Thor isn’t quite as directly in the theory :-) In Norse mythology he’s a creature born to a father and mother, a consequence of initial conditions just like you.
Sure, you’d have to believe that initial conditions were such that would lead to Thor. But if I told you I had a neighbor named Bob, you’d have no problem believing that initial conditions were such that would lead to Bob the neighbor. You wouldn’t penalize the Bob hypothesis by saying “Bob’s brain is too complicated”, so neither should you penalize the Thor hypothesis for that reason.
The true reason you penalize the Thor hypothesis is because he has supernatural powers, unlike Bob. Which is what I’ve been saying since the first comment.
Thor isn’t quite as directly in the theory :-) In Norse mythology...
Tetraspace Grouping’s original post clearly invokes Thor as an alternate hypothesis to Maxwell’s equations to explain the phenomenon of electromagnetism. They’re using Thor as a generic stand-in for the God hypothesis.
Norse mythology he’s a creature born to a father and mother, a consequence of initial conditions just like you.
Now you’re calling them “initial conditions”. This is very different from “conditions” which are directly observable. We can observe the current conditions of the universe, come up with theories that explain the various phenomena we see and use those theories to make testable predictions about the future and somewhat harder to test predictions about the past. I would love to see a simple theory that predicts that the universe not only had a definite beginning (hint: your High School science teacher was wrong about modern cosmology) but started with sentient beings given the currently observable conditions.
Sure, you’d have to believe that initial conditions were such that would lead to Thor.
Which would be a lineage of Gods that begins with some God that created everything and is either directly or indirectly responsible for all the phenomena we observe according to the mythology.
I think you’re the one missing Tetraspace Grouping’s point. They weren’t trying to invoke all of Norse mythology, they were trying to compare the complexity of explaining the phenomenon of electromagnetism by a few short equations vs. saying some intelligent being does it.
You wouldn’t penalize the Bob hypothesis by saying “Bob’s brain is too complicated”, so neither should you penalize the Thor hypothesis for that reason.
The existence of Bob isn’t a hypothesis it’s not used to explain any phenomenon. Thor is invoked as the cause of, not consequence of, a fundamental phenomenon. If I noticed some loud noise on my roof every full moon, and you told me that your friend bob likes to do parkour on rooftops in my neighborhood in the light of the full moon, that would be a hypothesis for a phenomenon that I observed and I could test that hypothesis and verify that the noise is caused by Bob. If you posited that Bob was responsible for some fundamental forces of the universe, that would be much harder for me to swallow.
The true reason you penalize the Thor hypothesis is because he has supernatural powers, unlike Bob. Which is what I’ve been saying since the first comment.
No. The supernatural doesn’t just violate Occam’s Razor: it is flat-out incompatible with science. The one assumption in science is naturalism. Science is the best system we know for accumulating information without relying on trust. You have to state how you performed an experiment and what you observed so that others can recreate your result. If you say, “my neighbor picked up sticks on the sabbath and was struck by lightning” others can try to repeat that experiment.
It is, indeed, possible that life on Earth was created by an intelligent being or a group of intelligent beings. They need not be supernatural. That theory, however; is necessarily more complex than any a-biogenesis theory because you have to then explain how the intelligent designer(s) came about which would eventually involve some form of a-biogenesis.
Yeah, I agree it’s unlikely that the equations of nature include a humanlike mind bossing things around. I was arguing against a different idea—that lightning (a bunch of light and noise) shouldn’t be explained by Thor (a humanlike creature) because humanlike creatures are too complex.
Well, the original comment was about explaining lightning
You’re right. I think I see your point more clearly now. I may have to think about this a little deeper. It’s very hard to apply Occam’s razor to theories about emergent phenomena. Especially those several steps removed from basic particle interactions. There are, of course, other ways to weigh on theory against another. One of which is falsifiability.
If the Thor theory must be constantly modified so to explain why nobody can directly observe Thor, then it gets pushed towards un-falsifiability. It gets ejected from science because there’s no way to even test the theory which in-turn means it has no predictive power.
As I explained in one of my replies to Jimdrix_Hendri, thought there is a formalization for Occam’s razor, Solomonoff induction isn’t really used. It’s usually more like: individual phenomena are studied and characterized mathematically, then; links between them are found that explain more with fewer and less complex assumptions.
