David Deutsch: Knowledge Creation and The Human Race, Part 2
Brett Hall and I interview David Deutsch , physicist and author of The Beginning of Infinity . Also see Part 1 .
Popper’s Impact
Brett Hall: One of the other things that is counterintuitive—and one of the misconceptions that I see crop up out there in academia, intellectual circles, education—is that people think that there’s a final theory. [They think] what we’re trying to achieve is a bucket full of theories that will be the truth at the end of some period of discovery and that we’ll be able to carry around the bucket and say, “Here are all the truths. We’ve got no more work to do.” We’re going to sit down and do nothing, apparently, except let the AI take care of all the menial jobs. We’re going to be laying back on sun chairs and drinking cocktails or something like that.
As far as I can tell, you are the only person today explaining that this whole vision of the way in which knowledge is constructed and what our purpose is in science and everywhere else, it’s completely misconceived. It’s not just that it’s a little bit wrong; it’s infinitely wrong. Because there won’t come a time when we’re going to be lying on the same chairs, drinking cocktails, intellectually speaking. Can you say a little bit more about that, because it did come from Popper ?
David Deutsch: Absolutely. Popper’s philosophy is actually very broad in a sense because it’s so deep. Popper only had one idea, and that is that it all begins with problems, and there’s no royal road to solving them. If you look at it the right way, that tells you to go to fallible and anti-authoritarianism and conjecture and criticism, and so on. Then he applied that to lots of different things and he wrote dozens of books. People bought them, and every philosopher has heard of him. But there, I have to draw the line. That’s as much success as he had. Nobody actually got it, not even many of his supporters. People tended to get part of it. Although when someone is very creative and successful in a particular area, they tend to be a Popperian in that area, and they usually insist that it’s a special property of that area.
Brett Hall: They have to be. If you’re going to make progress, the only possible way of doing it is finding the problem, purported solutions, and then criticizing those solutions. So you’re necessarily a Popperian if you’re making progress, even if you don’t know it.
Creative Guesses
Naval: If I were to give an example of exactly what you’re talking about, I interviewed Matt Ridley, who was a hero of mine growing up. I read all of his popular science books. I remember his book Genome and his book The Rational Optimist . His most recent one is about innovation. It’s all about trial-and-error or variation of selection or, as you say in science, conjecture and criticism. These are all just the same method. These are creative guesses.
Once you fully absorb this, it changes your view of the world. You just see that everything is creatively making guesses. We’re not copying. We’re not getting it from the environment. It’s not something that’s evident to us clearly in nature and then as we absorb it more and more as Bayesians or Inductivists , we somehow come up with the truth. Rather, everything is a theory-laden guess.
It’s funny, I’m teaching this to my six-year-old because I want him to have a solid foundation, and he now understands intuitively that, “Yeah, everything is a guess.” So every time we get to something and he asks why, I say, “Let’s start making some guesses.”
Once you absorb this view of the world, it is evident everywhere. For example, in my domain in technology and innovation, people think, “Yes, I’m being creative.” I’m guessing. The artists think they’re being creative, and they’re guessing.
David Deutsch: By the way, you just mentioned a solid foundation of epistemology for your six-year-old. Even in Popperian epistemology, its role is not to be a solid foundation. It also requires improvement and is always imperfectly stated.
I think that Popper didn’t concentrate enough on the concept of explanation, that the purpose of science is explanation. So one of the footnotes that I’ve added to Popperian epistemology is that it’s not just that good explanations are good heuristically and they help us to discover things; it’s rather that discovering them is what the whole thing is about. When you talk about, for example, testability, the only reason why testability is important is that in a particular field—namely physics—it’s the way one can test explanations.
Experiments, Demonstrations, and Measurements
David Deutsch: I’d like to draw a distinction between experiments, demonstrations, and measurements. When you do this experiment with the acid and base, since there’s no rival theory, what you’re doing is a demonstration.
If you are showing that to a class of schoolchildren, you can say, “You’d never believe what happens when I pour this into that. You’ll never guess in a million years.” And then you pour it in and it changes color, and they say, “We’ve seen that kind of thing before.”
But then it changes color back and then forward and back, and then you say, “How can that happen? That contradicts everything you’ve been told in chemistry so far. How can we find out? Some people say this was how it worked. Then someone else came along and said that was how it worked. How can we distinguish between those?” And that is an experiment. It’s testing two different explanations against each other, where you can’t tell without the experiment which is the good explanation. And then there’s a measurement, like the difference between what Newton did and what Cavendish did. Newton developed the theory of gravitation, but he never measured Newton’s constant. I think—don’t quote me on this—Newton could measure GM, where M is the mass of the Earth; he couldn’t measure G and M separately. And therefore when they guessed the mass of the sun and so on, it was always as a multiple of the mass of the Earth.
Then Cavendish, by actually getting a hands-on experiment where you had a gravitational force between two things whose mass you could measure directly—by comparatively weighing them against a standard kilogram or whatever they had in those days—[showed] you can measure the constant. Now that is not an experiment. It’s called the Cavendish experiment . But in this terminology I’m trying to set up, that’s not an experiment because there’s only one explanation involved. Before, during, and after Cavendish’s experiments, he never doubted Newton’s theory of gravity. What he was trying to do was to measure Newton’s constant.
Somebody could have come along and said, “Maybe Newton’s constant is different on different parts of the Earth.” But nobody did say that. If they had, then Cavendish’s measurement would’ve turned into an experiment. But there was no good explanation along those lines because Newton’s theory was incredibly successful, in part because it was so universal. So because of the problem situation at the time, what was missing was a measurement.
Many experiments now that are called experiments are really measurements and many of them are really demonstrations—not that both measurements and demonstrations aren’t great.
Naval: Let me make sure I understand. So you’re saying an experiment chooses between rival explanations or rival theories. A demonstration just shows, “If I do this, I get that. This is how the world seems to work. This is observable.” And the measurement can help refine a theory and make it more precise by figuring out things about it that we didn’t know. And those are three distinct things. And we use the term “experiment” loosely, but it’s really this key thing that is done once in a while to choose between two competing explanations, which is a very rare occurrence. It’s very rare to have two rival good explanations.
Going back to good explanations for a moment, there are two other things I’ve seen mentioned. There are a few other techniques that I see you use a lot in the two books when referring to good and bad explanations. One is that good explanations make these risky predictions.
Like Einstein had the prediction of the light bending around the sun or starlight bending around the sun. There are these risky and narrow predictions that before you would not have anticipated another one. You’ve talked about the simplest answer, or Solomonoff induction , where Solipsism is a bad explanation because you still have complex and autonomous entities but now you’ve added this extra entity in your mind.
David Deutsch: I don’t mention Solomonoff induction, but I do mention in the book the simplest explanation. That’s not the right way to look at it, because you can only detect or measure or define simplicity once you have, let’s say, a theory of physics, then you can say that simplicity is the smallest number of bits in which a given program could be encoded. But if bits behaved differently, then things would become simple that were previously complex. And that’s exactly what happened with quantum computation.
