Title: Physics and the
1Physics and the Real Patterns theory of
ontology
2Thanks to Joss and Richard and the Lorentz Centre
- The document that describes the topic of the
conference does a great job of identifying a lot
of important and fascinating issues. - Thanks to the physicists for informing us about
the relevant phenomena. - My ideas owe a lot to my co-authors Steven French
and Don Ross. - The material on phlogiston is forthcoming in a
paper in Synthese
3Three Ideas
- Structure is retained on theory change even when
ontology is not. - Structuralism about a domain involves the idea
that the entities in the domain are mutually
dependent on each other for their
existence/individuation. - Real Patterns
- In the case of physical structures I contend that
these three ideas all centrally involve modality.
4Of what is everything made?
- Western philosophy allegedly started when the
pre-Socratics asked this question. - This is a metaphysical question physics is
supposed to answer. - It presupposes that the world comes in a
hierarchy of levels and that there is a
fundamental level with a few basic kinds of
entities. - The most naïve picture is one of physical objects
ordered by (spatial) size and ultimately composed
of elementary particles.
5Levels
- There is not necessarily a single hierarchy
- Ordering by spatiotemporal scale
- Ordering by energy
- Ordering by composition
- Anomalous sciences evolution, game theory,
economics, thermodynamics,
6Scepticism about Levels
- Spatiotemporal scale may not be a fundamental
feature of reality. It is an open question
whether quantum gravity will take the
spatiotemporal manifold as primitive rather than
emergence. - The same may be true of the energy scale.
- The levels structure based on the composition
relation is undermined by the fact that the
notion of composition does not translate well
into physics - Of what are quasiparticles composed?
- Are particles composed of quantum fields?
- What composes a black hole?
71. Theory Change as a Motivation for
Structuralism
- Antirealism science saves the phenomena
- Realism science describes the furniture of the
world - Structural Realism science tells us about the
structure of the world - more than merely saving
the phenomena but less than full ontological
commitment - Example even the existence of central
theoretical entities is necessary for more than
empirical adequacy.
8The Theory of Phlogiston
- Burning is a process in which a principle of
combustion is given off by the fuel and enters
the air.
9The Theory of Phlogiston
- Burning is a process in which a principle of
combustion is given off by the fuel and enters
the air. - All flammable substances are supposed to contain
phlogiston and it is what all metals have in
common.
10The Theory of Phlogiston
- Burning is a process in which a principle of
combustion is given off by the fuel and enters
the air. - All flammable substances are supposed to contain
phlogiston and it is what all metals have in
common. - There is no such substance and ordinary
combustion is the addition of oxygen to something
and not the emission of something by the fuel.
11The Theory of Phlogiston
- Burning is a process in which a principle of
combustion is given off by the fuel and enters
the air. - All flammable substances are supposed to contain
phlogiston and it is what all metals have in
common. - There is no such substance and ordinary
combustion is the addition of oxygen to something
and not the emission of something by the fuel. - So it seems obvious that phlogiston theory must
be bad science.
12The Theory of Phlogiston (heyday 1700-1790)
- Becher (1635-1682) proposed combustible earth (as
one of three earths composing ordinary
substances).
13The Theory of Phlogiston (heyday 1700-1790)
- Becher (1635-1682) proposed combustible earth (as
one of three earths composing ordinary
substances). - Stahl (1660-1734) proposed phlogiston in 1697
(also year the worlds first heat engine was
built) parallels between metals heated in air
(calcination) and ordinary combustion creation
of dust and light often given off, lots of air
needed. Phlogiston given off in combustion -
flames
14The Theory of Phlogiston (heyday 1700-1790)
- Becher (1635-1682) proposed combustible earth (as
one of three earths composing ordinary
substances). - Stahl (1660-1734) proposed phlogiston in 1697
(also year the worlds first heat engine was
built) parallels between metals heated in air
(calcination) and ordinary combustion creation
of dust and light often given off, lots of air
needed. Phlogiston given off in combustion -
flames - Wood turns to ash when burnt (phlogiston must
therefore have mass). - Iron rusts to calx also giving off phlogiston.
- Charcoal combusts almost completely so charcoal
is very nearly pure phlogiston.
