarian Democrat

May 18, 2010 at 6:02 PM

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