So there is no scale of complexity or simplicity that is prior to physics. You can, in principle, define complexity or simplicity. But it doesn’t make sense to ask how complex, say, a theory of physics is, because that’s the wrong way around. Simplicity is not prior to science; it’s posterior.
Naval: This is also a theme running through your work. Computation has to be done in the real world and has to obey the laws of quantum physics. You talk about mathematics having to be bound to the laws of physics. So even the reductionist argument that, “No, all the good theories are basic,” just depends on what the laws of physics are and what the context you’re approaching it in is.
David Deutsch: Exactly. And what you’ve just said refutes Solomonoff induction because that is based on a particular measure, namely the length of Turing computer programs. But he was unaware that he was assuming a complex structured theory of physics and then saying that we should choose the theory of physics that is simplest in those terms.
I would expect that sometime after quantum theory, there’ll be yet another dispensation which will give us a different conception of complexity and simplicity. But already as a matter of logic, it doesn’t make sense to consider simplicity and complexity as being a priori fundamental compared with physics.
Taking Theories Seriously
Naval: One thing you bring up a lot, I would almost call it a Deutsch refutation—because I see you use this more often than almost any other author—is the theory refutes itself. For example, you talk about the precautionary principle . Since civilization has never followed the precautionary principle, if we start following it now, we’re no longer being precautionary. So it refutes itself. That’s one example, but you use many of these. So there’s these self-refutations buried in a lot of these theories.
David Deutsch: Another way of putting that, though, rather than thinking of it as a method of refutation, is to think this is just what it means to take theories seriously, rather than just as forms of words that one learns to say.
Like physics professors, when asked something important about quantum theory, they have learned to say, “Ah, well, it’s a particle in a wave at the same time.” And if the student says, “What does that mean?” The professor may well say, “You’ll get used to it. You will understand that eventually.” But what they often say, regrettably, is, “That’s the wrong question to ask. That’s not a meaningful question,” and “You are not allowed to ask that question.” But the question isn’t based in a misunderstanding of quantum theory; it’s the other way around. It’s taking quantum theory seriously and saying, “I want to understand quantum theory.” And saying that it’s both a particle and wave at the same time is not an answer to that question. It’s a way of shutting up the question.
Brett Hall: I used to get, “It’s born as a particle, lives as a wave, and dies as a particle.” Because the experiments that capture the entity that’s moving will only ever capture the particle. But then the interference is explained by it being a wave. That was a tricky way of trying to get around the wave-particle duality by saying, “Well, not technically at the same time.” But there was no explanation for how it transitioned between being particle to wave or how it knew it should move between being a particle and a wave.
David Deutsch: Yes. And, of course, it can move back as well. If you have a more complex interference experiment, it’s a particle, then a wave, then a particle. If you look at some of Vaidman’s experiments , it’s very hard to get your head around if you don’t have the Everett interpretation because it totally depends on taking seriously this quantum entity that cannot be described as a particle or a wave.
Brett Hall: If what we’re saying of our good explanations is that they really are accounts of reality, in what sense are we getting closer to reality with the good explanations? My classic go-to example of Newton explaining gravity as this force that acts instantly on the bodies and then it is superseded by Einstein’s general relativity, where there is no such force whatsoever. We’re saying that this thing that was part of a good explanation no longer exists at all.
David Deutsch: There are two answers to that question. One is in the book and one isn’t.
In the book I say there are many concepts, laws, explanations that are shared between Newton’s theory and Einstein’s theory of gravity. For example, both theories adopt the heliocentric cosmology and they say that the motion of the Earth and the other planets in gravity is caused by the sun. It’s because the sun is there that an influence is felt. Now, the influence is not a force—it’s a coverture of space-time—but that curvature of space-time is caused by the mass of the sun.
But there’s another sense in which say Newton’s theory and Einstein’s theory are more closely related than you might think. Newton’s theory contains the problems to which Einstein’s theory is the solution. Newton said that gravity travels instantaneously. That was a problem which people recognized before Einstein. They wanted to explain, “What does it even mean for something to travel instantly?” And then there was the fact that, if the universe lasts forever, as Newton thought, then how come in the long run it doesn’t all collapse?
I don’t know if Newton was aware of what’s called Olber’s paradox , but according to Newton’s theory, if the universe is either infinite or very big, then the sky should be white. Again, that is a problem Newton’s theory can’t really answer. You have to make some very ad hoc assumptions to fit that into Newton’s theory as a cosmology. And Einstein’s theory just solves that problem, which was in Newton’s theory.
And Newton’s theory solves the problem in Kepler’s theory , which was so severe that Galileo rejected it. Galileo did not want to believe Kepler’s theory because it didn’t explain why the orbits were ellipses. If they had been circles, there was an explanation that would’ve fit into the philosophy of the time. The circle is the perfect shape. If it wasn’t a circle, you’d have to explain why it isn’t a circle. Kepler was like, “Well, just look, it’s an ellipse.” That wasn’t good enough for Galileo, so he had to torture the theory to make it predict circles. But then Newton came along and said, “It’s the inverse square law and that can make circles, but it can [also] make ellipses.” And that is a deeper level of explanation even than saying circles are perfect shapes.
So they’re related by the common assumptions and they’re related by the problems that they have or solve.
New Paradigms
Brett Hall: What you say there, though, it raises the tension between Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn , who to some extent over-egg this idea that we have these grand revolutions in the history of science that completely overturn the previous paradigm and anyone working in that existing paradigm is literally incapable of conceiving how this new paradigm works. Kuhn has a lot more support out there in the intellectual community than Popper, certainly amongst the humanities, even amongst the sciences to some extent. And, of course, Kuhn has been taken to the extreme ever since by anything calling itself science, like gender science or something that appends the word “science” to some particular subject.
Kuhn did say correct things, but, as you just said, it’s not the case that we completely do away with the previous paradigm. And the people who create the new paradigm tend to have understood the previous paradigm and solved problems from that previous paradigm.
David Deutsch: This picture of the young iconoclast being rejected by the old stick-in-the-muds and then the young iconoclast draws together a few friends and, when the old stick-in-the-muds die, then the young iconoclasts become the old stick-in-the-muds. The thing is, it’s pure fiction. I don’t know of any actual situation where that happened. What does happen is that people often irrationally stick to their own ideas, whether they are new ideas or old ideas. People can be stubborn. Sometimes stubborn people who support a theory for no reason except that they feel it’s right, turn out to be right. There’s no algorithm for determining who is right according to who is more stubborn.
