有了好的知识论,你就能判断其他什么是真的
有了好的知识论,你就能判断其他什么是真的
大卫·多伊奇的理论以良好解释为中心
Naval:
大卫·多伊奇有一个伟大的世界观,他认为所有重要的事物都能被单个人类理解。他所说的”重要”指的是驱动大部分现实的基础理论。
多伊奇专注于四个理论。我可能会争辩说也许还有几个,特别是当你开始研究亚当·斯密和《国富论》以及其他一些更社会学的理论时。但他显然更关注现实和真理探索的物理学家,而不是人类系统。
他选择的四个是:知识论;自然选择进化论;量子理论(他将相对论和其他物理学纳入其中);以及计算理论,这包括他的量子计算理论。
这四个理论很迷人。探索每个理论的有趣之处可能很有价值。这里的突破点可能是什么不太明显的地方?
让我们从知识论开始。
我之所以喜欢《无限的开始》,是因为多伊奇对知识论中什么是正确的、我们知道的最佳答案进行了非常严谨的回顾。一旦你有了一个好的知识理论,那么你就能判断其他什么是真的。
如果你从一个糟糕的知识理论基础开始,那么当你认为某些事情可能是真的时,你会判断出一堆实际上是错误的事情。
他的知识论以良好解释为中心。它采纳了波普尔关于科学和真理探索作为纠错机制的观点并加以扩展。我很想听听你对多伊奇所阐述的知识理论或知识论的总结。
With a Good Theory of Knowledge, You Can Decide What Else Is True
David Deutsch’s theory is centered around good explanations
Naval:
David Deutsch has this great view of the world where he believes that everything important is understandable by a single human. By important he means the underlying base theories that drive most of reality.
Deutsch fixates on four theories. I could argue maybe there are a few more, especially if you start getting into Adam Smith and The Wealth of Nations and a few other more sociological ones. But he’s obviously a physicist concerned more with reality and truth-seeking, not human systems.
The four he picks are the theory of epistemology; the theory of evolution by natural selection; quantum theory, into which he subsumes relativity and other physics; and the theory of computation, which includes his theory of quantum computation.
These four are fascinating. It’s probably worth exploring what’s interesting about each of them. What is the breakthrough here that might be nonobvious?
Let’s start with epistemology.
The reason I love The Beginning of Infinity is that Deutsch does a very rigorous review of what is correct in epistemology, what we know to be the best answers. Once you have a good theory of knowledge, then you can decide what else is true.
If you’re starting with a bad basis for the theory of knowledge, then you’re going to decide on a bunch of things that are false when you think they might be true.
And his epistemology is centered around good explanations. It takes Popper’s view of science and truth-seeking as being error-correcting mechanisms and expands on it. I’d love to hear your summary of the theory of knowledge, or epistemology, as Deutsch lays it out.