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Monday, 10 January 2011

John Stuart Mill's Methods of Induction

Posted on 06:10 by Unknown
If you're familiar with the name, then you probably know that the 19th century British philosopher John Stuart Mill is primarily famous for his work on the ethical theory of utilitarianism. What you may not know, however, is that this young and prolific genius also did some important and sophisticated work in logic and the philosophy of science trying to solve Hume's famous problem of induction.

You may have heard scientists sometimes refer to 'the laws of nature.' The problem of induction is that we never directly experience these 'laws': all we seem to experience is the constant conjunction of certain circumstances with certain events. To talk about a cause-effect relationship between two events, however, seems to require more than just a mere conjunction (which, for all we know, might be entirely coincidental and fortuitous). In short, part of the conceptual problem is that science is supposed to be an empirical enterprise, grounded in experience. But experience is always of particular events. So if our experience is only of particular events, and never of the laws of nature themselves, how can we rationally engage in any meaningful discourse about general laws and principles? This, incidentally, is one of the reasons why scientists sometimes don't like philosophers :)

But here's where John Stuart Mill comes in: he developed, classified and formalized a set of methods for testing causal hypotheses (thereby going beyond mere generalizations from few to many or from past to future). As in all cases of induction, though we may never be able to develop a proof based on logical necessity (the way mathematicians and logicians are used to), science can nevertheless make progress by testing hypotheses: any hypothesis that survives the day gets to make it to the next round. Those that are eliminated are discarded and no more neural energy is wasted on them (ideally).

Anyway, the following is a slideshow presentation I've been working on, summarizing these methods. It's a bit heavy on text to help anyone who may want to use it without having to sit in one of my classes and hear me yap about these ideas :)

The show is best viewed in full-screen mode. Once you start it, just click the right arrow on your keyboard to move through the animations and the slides (don't use your mouse to click on the 'next slide' button or you'll miss important sections of the presentation).



And if you want a short and thought-provoking introduction to Utilitarianism, check out Harvard Professor Michael Sandel's fascinating lectures on Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill.
Disclaimer: The slideshow is based on the eleventh edition of Copi and Cohen's "Introduction to Logic," so the credit should really go to them.
You may also be interested in my slideshow presentation on logical fallacies.
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Posted in David Hume, logic, philosophy, science | No comments

Friday, 7 January 2011

Bill O'Reilly Proves God's Existence?

Posted on 13:21 by Unknown
It kind of sucks when some of us spend years of rigorous disciplined training and research trying to understand the nature of reality only to be one-upped by the supernatural theo-philosophical powers of pundits like Bill O'Reilly.

As part of this ongoing and silly billboard battle between Christians and atheists, Papa Bear dropped the following version of the bombshell god-of-the-gaps argument on atheists. And here I thought the argument proved the existence of the Flying Spaghetti Monster...

Stephen Colbert and Neil DeGrasse Tyson discuss the incredible implications:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Bill O'Reilly Proves God's Existence - Neil deGrasse Tyson
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical Humor & Satire Blog</a>Video Archive


Kneel before Neil! :)

Update: Papa Bear fights back:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Crisis in Egypt - Anderson Cooper & Bill O'Reilly<a>
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical Humor & Satire Blog</a>Video Archive


The stupid... it hurts!!!
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Posted in Enemies of Reason, hilarious, logic, Neil DeGrasse Tyson, religion, science, Stephen Colbert | No comments

Hans Rosling - The Joy of Stats

Posted on 07:23 by Unknown
If there were a prize for the geekiest and most adorable intellectuals out there, Hans Rosling would surely be in the lead. He's the kind of guy from whom you want to learn and whose cheeks you want to pinch :)

It is no surprise, therefore, that the BBC partnered up with him to produce a fascinating and amusing documentary about the history, importance and influence of statistical analysis.

If you think statistics sounds boring, that's probably because you've never seen them come to life, but that's about to change as you see how this humble discipline has the potential to revolutionize the world, and even the way science is done, a few times over.