Sometimes the person who’s more stubborn is actually right—like Lister and Semmelweis . They stuck to their guns. They were rejected, but even then it was not a generational thing. There was a much more complex process at work. [Doctors] didn’t just reject a theory. They rejected having to change their working practices that reduced their perceived dignity. But the perceived dignity of doctors is functional. Especially in the days when not much was known about medicine, if you told a person that they had to have their tonsil taken out—which was an extremely unpleasant, difficult, painful process—you needed a bit of authority, irrational as it is. The world was much more irrational in those days, and when science got better, people became more open to argument. But the generational story, as I say in The Fabric of Reality , provides no explanation for them changing from one theory to another.
It’s as if they just invent a new fashion, like when Christian Dior says, “Put up your hemline,” then every woman in the world puts up their hemline. That used to happen apparently. That is not the description of what happens in science. There’s a reason why people adopt a theory. Even if it’s false, there’s a reason why they adopt it. If it’s not satisfactory to them, they’re not adopting it. And sometimes they’re irrational. That’s just how it is, but it’s not a picture of science.
Naval: I think this is quite obvious if you look at technology. We might have gone from analog attempts at computing to vacuum tubes to transistors, and vacuum tubes to transistors is less of a jump than analog computing to vacuum tubes. Clearly there’s progress along the way. Now, we don’t use vacuum tube computing anymore—it’s been obsoleted—but that doesn’t mean it was wrong. It was a necessary stepping stone. It was closer to the truth and there was a lot to be learned from there. When you encounter it in real life, then it becomes a lot more tangible and it’s harder to refute.
I find that the more feedback that you take from other people, the more likely you are to go astray; whereas the more feedback you take from reality and nature, the closer you are to the truth. And in science, unfortunately, a lot of it gets mixed up in philosophy and academia, where they’re not actually interacting as much with the real world. It shouldn’t happen in physics, but there is this social feedback loop where you’re talking to other people. You’re not always building things. The rockets don’t have to fly, so to speak.
David Deutsch: But the growth of knowledge is possible in philosophy too. Even in morality and epistemology, even when you don’t have physical reality. It’s this thing I called a few minutes ago “taking the theory seriously,” that refutation of Solipsism is nothing more than taking Solipsism seriously. Rather than saying, “Oh, it might all just be my dream,” you go on from there: “Okay. If this is my dream, what can we say about my dream? So I’m dreaming the bus. I’m dreaming all the people in it. Now there’s a person who is wearing a yellow suit. Did I make that up? I’ve never thought of it before. Now I’m seeing it.”
So if I’m a Solipsist, I have to have an explanation for how the things in my dream can have come about. And that’s really why Solipsism destroys itself. And in philosophy—in physics too—most ideas destroy themselves. As you said a little while ago, it’s rare to have a case where you can actually decide between two explanations by experiment.
Brett Hall: When it comes to progress and understanding, is there going to be a theory that we are not going to be able to understand? I think it’s the prevailing view at the moment that there’s got to be something out there that is beyond our comprehension.
David Deutsch: How do we know that there isn’t a limit? How do we know that there’ll be no new mathematical knowledge to discover? We can’t know. We could be wiped out by an incoming planet from another galaxy that is hurtling through our galaxy at half the speed of light, and we’ll just be all killed instantly. There’s no known theory that says that isn’t going to happen.
Similarly, the same could be true in the universe of ideas. There could be a brick wall somewhere where we won’t go any further than that. But in both cases invoking that as an argument about what we can or should do is logically equivalent to believing in the supernatural. Because, why did I just say a planet moving at half the speed of light? Why didn’t I say an asteroid moving at 99% the speed of light? Why didn’t I say an illness that operates on principles that we don’t know and will wipe us out in a few days? There’s an infinity of things I could have said, and all of them make a sophisticated prediction without having an explanation for it.
It’s exactly the same when people say that the world is going to end on such and such Tuesday. I would want to ask them, “Why Tuesday? Why not Wednesday?” And they will say, “Because Tuesday comes out of my interpretation of the Bible.” And I would say, “Why is it your interpretation of the Bible and not this other guy who says it’s Wednesday?” And pretty much immediately they don’t have an answer to that because they do not have an explanation for their prediction.
It’s the same with the idea that the explanatory universality is going to run out for one reason or another, whether it’s physical wipeout or AGI apocalypse or we are all simulations in a computer, and so on.
Foundations of Science
Brett Hall: But there is this impulse in people to suggest things like Solipsism, the simulation hypothesis, whatever it happens to be, as the final theory. The interesting thing about your work is that you work at the foundations. You go as deep as you possibly can, but at the same time you’re against foundationalism.
How do you square this circle for people? How do you say, “Well, I’m looking at the foundations—but on the other hand, I’m against foundations.”
David Deutsch: It’s rather like the relationship between physics and structural engineering. Foundations are theories that explain why the higher level theories are as they are. But you can’t use Newton’s theory to build a bridge. To build a bridge, you need theories of bridge building.
Christopher Wren
—one of the reasons why he was a successful architect is that he began to use Newton’s theories seriously to design buildings. So when deciding what the distance between pillars ought to be, rather than have a master builder’s eye for what that should look like and what will or won’t collapse, he could actually work it out using Newtonian mechanics. That means that Newtonian mechanics was playing a role of understanding what makes buildings stand up in the first place and also criticizing particular designs as being not as good as other designs. Then you could use measurement and demonstration and so on to fill in the gaps.
But if you’re just given Newton theory, you wouldn’t think of a suspension bridge. Nowhere in Newton’s Principia is there a picture of a suspension bridge. That was invented later. So engineering is a separate subject, and you don’t study Newton’s laws primarily to help you build better bridges. But what Newton’s theory did was unify our understanding. It gave us a new level of understanding. It influenced other sciences. People tried to make Newton’s theories in other fields of knowledge, some of which worked and some of which didn’t work.
The Enlightenment
Brett Hall: Now tell me this: Newton, English; Christopher Wren, English; Alan Turing, English. What’s special about England? We shouldn’t judge one culture as being superior to another; however, it seems as though we’ve got the beginnings of a special kind of enlightenment there in Britain leading to an industrial revolution led by Britain. What’s going on? Why is there so much coming out of England and perhaps the Anglosphere more broadly?
David Deutsch: There was the Enlightenment, which largely took place in England. There were individual people who participated in it in France and Germany as well, but in England it became the mainstream much faster. It was a rebellion against authority, but it was a non-utopian rebellion. So instead of saying, “Let’s get rid of the authority and replace it by the thing that’s really true, the thing that’s really reliable, the thing that we won’t ever have to overturn again,” it was a case of, “Look, there’s this problem. Some people have privilege, but God tells us that all people are equal. What can we do to fix this problem?”
You also had quite rapid social change [and] economic change, but it all took the form of extending to more and more classes of people privileges that had previously been only in the ruling class. You had the Parliament, which was only open to a certain group of people. Then it was opened up to more people and more people, and so on.