15The Theory of Phlogiston (heyday 1700-1790)
- Becher (1635-1682) proposed combustible earth (as
one of three earths composing ordinary
substances). - Stahl (1660-1734) proposed phlogiston in 1697
(also year the worlds first heat engine was
built) parallels between metals heated in air
(calcination) and ordinary combustion creation
of dust and light often given off, lots of air
needed. Phlogiston given off in combustion -
flames - Wood turns to ash when burnt (phlogiston must
therefore have mass). - Iron rusts to calx also giving off phlogiston.
- Charcoal combusts almost completely so charcoal
is very nearly pure phlogiston. - Phlogiston was supposed to have a metallic
quality. Metal calx burnt in charcoal becomes
ordinary metal - adding phlogiston adds the
metallic quality to the true form (calx) of the
metal (practical application to copper mining).
16The Theory of Phlogiston (heyday 1700-1790)
- Becher (1635-1682) proposed combustible earth (as
one of three earths composing ordinary
substances). - Stahl (1660-1734) proposed phlogiston in 1697
(also year the worlds first heat engine was
built) parallels between metals heated in air
(calcination) and ordinary combustion creation
of dust and light often given off, lots of air
needed. Phlogiston given off in combustion -
flames - Wood turns to ash when burnt (phlogiston must
therefore have mass). - Iron rusts to calx also giving off phlogiston.
- Charcoal combusts almost completely so charcoal
is very nearly pure phlogiston. - Phlogiston was supposed to have a metallic
quality. Metal calx burnt in charcoal becomes
ordinary metal - adding phlogiston adds the
metallic quality to the true form (calx) of the
metal (practical application to copper mining). - When something burns in a sealed container it
uses up the oxygen in the air until eventually
the fire goes out. This was explained in terms of
the saturation of the air with phlogiston. - Combustion, respiration and calcification are all
the same kind of reaction (oxidisation). (Animals
in a sealed chamber phlogisticate the air
(Boyle).)
17The Theory of Phlogiston
- Big Problem
- Since Rey (1630) it was known that the calx of a
metal could be heavier than its metallic form. - Some Stahlians posited negative weight for
metallic phlogiston but most believed that
impurities caused the weight increase.
18Priestley (1733-1804)
- Plants dephlogisticate the air (cycle between
plants and animals). - Air without any phlogiston is air whose potential
to be burnt is maximal. - Dephlogisticated air by heating a calx (red
mercury) (1774) - Scheele (1742-1786) fire air (1771-2,
published 1777) - There is a clear sense in which the
dephlogisticated air that Priestley describes
breathing is oxygen.
19Priestley (1733-1804)
- Plants dephlogisticate the air (cycle between
plants and animals). - Air without any phlogiston is air whose potential
to be burnt is maximal. - Dephlogisticated air by heating a calx (red
mercury) (Priestley 1774) - Scheele (1742-1786) fire air (1771-2,
published 1777) - There is a clear sense in which the
dephlogisticated air that Priestley describes
breathing is oxygen. - Phlogisticated air is air saturated with
phlogiston. - Inflammable air hydrogen (Cavendish 1766) is
pure phlogiston not charcoal according to
Cavendish. - Priestley burned metal oxide in inflammable air
to make pure metal (and water) - reduction
inverse of oxidisation. - But inflammable air is obviously not just
ordinary air with phlogiston in higher
concentration, since ordinary air becomes
saturated with phlogiston during combustion and
eventually the fire goes out. - Some of the phlogisticated air dissolves in water
(carbon dioxide) and some does not (mostly
nitrogen). Neither supports ordinary combustion
(like Oxygen) or reduction (like hydrogen).
20Lavoiser (1743-1794)
- Oxygen (dephlogisticated air) and hydrogen
(phlogisticated air) found in compound ordinary
air and make up water. - Burning, respiration and rusting of iron are all
oxidisation. - But he also thought all acids contain oxygen and
that oxygen was a principle not an element.