Check out more documentaries, more entries on math or just tons of awesome animations.
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Posted in documentary, geography, history, math, science | No comments

Wednesday, 5 January 2011

Neuroscience and Free Will

Posted on 14:11 by Unknown
As a world-renowned mathematician, Professor Marcus Du Sautoy is well aware of bombshell ideas that have devastating conceptual power such as Godel's Incompleteness Theorem or Russell's Paradox. These ideas, of course, are not merely mathematical curiosities: they have powerful philosophical implications about the nature of universals, logic and the limits of thought and cognition.

All his mathematico/philosophical training, however, could not prepare him for the existential confrontation with one of the deepest philosophical questions regarding what it is to be human: free will. Challenging abstract concepts are one thing... lived experience, as one might expect, is a bit more visceral :)

The problem is not simply that free will is most likely an illusion. Today's technological advances in neuroimaging and brain scanning present a modern-day version of LaPlace's demon: other people may know what choice you are going to make before you yourself are aware your own 'choice'...



And here is a bit more from Susan Greenfield on these types of experiments:



Haynes' interpretation didn't quite convince me (I don't assume mind-brain identity, even though I am a physicalist), but you get the point anyway...
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Posted in free will, mind, Mind control, philosophy | No comments

Tuesday, 4 January 2011

Barack Obama is Luke Skywalker?

Posted on 09:04 by Unknown
The holiday break seems to have renewed the already funny juices of the writers at The Daily Show, which they have now combined with their geeky juices into a hilarious montage about the recent political adventures of Barack Obama:



The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Barack Obama Is Luke Skywalker
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full EpisodesPolitical Humor & Satire Blog</a>The Daily Show on Facebook




I hope Stevie Wonder didn't see that... oh wait... :)

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Posted in hilarious, Jon Stewart, movie | No comments

Monday, 3 January 2011

Super Monkey Collider Loses Funding

Posted on 06:48 by Unknown
Though the longitudinal study on whether multiple stab wounds may be harmful to monkeys is not yet complete, The Onion reports that the economic crisis is forcing politicians to cut funding in other areas of curiosity-based research, such as CERN's Large Monkey Collider.



At least the scientists did manage to discover cheesium before the funding was cut :)
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Posted in chemistry, hilarious, Large Hadron Collider, monkeys, science, The Onion | No comments

Sunday, 2 January 2011

The Genius of Britain - Episode 3

Posted on 07:38 by Unknown
After exploring the birth of the scientific revolution as it took place in England, and tracing the consequences of that revolution as they manifested in and helped fuel the industrial revolution, today's episode of this fascinating documentary series explores the men behind some of the greatest scientific breakthroughs of the 19th century.

First up is the all-too-likable Michael Faraday, that man of humble origins who would rise to scientific fame through his ingenuity and the precision and creativity of his experiments, especially those he conducted on electromagnetism. Without his contributions, the world would be literally dark at night, so he's kind of a big deal.

Richard Dawkins recounts the story of a great neglected hero of his: Alfred Russel Wallace, the man who thought up the theory of evolution through natural selection independently of Darwin, and who would consequently stimulate the latter to finally publish all the work he'd kept secret for about twenty years. Like Faraday, Wallace also turned out to be a super nice guy... unlike that other British dick embroiled in a priority dispute over the invention of the calculus: Newton :)

The next two men in our story dreamed of developing faster communication between Europe and America through what would become the Transatlantic cable. William Thomson (mainly famous for his work on thermodynamics) would develop the theory and the engineering required to produce a workable cable, and Isambard Kingdom Brunel would develop the theory of fluid motion that would then allow him to create the ship capable of carrying and laying said cable. Brunel did not live to see his dream realized, but when the mission finally succeeded, Thomson became Lord Kelvin.

Finally, Jim Al-Khalili introduces the incredible and curious genius of James Clerk Maxwell, arguably the man whose intellectual contributions were the most important contributing factor for inspiring Einstein to develop his theory of special relativity.



If the book of Genesis had said this:


or even "wash your hands," I'd totally be a believer :)
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Posted in biography, Charles Darwin, chemistry, documentary, evolution, history, Jim Al-Khalili, Michael Faraday, Richard Dawkins, science, Stephen Hawking | No comments
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