There was a phrase, “The Englishman’s home is his castle.” Now, I’m not a historian, but presumably an aristocrat’s home was his castle. His castle was his home and his home was his castle and nobody was legitimately allowed to interfere with him in his own domain. So when you then made reforms that said that the Englishman’s home is his castle, that was a modification of existing knowledge of how to structure society. Now, you had people who owned houses who weren’t the aristocracy. There was a readymade set of privileges that could be extended until, eventually, one after another, they were extended to everyone.
Whereas in France or Germany, it was different. Their reforms were all about abolishing things. Abolishing the tyrant. To this day, there are traditions of utopianism. The idea is to set up institutions that will last forever and that they are to be set up by fundamental theories—like human rights—and you write them down once and for all, then make it difficult to change them. And set up institutions that are going to protect those rights forever.
But Britain has stuck to its plan over centuries, and it has produced rapid change without any sudden revolutions or without any extremism. In the 1930s totalitarian theories were very widespread all over Europe, and totalitarian parties either took over or were a major threat to democratic parties. Whereas in Britain, there was a fascist movement, but it never got a single MP and it went away of its own accord soon afterwards. That’s because it was taken for granted in British political culture that the political system is here to solve problems. You petition the government for redress of grievances, not to line each other up against the wall and shoot them.
The theory was that there is such a thing as a grievance, there is such a thing as redressing, that it’s not easy to do that. The way to do it is to have the rival theories confront each other. You must be allowed to say what you think the problem is and other people say what they think the problem is, and so on. Nowhere is it assumed that someone has the final answer.
Misinformation
Naval: This is why the current rage against misinformation is so troubling—and people even invoke Popper for it. There’s a political cartoon that goes around invoking Popper as saying, “We don’t tolerate the intolerant, so we have to shut them up because they’re spreading misinformation.” When nothing could be more the opposite of Popper, which is: you have to have debate, have rival opposing theories, have a system for removing bad rulers and reversing bad decisions.
In that sense the system with two parties makes sense because you can hold one accountable against the other. Every eventual successful truth is defined as misinformation by the other side because it contradicts what is already believed to be true. So eliminating misinformation a priori is impossible because knowledge a priori is impossible. It has to be creatively conjectured and discovered.
There is this beautiful idea in The Fabric of Reality , and when I try to explain it to friends in my own halting way, it blows their minds. It combines all four strands of The
Fabric of Reality . You talk about epistemology, computation, quantum physics, and evolution. If I can summarize the insight, it goes something like this: Knowledge is a thing that causes itself to be replicated in the environment. If I figure out how to create fire, then other people in the environment will copy that because it’s useful. If there’s a gene that is well adapted to the environment, then the sequence in the gene that leads to higher survivability gets copied. Whereas if there’s random or junk DNA, that’s not going to get copied.
If you look at how the multiverses differentiate the randomness, the non-useful part—the information that is not knowledge—will be different in the multiverses. Whereas, the knowledge that is useful—the genes that are leading to higher adaptation, the ideas that are leading to higher survivability, the inventions that we’re creating that are actually working, the philosophies that we have that are causing us as humans to thrive and replicate—those will be common across the multiverse.
So it will almost be like there is a crystal of knowledge. And I don’t think this is doable, [but] if you were somehow able to peek at the multiverse as a single object, then truth would be emergent, or we would be closer to the truth by seeing what is common across the multiverse, and what is different across the multiverse would not be true. This insight, as far as I know, is unique and massively interesting. But is there anything practical out of it someday?
David Deutsch: There’s a fundamental reason why, even if we could look into the multiverse, it wouldn’t be that much help. Because there is no limit to the size of error we can make. Therefore, when you look around in a multiverse and see all these crystals, yes, on the whole, there are great big fat ones and you can guess that this one is heading towards the truth. You can’t tell where because you don’t know where this crystal is going to go.
And then there’ll be this other great big thing—a religion or something which has been growing for thousands of years—and there’s no way of examining it with a magnifying glass and seeing that it’s any different from one that is heading towards the truth. We might hope that most of the big ones are heading towards the truth according to some definition of “most.” In one universe you can get a hint of that already because you can say what idea is most persuasive. Okay. Many bad ideas are persuasive. What idea is most persuasive to people who adopt it because they think it solves their problem? Okay. But there are many such ideas that are false too. So I’m afraid it’s not going to work.
If there were a limit to the size of error, you would know that once you’ve made an error of a certain size, when you have your next idea, it’s bound to be true. “No one can make more than 256 errors in a row” would be the thing. And nothing like that is true.
Naval: No shortcuts.
David Deutsch: Exactly, there’s no shortcut.
Naval: It seems that the nature of knowledge is that it creates non-linearities. So even a single false idea can create false knowledge that overwhelms a truth for quite a while, in a large amount of space.
David Deutsch: Yes.
Naval: So it’s always creative. It’s always conjectural. It’s always contextual, which gives an infinity of improvement ahead of us which keeps life interesting.
David Deutsch:知识创造与人类,第二部分
Brett Hall 和我采访了 David Deutsch ,物理学家、 《无限的开始》 的作者。另见 第一部分 。
Popper 的影响
Brett Hall: 还有一件事非常违反直觉——我在学术界、知识界、教育界经常看到的一个误解——就是人们认为存在一个终极理论。他们认为我们要实现的目标是一桶理论,经过一段时间的发现之后,这些理论将成为真理,我们可以提着这个桶到处走,说:“这些就是所有的真理了。我们没什么活儿要干了。“我们大概就坐下来什么也不做,让 AI 去处理那些琐碎的工作。我们躺在沙滩椅上喝鸡尾酒之类的。
据我观察,你是当今唯一一个在说明这一点的人:这种关于知识如何构建以及我们在科学和其他一切领域的目的是什么的全套构想,是完全搞错了。不是差一点,是差了无穷远。因为永远不会有一个时刻——至少在智力层面——我们躺在同样的椅子上喝着鸡尾酒。你能再多谈谈这个吗?因为这确实源自 Popper ?