21Realists on Phlogiston
- Among philosophers phlogiston is a prime
example of a non-referring theoretical term. - phlogiston refers to nothing (Psillos)
- Phlogiston is a counterexample to the simple
causal theory since then it would refer to oxygen
(whatever is involved in combustion) (Bird)
22Phlogistons Success
- Explains loss of weight of wood, coal and
ordinary substance when burnt. - Charcoal leaves hardly any ash because it is
almost pure phlogiston. - Air saturated with phlogiston cannot support
respiration. - Metal heat (in air) calx metal oxide
phlogisticated air de-oxygenated air - Calx charcoal (source of phlogiston) metal (
fixed air carbon dioxide (Joseph Black
(1728-1799) 1754)) - So Metal calx phlogiston (explaining what
metals have in common) - Charcoal calx (fixed air) phlogiston
- Metal acid salt inflammable air (note
Lavoisier thought acids had to contain oxygen) - Metal water calx inflammable air
- (Water inflammable air hydrogen
dephlogisticated air oxygen) - Dephlogisticated marine acid (Scheele) chlorine
(Davy). - novel prediction heat calx in inflammable air to
get pure metal - novel prediction of new acids by Scheele (formic
acid, lactic acid) - Animals and plants have opposite effects on the
air - the former phlogisticate and the latter
dephlogisticate - Metals are alike (lost by intermediary science
between Priestley and electronic chemistry). - Phlogistication and dephlogistication are inverse
chemical reactions (reduction and oxygenation)
23- phlogistication and dephlogistication can be
regarded as referring to the processes of
oxidation and reduction, where these are
understood in the general sense of the formation
of an ionic bond with an electronegative
substance, and the regaining of electrons
respectively.
24- phlogistication and dephlogistication can be
regarded as referring to the processes of
oxidation and reduction, where these are
understood in the general sense of the formation
of an ionic bond with an electronegative
substance, and the regaining of electrons
respectively. - If the oxidising agent is oxygen, and the
oxidised compound is a source of carbon then the
product is carbon dioxide i.e. fixed air.
(combustion of fossil fuels) - If the oxidising agent is an acid, then hydrogen
is emitted.
25- phlogistication and dephlogistication can be
regarded as referring to the processes of
oxidation and reduction, where these are
understood in the general sense of the formation
of an ionic bond with an electronegative
substance, and the regaining of electrons
respectively. - If the oxidising agent is oxygen, and the
oxidised compound is a source of carbon then the
product is carbon dioxide i.e. fixed air. If the
oxidising agent is an acid, then hydrogen is
emitted. - We could go further and allow that phlogiston
rich and phlogiston deficient refer too,
namely to strongly electro-negative and
electro-positive molecules respectively. - One could even argue that phlogiston refers to
electrons in the outer orbital of an atom.
26Forgotten Wisdom Whewell, History of the
Inductive Sciences
- But we must not forget how natural it was to
suppose that some part of a body was destroyed or
removed by combustionIt would be easy to show,
from the writings of phlogistic chemists, what
important and extensive truths their theory
enabled them to express simply and clearly. - Combustion, respiration and calcination of metals
are all the same kind of reaction and there is an
inverse kind of reaction too.
27Structural Realism
- John Worrall (1989) introduced structural realism
(although he attributes its original formulation
to Poincaré). Using the case of the transition in
nineteenth century optics from Fresnel's elastic
solid ether theory to Maxwell's theory of the
electromagnetic field, Worrall argues that - There was an important element of continuity in
the shift from Fresnel to Maxwell and this was
much more than a simple question of carrying over
the successful empirical content into the new
theory. At the same time it was rather less than
a carrying over of the full theoretical content
or full theoretical mechanisms (even in
approximate form) ... There was continuity or
accumulation in the shift, but the continuity is
one of form or structure, not of content (1989,
117).
28More Structural Realism
- Instructive historical examples
- The transition from Fresnels ether theory of
light to Maxwells electromagnetic field theory. - The transition from Galilean relativity to
Lorentz invariance. - The transition from classical mechanics to
quantum mechanics. - The transition from Newtonian gravitation to
General Relativity.
29Modality
- We have been very focused on the composition of
wholes by parts and have not addressed the key
issue of the status of putative causal claims at
different levels. - More generally, I consider modality to be a
central issue for the philosophy of physics.
(Counterfactual definiteness Locality is
sufficient to prove Bells theorem (cf. Tomasz
Bigaj in SHPMP).)
30Modality
- Realism physics tells us about causation, the
laws of nature and deep metaphysics - Antirealism physics gives maximally general
descriptions of regularities in the phenomena
31Modality
- Realism physics tells us about causation, the
laws of nature and deep metaphysics - Antirealism physics gives maximally general
descriptions of regularities in the phenomena - Example the speed limit of light speed - is it
merely a generalization that is true or does it
have some kind of necessary status?
32Modality
- Realism physics tells us about causation, the
laws of nature and deep metaphysics - Antirealism physics gives maximally general
descriptions of regularities in the phenomena - Example the speed limit of light speed - is it
merely a generalization that is true or does it
have some kind of necessary status? - Example the laws and the constants and the
fine-tuning argument
33Is Physics Special and is fundamental physics
special with respect to the rest of physics?