In the case of Many Worlds vs. Copenhagen, it’s pretty clear cut. Copenhagen has the same explanatory power as Many Worlds and shares all the postulates of Many Worlds, but adds some extra assumptions, so it’s a clear violation of Occam’s razor. I don’t know of a *practical* way to handle situations that are less clear cut.
Thor isn’t quite as directly in the theory :-) In Norse mythology he’s a creature born to a father and mother, a consequence of initial conditions just like you.
Sure, you’d have to believe that initial conditions were such that would lead to Thor. But if I told you I had a neighbor named Bob, you’d have no problem believing that initial conditions were such that would lead to Bob the neighbor. You wouldn’t penalize the Bob hypothesis by saying “Bob’s brain is too complicated”, so neither should you penalize the Thor hypothesis for that reason.
The true reason you penalize the Thor hypothesis is because he has supernatural powers, unlike Bob. Which is what I’ve been saying since the first comment.
Tetraspace Grouping’s original post clearly invokes Thor as an alternate hypothesis to Maxwell’s equations to explain the phenomenon of electromagnetism. They’re using Thor as a generic stand-in for the God hypothesis.
Now you’re calling them “initial conditions”. This is very different from “conditions” which are directly observable. We can observe the current conditions of the universe, come up with theories that explain the various phenomena we see and use those theories to make testable predictions about the future and somewhat harder to test predictions about the past. I would love to see a simple theory that predicts that the universe not only had a definite beginning (hint: your High School science teacher was wrong about modern cosmology) but started with sentient beings given the currently observable conditions.
Which would be a lineage of Gods that begins with some God that created everything and is either directly or indirectly responsible for all the phenomena we observe according to the mythology.
I think you’re the one missing Tetraspace Grouping’s point. They weren’t trying to invoke all of Norse mythology, they were trying to compare the complexity of explaining the phenomenon of electromagnetism by a few short equations vs. saying some intelligent being does it.
The existence of Bob isn’t a hypothesis it’s not used to explain any phenomenon. Thor is invoked as the cause of, not consequence of, a fundamental phenomenon. If I noticed some loud noise on my roof every full moon, and you told me that your friend bob likes to do parkour on rooftops in my neighborhood in the light of the full moon, that would be a hypothesis for a phenomenon that I observed and I could test that hypothesis and verify that the noise is caused by Bob. If you posited that Bob was responsible for some fundamental forces of the universe, that would be much harder for me to swallow.
No. The supernatural doesn’t just violate Occam’s Razor: it is flat-out incompatible with science. The one assumption in science is naturalism. Science is the best system we know for accumulating information without relying on trust. You have to state how you performed an experiment and what you observed so that others can recreate your result. If you say, “my neighbor picked up sticks on the sabbath and was struck by lightning” others can try to repeat that experiment.
It is, indeed, possible that life on Earth was created by an intelligent being or a group of intelligent beings. They need not be supernatural. That theory, however; is necessarily more complex than any a-biogenesis theory because you have to then explain how the intelligent designer(s) came about which would eventually involve some form of a-biogenesis.
Yeah, I agree it’s unlikely that the equations of nature include a humanlike mind bossing things around. I was arguing against a different idea—that lightning (a bunch of light and noise) shouldn’t be explained by Thor (a humanlike creature) because humanlike creatures are too complex.
You’re right. I think I see your point more clearly now. I may have to think about this a little deeper. It’s very hard to apply Occam’s razor to theories about emergent phenomena. Especially those several steps removed from basic particle interactions. There are, of course, other ways to weigh on theory against another. One of which is falsifiability.
If the Thor theory must be constantly modified so to explain why nobody can directly observe Thor, then it gets pushed towards un-falsifiability. It gets ejected from science because there’s no way to even test the theory which in-turn means it has no predictive power.
As I explained in one of my replies to Jimdrix_Hendri, thought there is a formalization for Occam’s razor, Solomonoff induction isn’t really used. It’s usually more like: individual phenomena are studied and characterized mathematically, then; links between them are found that explain more with fewer and less complex assumptions.
In the case of Many Worlds vs. Copenhagen, it’s pretty clear cut. Copenhagen has the same explanatory power as Many Worlds and shares all the postulates of Many Worlds, but adds some extra assumptions, so it’s a clear violation of Occam’s razor. I don’t know of a *practical* way to handle situations that are less clear cut.