David Deutsch: 当然。Popper 的哲学在某种意义上其实非常广泛,因为它非常深刻。Popper 只有一个想法,就是一切都始于问题,而解决它们没有捷径。如果你从正确的角度看,这会引导你走向可错论和反权威主义、猜想与批评等等。然后他把这个想法应用到了许多不同的事物上,写了几十本书。人们买了他的书,每一位哲学家都听说过他。但是,我得到此为止——他的成功也就到此为止了。没有人真正理解了他,甚至他的许多支持者也没有。人们倾向于只理解其中一部分。不过,当一个人在某个特定领域非常有创造力和成就时,他在那个领域往往就是 Popper 式的,而且通常会坚持说这是那个领域的特殊属性。
Brett Hall: 他们必须如此。如果你要取得进步,唯一可能的方式就是发现问题、提出假设性的解决方案,然后对这些方案进行批评。所以只要你在进步,你必然是 Popper 式的,即使你自己不知道。
创造性猜测
Naval: 如果我要举一个你所说的精确例子——我采访过 Matt Ridley,他是我成长过程中的偶像。我读过他所有的科普书籍。我记得他的《基因组》和《理性的乐观主义者》。他最近一本是关于创新的。全书都在讲试错法或变异选择,或者用你科学中的说法——猜想与批评。这些都是同一种方法。都是创造性的猜测。
一旦你充分吸收了这一点,它就会改变你的世界观。你会看到一切都是创造性地在做猜测。我们不是在复制。我们不是从环境中获取的。它不是自然中清晰地呈现在我们面前、然后我们作为 贝叶斯主义者 或 归纳主义者 逐渐吸收、最终得出真理的东西。相反,一切都是承载着理论的猜测。
有趣的是,我正在把这些教给我六岁的孩子,因为我希望他有坚实的基础,他现在已经直觉地理解了——“对,一切都是猜测。“所以每次我们遇到什么事情,他问为什么的时候,我就说:“我们来猜猜看吧。”
一旦你吸收了这种世界观,它就处处可见。比如在我的领域——技术和创新领域——人们会觉得,“对,我在创造。“我在猜测。艺术家觉得他们在创造,而他们在猜测。
David Deutsch: 顺便说一下,你刚才提到给你六岁的孩子一个认识论的坚实基础。即使在 Popper 式的认识论中,它的作用也不是做一个坚实的基础。它也需要改进,而且总是表述得不完美。
我认为 Popper 对”解释”这个概念关注得不够,即科学的目的是解释。所以我对 Popper 式认识论添加的其中一个脚注是:好的解释不仅仅是启发性好、帮助我们发现东西;而是发现好的解释才是这整个事业的意义所在。当你谈到可检验性时,可检验性之所以重要的唯一原因是:在一个特定的领域——即物理学——它是检验解释的方式。
实验、演示与测量
David Deutsch: 我想区分一下实验、演示和测量。当你做这个酸和碱的实验时,既然没有与之竞争的理论,你做的其实是一个演示。
如果你在给一班小学生展示这个,你可以说:“你们绝对想不到当我把这个倒进那个里面会发生什么。你们一百万年也猜不到。“然后你倒进去,它变色了,他们说:“这种事我们见过。”
然后它又变了回来,再变过去,再变回来,然后你说:“这怎么可能?这和你们在化学课上学到的一切都矛盾。我们怎样才能搞清楚?有人说它是这样运作的,然后又有人说它是那样运作的。我们怎么区分呢?“这才是一个实验。它在测试两种不同的解释,如果没有这个实验你就无法判断哪个是好解释。然后还有测量,比如 Newton 做的事和 Cavendish 做的事之间的区别。Newton 发展了引力理论,但他从未测量过 Newton 常数。我想——别引用我的话——Newton 能测量 GM,其中 M 是地球质量;他无法分别测量 G 和 M。因此当他们猜测太阳的质量等等时,总是以地球质量的倍数来表示。
然后 Cavendish,通过一个实际动手的实验——你可以直接测量两个物体之间的引力,通过将它们与标准千克或那个时代用的什么东西进行对比称量——证明了你可以测量这个常数。但这不是一个实验。它被称为 Cavendish 实验 。但在我试图建立的术语体系中,那不是一个实验,因为其中只涉及一种解释。在 Cavendish 实验之前、期间和之后,他从未怀疑过 Newton 的引力理论。他所要做的是测量 Newton 的常数。
本来可以有人出来说:“也许 Newton 的常数在地球的不同地方是不同的。“但没有人这么说。如果有人这么说了,那么 Cavendish 的测量就会变成一个实验。但沿着这个方向并没有好的解释,因为 Newton 的理论极其成功,部分原因在于它如此具有普适性。所以在当时的问题情境下,缺少的是一个测量。
现在许多被称为实验的东西其实是测量,许多其实是演示——当然测量和演示也都很棒。
Naval: 让我确认我理解了。所以你的意思是,实验是在相互竞争的解释或理论之间做出选择。演示只是展示,“如果我这样做,就会得到那个结果。世界看起来就是这样运作的。这是可观察的。“而测量可以帮助完善一个理论,通过发现我们之前不知道的关于它的一些东西,使其更加精确。这是三件不同的事情。我们宽泛地使用”实验”这个词,但它真正指的是那种偶尔才进行的关键操作——在两个相互竞争的解释之间做出选择,这是非常罕见的事情。要同时存在两个相互竞争的好解释,是非常罕见的。
好解释与冒险的预测
回到好解释这个话题,我还注意到另外两点。在两本书中,当你谈到好解释和坏解释时,我看到你经常使用其他几种技巧。其一是好解释会做出冒险的预测。
比如 Einstein 预测光线在太阳附近会弯曲,或者说星光在太阳附近会弯曲。就是这种冒险的、狭窄的预测,之前你不会预料到的那种。你还谈到过最简单的答案,或者说 Solomonoff 归纳,其中唯我论是一个坏解释,因为你仍然有复杂且自主的实体,但现在你又在自己的心智中添加了一个额外的实体。
David Deutsch: 我没有提到 Solomonoff 归纳,但我确实在书中提到了最简单的解释。那不是正确的看待方式,因为你只有在拥有——比如说——一个物理学理论之后,才能检测、测量或定义简单性,然后你才能说简单性是给定程序可以被编码的最小比特数。但如果比特的行为方式不同,那么原本复杂的事情就会变得简单。而这正是量子计算所发生的情况。
所以不存在先于物理学的复杂性或简单性的尺度。原则上,你可以定义复杂性或简单性。但追问一个物理学理论有多复杂,这是没有意义的,因为这是本末倒置了。简单性不先于科学;它是后于科学的。
Naval: 这也是贯穿你作品的一个主题。计算必须在现实世界中执行,并且必须遵循量子物理的规律。你谈到数学必须受物理规律的约束。因此,即使是那种还原论的说法——“不,所有好的理论都是基础的”——也取决于物理规律是什么,以及你是在什么语境下探讨它的。
David Deutsch: 完全正确。你刚才说的驳斥了 Solomonoff 归纳,因为后者基于一种特定的度量,即 Turing 机程序的长度。但他没有意识到自己已经预设了一个复杂的、有结构的物理学理论,然后又说我们应该选择在那个意义上最简单的物理学理论。
我预期在量子理论之后的某个时候,会有另一种新的范式,它会给我们带来关于复杂性和简单性的不同概念。但即使单从逻辑上讲,把简单性和复杂性视为先验于物理学的基本概念,也是没有意义的。
认真对待理论
Naval: 有一件事你经常提到,我几乎想称之为 Deutsch 式反驳——因为我看到你使用它的频率几乎高于任何其他作者——就是理论反驳了它自身。例如,你谈到预防原则。因为文明从未遵循过预防原则,如果我们现在开始遵循它,我们反而不是在预防。所以它反驳了自身。这是一个例子,但你使用了很多类似的例子。所以这些理论中埋藏着许多自我反驳。
David Deutsch: 不过,换一种方式来理解,与其把它看作一种反驳方法,不如把它看作是认真对待理论意味着什么——而不是仅仅把它当作一种人们学会说的套话。
比如物理学教授,当被问到关于量子理论的重要问题时,他们学会了说:“啊,它同时是粒子又是波。“如果学生问:“那是什么意思?“教授很可能会说:“你会习惯的。你最终会理解的。“但遗憾的是,他们经常说的是:“那个问题问错了。那不是一个有意义的问题,“以及”你不被允许问那个问题。“但这个问题并不是基于对量子理论的误解;恰恰相反。它是认真对待量子理论,说”我想理解量子理论。“而说它同时是粒子和波,并不是对那个问题的回答。它是一种让人闭嘴的方式。
Brett Hall: 我以前听到的是:“它作为粒子诞生,作为波生存,作为粒子死亡。“因为捕获运动实体的实验永远只能捕获到粒子。但干涉现象则用波来解释。这是一种试图绕过波粒二象性的取巧说法:“嗯,严格来说不是同时的。“但没有任何解释说明它如何从粒子过渡为波,或者它如何知道应该在粒子和波之间转换。
David Deutsch: 是的。而且,当然,它也可以变回来。如果你做一个更复杂的干涉实验,它是粒子,然后是波,然后又是粒子。如果你看看 Vaidman 的一些实验,如果你不了解 Everett 解释的话,会非常难以理解,因为它完全依赖于认真对待这个无法被描述为粒子或波的量子实体。
好解释趋近实在了吗
Brett Hall: 如果我们对好解释的说法是它们确实是对实在的描述,那么在什么意义上我们通过好解释在趋近实在?我经典的常引用的例子是 Newton 把引力解释为一种瞬间作用于物体的力,然后它被 Einstein 的广义相对论所取代,而后者中根本不存在这种力。我们在说这个曾经是好解释的一部分的东西完全不存在了。
David Deutsch: 这个问题有两个回答。一个在书里,一个不在书里。
在书中我说,Newton 的理论和 Einstein 的引力理论之间有许多共同的概念、定律和解释。例如,两种理论都采用日心宇宙学,都说地球和其他行星在引力作用下的运动是由太阳引起的。正因为太阳在那里,才感受到一种影响。只不过这种影响不是力——而是时空的弯曲——但时空的弯曲是由太阳的质量引起的。
但还有另一种意义上,Newton 的理论和 Einstein 的理论之间的联系比你想象的更紧密。Newton 的理论包含了 Einstein 理论所要解决的问题。Newton 说引力是瞬间传递的。那是人们在 Einstein 之前就认识到的一个问题。他们想要解释:“瞬间传递到底是什么意思?“还有一个问题是,如果宇宙像 Newton 认为的那样永远存在下去,那为什么从长远来看它不会全部坍缩?
我不知道 Newton 是否意识到所谓的 Olber 佯谬,但根据 Newton 的理论,如果宇宙是无限的或者非常大,那么天空应该是白色的。同样,这是 Newton 的理论无法真正回答的一个问题。你必须做一些非常特设的假设才能把它作为宇宙学纳入 Newton 的理论中。而 Einstein 的理论就直接解决了 Newton 理论中的这个问题。
而 Newton 的理论解决了 Kepler 理论中的问题,这个问题曾如此严重,以至于 Galileo 拒绝接受它。Galileo 不愿意相信 Kepler 的理论,因为它没有解释为什么轨道是椭圆的。如果轨道是圆形的,那倒有一个符合当时哲学的解释——圆形是完美的形状。如果不是圆形,你就必须解释为什么它不是圆形。Kepler 的态度是:“嗯,你看看,它就是椭圆的。“这对 Galileo 来说不够好,所以他不得不扭曲理论,让它预测出圆形。但后来 Newton 出来了,说:“这是平方反比定律,它可以产生圆形,但也[可以]产生椭圆。“这是一种比说”圆形是完美形状”更深层的解释。
所以它们通过共同的假设联系在一起,也通过它们各自具有或解决的问题联系在一起。
新范式
Brett Hall:
不过你刚才说的这些,凸显了 Karl Popper 和 Thomas Kuhn 之间的张力。Kuhn 在某种程度上过分渲染了这样一种观念:在科学史上,我们经历了这些宏大的革命,它们完全颠覆了此前的范式,而在那个旧范式下工作的任何人都简直无法想象这个新范式是如何运作的。在知识界,Kuhn 比 Popper 获得了多得多的支持,当然在人文学科中是如此,甚至在某种程度上在科学界也是如此。而且,从那以后,任何自称科学的东西——比如性别研究,或者把”科学”一词缀在某个特定学科后面的东西——都把 Kuhn 推向了极端。
Kuhn 确实说过一些正确的东西,但正如你刚才所说,情况并非我们完全抛弃了先前的范式。创造新范式的人往往已经理解了先前的范式,并解决了先前范式中的问题。
David Deutsch:
那种画面——年轻的叛逆者被老顽固们排斥,然后年轻叛逆者聚集了几个朋友,等老顽固们死了,年轻叛逆者自己就成了新的老顽固——问题在于,这纯粹是虚构。我不知道有任何真实的情形是这样的。真实发生的是,人们经常非理性地固执于自己的想法,不管这些想法是新的还是旧的。人可能会很固执。有时候,一个仅仅因为觉得某个理论是对的而固执支持它的人,结果证明是对的。没有什么算法可以根据谁更固执来判断谁是对的。
有时候更固执的那个人反而是对的——比如 Lister 和 Semmelweis。他们坚持了自己的立场。他们遭到了拒绝,但即便如此,那也不是一个代际更替的问题。背后有一个复杂得多的过程在运作。[医生们]并非只是拒绝一个理论。他们拒绝的是改变自己的工作惯例,因为那会降低他们感知到的尊严。但医生的这种感知到的尊严是有功能性的。尤其是在医学知识还很少的年代,如果你要告诉一个人他必须切除扁桃体——那是一个极其令人不快、困难且痛苦的过程——你就需要一点权威,尽管这权威是非理性的。那个时代的世界比现在非理性得多,而当科学进步之后,人们变得更加愿意接受论证。但正如我在《实在的织锦》中所说的,代际更替的故事对他们从一种理论转变为另一种理论不能提供任何解释。
那就好像他们只是发明了一种新时尚,比如 Christian Dior 说:“把裙摆提上去,“然后全世界每个女人都把裙摆提上去。据说这种事以前真的发生过。但这不是对科学中发生之事的描述。人们接受一个理论是有原因的。即便这个理论是错的,他们接受它也是有原因的。如果它不能让他们满意,他们就不会接受。有时候他们是非理性的。事情就是如此,但这不是科学的面貌。
Naval:
我觉得如果你看技术领域,这一点非常明显。我们可能从模拟计算尝试走到了真空管,再从真空管走到了晶体管,而从真空管到晶体管的跨越不如从模拟计算到真空管那么大。显然,一路上有进步。现在我们不再使用真空管计算了——它已被淘汰——但这并不意味着它是错误的。它是一块必要的垫脚石。它离真理更近了,而且从中学到了很多东西。当你在现实生活中遇到这种情况时,它会变得更加切实可感,也更难以反驳。
我发现,你从他人那里获取的反馈越多,就越可能走偏;而你从现实和自然中获取的反馈越多,就越接近真理。不幸的是,在科学中,很多东西与哲学和学术界混在了一起,他们实际上并没有那么多地与真实世界互动。按说不该在物理学中发生这种事,但存在一种社会反馈循环——你是在跟其他人对话。你并不总是在建造东西。火箭不一定非得飞起来,可以这么说。
David Deutsch:
但知识的增长在哲学中也是可能的。即便在道德和认识论中,即便没有物理实在,也是可能的。这就是我几分钟前称之为”认真对待理论”的那种东西——对唯我论的反驳,无非就是认真对待唯我论。与其说”哦,这一切可能只是我的梦”,你从那里继续往下走:“好吧。如果这是我的梦,那关于我的梦我们能说些什么?所以我在梦见那辆公交车。我梦见里面的所有人。现在有一个人穿着一套黄色西装。那是我编造的吗?我以前从未想过这件事。现在我看见了。”
所以如果我是一个唯我论者,我就必须解释我梦中的事物是如何产生的。这就是唯我论自我毁灭的原因。在哲学中——在物理学中也是——大多数想法都会自我毁灭。正如你刚才所说,你能真正通过实验在两种解释之间做出决定的情况是罕见的。
Brett Hall:
说到进步和理解,会不会存在一种我们无法理解的理论?我认为目前的主流观点是,一定存在某种超出我们理解能力的东西。
David Deutsch:
我们怎么知道不存在一个极限?我们怎么知道不会再有新的数学知识可以发现?我们无法知道。我们可能会被来自另一个星系、以半光速飞过我们星系的行星撞上,然后我们瞬间全部丧命。没有任何已知理论说这不可能发生。
同样,在理念的世界里情况也可能如此。某处可能存在一堵砖墙,我们在那里无法再前进一步。但在这两种情况下,将其作为关于我们能做什么或应该做什么的论据来援引,在逻辑上等价于相信超自然。因为,为什么我偏偏说以半光速运动的行星?我为什么不说以光速 99% 运动的小行星?我为什么不说一种按我们不了解的原理运作的疾病,会在几天内将我们消灭?我可以说出无穷多种可能性,而所有这些可能性都在没有解释的情况下做出了一个精致的预测。
这和那些说世界将在某个星期二毁灭的人完全一样。我会问他们:“为什么是星期二?为什么不是星期三?“他们会说:“因为星期二是从我对照《圣经》的解读中得出的。“我会说:“为什么是你的解读,而不是另一个人说的星期三?“几乎立刻他们就无法回答了,因为他们的预测并没有一个解释。
关于解释的普遍性会因这样或那样的原因而耗尽的观点——无论是物理性的毁灭、AGI 末日、还是我们都是计算机中的模拟等等——情况完全一样。
科学的根基
Brett Hall:但人们内心有一种冲动,想要把唯我论、模拟假说之类的东西当作终极理论提出来。你的工作有一个有趣之处:你研究的是根基,你尽可能地深入到最底层,但与此同时你反对基础主义。
你如何向人们解释这个看似矛盾的问题?你怎么说——“嗯,我在审视根基——但另一方面,我又反对根基”?
David Deutsch:这有点像物理学和结构工程学之间的关系。根基理论是解释更高层次理论为何如其所是的那些理论。但你不能拿牛顿的理论来建桥。要建桥,你需要的是桥梁建造的理论。
Christopher Wren——他之所以成为一位成功的建筑师,原因之一是他开始认真地运用牛顿理论来设计建筑。所以在决定柱子之间应该相距多远时,他不再依赖一位大师级建造者凭经验判断什么样子合适、什么会塌什么不会塌,而是可以用牛顿力学真正地计算出来。这意味着牛顿力学在理解建筑何以矗立方面发挥了作用,同时在批评特定设计方案不如其他方案方面也发挥了作用。然后你可以用测量和验证等手段来填补细节。
但如果仅仅给你牛顿理论,你不会想到悬索桥。牛顿的《原理》中任何地方都没有悬索桥的图片。那是后来才发明出来的。所以工程学是一门独立的学科,你研究牛顿定律的首要目的并不是帮你建造更好的桥梁。但牛顿理论所做的,是统一了我们的理解。它给了我们一个新层次的理解。它影响了其他科学。人们试图在其他知识领域也建立类似牛顿理论的东西,其中有些成功了,有些没有。
启蒙运动
Brett Hall:那么告诉我:牛顿,英国人;Christopher Wren,英国人;艾伦·图灵,英国人。英国有什么特别的?我们不应该评判一种文化比另一种文化优越;然而,似乎在英国出现了一种特殊的启蒙的开端,进而引发了一场由英国主导的工业革命。这是怎么回事?为什么有这么多东西出自英国,也许更广泛地说出自整个英语圈?
David Deutsch:有一场启蒙运动,很大程度上发生在英国。法国和德国也有个人参与其中,但在英国,它成为主流的速度要快得多。那是一场对权威的反叛,但那是一场非乌托邦式的反叛。所以他们没有说”让我们推翻权威,用那个真正正确的东西、真正可靠的东西、我们永远不必再推翻的东西来取而代之”,而是这样的态度:“看,存在这个问题。有些人享有特权,但上帝告诉我们人人平等。我们能做些什么来解决这个问题?”
你也看到了相当快速的社会变革和经济变革,但所有这些变革采取的形式都是将先前只属于统治阶级的特权扩展到越来越多的阶层。你有议会,最初只对特定的一群人开放。然后它向越来越多的人开放,如此等等。
有一句话叫”英国人的家就是他的城堡”。我不是历史学家,但想必一位贵族的家就是他的城堡。他的城堡就是他的家,他的家就是他的城堡,任何人都没有正当理由在他的领地内干涉他。所以当你后来进行改革,说英国人的家就是他的城堡时,那是对现有的关于如何组织社会的知识的一种改造。于是,拥有房屋的人不再只是贵族。有一套现成的特权可以被扩展,最终,它们一个接一个地被扩展到了所有人。
而在法国或德国,情况则不同。他们的改革全都是关于废除。废除暴君。直到今天,仍然存在乌托邦主义的传统。其理念是要建立永远存续的机构,这些机构要由基础理论——比如人权——来设立,你一劳永逸地把它们写下来,然后使之难以更改。并建立那些将永远保护这些权利的机构。
但英国几个世纪以来一直坚持自己的路线,它产生了快速的变化,却没有发生任何突然的革命,也没有任何极端主义。在 20 世纪 30 年代,极权主义理论在整个欧洲非常盛行,极权主义政党要么夺取了政权,要么对民主政党构成了重大威胁。而在英国,确实存在法西斯运动,但它从未获得过一个议席,而且不久之后便自行消失了。这是因为在英国的政治文化中,人们理所当然地认为政治制度是为了解决问题的。你向政府请愿以求伸冤,而不是让大家排成一排互相枪毙。
其理论是:冤屈是存在的,伸冤是存在的,而且这并不容易做到。方法就是让对立的理论相互交锋。你必须被允许说出你认为问题是什么,其他人也说出他们认为问题是什么,如此等等。从未预设某人拥有最终答案。
错误信息
Naval:这就是为什么当前对错误信息的狂热反对如此令人不安——人们甚至搬出波普尔来为之辩护。有一幅流传甚广的政治漫画,引用波普尔说:“我们不宽容不宽容的人,所以我们必须让他们噤声,因为他们在传播错误信息。“然而没有什么比这更违背波普尔的本意了。波普尔的意思是:你必须进行辩论,让对立的理论交锋,建立一个可以罢免糟糕的统治者、逆转糟糕决策的制度。
从这个意义上说,两党制是有道理的,因为你可以用一个来追究另一个的责任。每一个最终成功的真理,都会被另一方定义为错误信息,因为它与已经被信以为真的东西相矛盾。因此,先验地消除错误信息是不可能的,因为先验的知识是不可能的。它必须被创造性地猜想和发现。
在《真实世界的脉络》中有一个美妙的思想,当我用自己笨拙的方式试图向朋友们解释时,他们都会为之惊叹。它结合了《真实世界的脉络》中的全部四条主线。你谈到了认识论、计算、物理学和进化。如果让我概括这个洞见,大致是这样的:知识是一种在环境中导致自身被复制的东西。如果我掌握了如何生火,那么环境中的其他人就会去模仿,因为它有用。如果有一个基因很好地适应了环境,那么导致更高存活率的基因序列就会被复制。而如果是随机的或垃圾 DNA,就不会被复制。
如果你观察多元宇宙如何分化随机性——那些无用的部分,即不是知识的信息——在各个多元宇宙中会是不同的。而那些有用的知识——带来更高适应性的基因、带来更高存活率的思想、我们创造的真正有效的发明、使我们人类繁荣繁衍的哲学——这些将在多元宇宙中是共通的。
所以,知识几乎就像是一块晶体。我认为这是不可行的,[但]如果你能以某种方式窥见多元宇宙作为一个整体对象,那么真理就会从中涌现——或者说,通过观察多元宇宙中什么是共通的、什么是不同的,我们就能更接近真理,而那些不同的部分就不是真理。据我所知,这个洞见是独一无二的,而且极其有趣。但这在未来是否能产生什么实际的应用呢?
David Deutsch: 有一个根本性的原因,解释了为什么即使我们能够窥见多元宇宙,它也不会有太大帮助。因为我们所能犯的错误的大小是没有上限的。因此,当你在多元宇宙中环顾四周,看到所有这些晶体时,是的,总体而言,有些巨大的晶体赫然在目,你可以猜想这一块正在趋向真理。但你无法判断它趋向何方,因为你不知道这块晶体会走向哪里。
然后还会有另一巨大的东西——一种存在了数千年的宗教或诸如此类的东西——而你没有办法用放大镜审视它、发现它与一个趋向真理的东西有什么区别。我们可以希望那些最大的晶体中,大多数都在趋向真理——按照某种关于”大多数”的定义。在单一宇宙中,你已经可以窥见这一点,因为你可以问什么理念最有说服力。好吧。许多坏理念也很有说服力。那么,什么理念对那些因为认为它解决了自身问题而采纳它的人来说最有说服力?好吧。但许多这样的理念同样是错误的。所以恐怕这条路行不通。
如果错误的大小有上限,你就会知道,一旦你犯了一个特定大小的错误,当你产生下一个想法时,它必然是真的。“没有人能连续犯超过 256 个错误”大概就会是这样一条定律。但没有任何类似的东西是成立的。
Naval: 没有捷径。
David Deutsch: 没错,没有捷径。
知识的非线性和无限改进
Naval: 知识的本质似乎在于它会制造非线性。因此,哪怕是一个错误的理念,也能创造出虚假的知识,在相当长的时间里、在广阔的范围内压倒真理。
David Deutsch: 是的。
Naval: 所以它始终是创造性的。始终是猜想性的。始终是情境依赖的——这为我们留下了无穷无尽的改进空间,也让生命始终有趣。
术语表
| 原文 | 中文 |
|---|---|
| a priori | 先验 |
| anti-authoritarianism | 反权威主义 |
| Bayesian | 贝叶斯主义者 |
| Cavendish | 卡文迪什(Henry Cavendish,英国科学家,首次精确测量引力常数) |
| Christian Dior | 克里斯汀·迪奥(Christian Dior,法国时装设计师) |
| Christopher Wren | Christopher Wren(英国建筑师、天文学家,圣保罗大教堂设计者) |
| conjecture and criticism | 猜想与批评 |
| epistemology | 认识论 |
| Everett | Everett(Hugh Everett III,多世界诠释提出者) |
| Everett interpretation | Everett 解释 |
| explanatory universality | 解释的普遍性 |
| fallible | 可错论 |
| foundationalism | 基础主义 |
| Galileo | 伽利略(Galileo Galilei,意大利物理学家、天文学家) |
| heuristically | 启发性地 |
| Inductivist | 归纳主义者 |
| Karl Popper | 卡尔·波普尔(Karl Popper,科学哲学家) |
| Kepler | 开普勒(Johannes Kepler,德国天文学家,行星运动定律发现者) |
| Lister | 李斯特(Joseph Lister,英国外科医生,无菌手术先驱) |
| Olber | Olber(Heinrich Olbers,德国天文学家) |
| Olber’s paradox | Olber 佯谬 |
| precautionary principle | 预防原则 |
| Semmelweis | 塞麦尔维斯(Ignaz Semmelweis,匈牙利医生,洗手消毒先驱) |
| simulation hypothesis | 模拟假说 |
| Solipsism | 唯我论 |
| Solomonoff | Solomonoff(Ray Solomonoff,归纳推断理论先驱) |
| Solomonoff induction | Solomonoff 归纳 |
| testability | 可检验性 |
| The Fabric of Reality | 《真实世界的脉络》(David Deutsch 著作) |
| Thomas Kuhn | 托马斯·库恩(Thomas Kuhn,科学哲学家,“范式转换”概念提出者) |
| Turing computer | Turing 机 |
| Vaidman | Vaidman(Lev Vaidman,量子物理学家) |
此文章由 AI 翻译(miaoyan_chunk_translate)