- In science there is only physics all the rest
is stamp collecting. - Ernest Rutherford
34The Incompleteness of the Special Sciences
- In all the special sciences it is acceptable to
invoke entities and processes from more
fundamental sciences in explanations. - For example, the economy may be affected by the
weather, living systems may be affected by
radiation, chemical reactions may be affected by
magnetic fields, and so on. - There is a fundamental asymmetry between physics
and the special sciences.
35The Completeness of Physics
- Fundamental physics aspires to a kind of
completeness in so far as it is never permitted
to invoke entities or processes from the special
sciences in an explanation of the behaviour of
the the fundamentally physical. - Physics is analytically complete since it is the
only science that cannot be left incomplete.
36Fundamental Physics
- Measurements at all scales and at all locations
in spacetime are potential falsifications or
confirmations of fundamental physics. - This is not true of any other science.
- Fundamental physics may not exist other than as a
limiting ideal (if there is no fundamental
level). - (Many parts of physics are special sciences.)
37The Primacy of Physics Constraint (PPC)
- Naturalists ought only to accept a form of
physicalism that is motivated by reflection on
the history of science and the nature and
practice of contemporary science. Ladyman and
Ross argue that this justifies nothing more than
the PPC (methodological physicalism) - Special science hypotheses that conflict with
fundamental physics, or such consensus as there
is in fundamental physics, should be rejected for
that reason alone. Fundamental physical
hypotheses are not symmetrically hostage to the
conclusions of the special sciences. (2007, 44) - This leaves it open to the naturalist to believe
both that the entities posited by the special
sciences exist, and that the causal relations
posited by them are genuine.
382. Structuralism and the Part-Whole relation
- The natural numbers are often said to
ontologically depend on each other and the
relations among them - so the parts depend on the
whole. - Cf. the identity and individuality of spacetime
points depends on the metric field and hence
again the parts depend on the whole.
39- Structuralism less than ontological commitment
to the dressing theory is given more than
relations among the phenomena.
40Objects and Individuals
- What does it take to be an object?
- What does it take to be an individual?
- Quasi-particles, Bose Einstein Condensates,
Cooper pairs, entangled photon pairs, quantum
fields - Do they exist in the same sense as tables and
chairs?
41Individuation
- PII and weak discernibility - structures
admitting a non-trivial automorphism - complex
plane, fermions in the singlet state (Michal) - purely relational individuation
- an asymmetric graph of order 6 pure relations
can give rise to absolute discernibility
42Quasi-Particles
- Bipolaron a bound pair of two polarons
- Chargon a quasiparticle produced as a result of
electron spin-charge separation - Configuron an elementary configurational
excitation in an amorphous material which
involves breaking of a chemical bond - Electron hole a lack of electron in a valence
band - Exciton a bound state of an electron and a hole
- Fracton a collective quantized vibration on a
substrate with a fractal structure. - Holon a quasi-particle resulting as a result of
electron spin-charge separation - Libron a quasiparticle associated with the
librational motion of molecules in a molecular
crystal - Magnon a coherent excitation of electron spins
in a material - Phason vibrational modes in a quasicrystal
associated with atomic rearrangements - Phonon vibrational modes in a crystal lattice
associated with atomic shifts - Plasmon a coherent excitation of a plasma
- Polaron a moving charged quasiparticle that is
surrounded by ions in a material - Polariton a mixture of photon with other
quasiparticles - Roton elementary excitation in superfluid
Helium-4 - Soliton a self-reinforcing solitary excitation
wave - Spinon a quasiparticle produced as a result of
electron spin-charge separation
433. Real Patterns
- macroscopic objects as relatively stable and
enduring patterns that emerge within the
structure of the quantum state of the world. - On such a view, the world need not form a
compositional hierarchy, with or without ultimate
parts.
44Special Science Ontology
- In science one is only interested in recovering
the statistical properties of low-level entities
when tracking high level ones. - Coarse-graining and approximation are necessary
for special science ontologies to emerge. This
explains why even token identities do not obtain
between say a cat and its constituent atoms. - In the special sciences one is usually interested
in universal forms of behaviour, where
universal means independent of microphysical or
lower level constitution. The identification of
universality and the appropriate descriptive
categories for tracking it is one of the
principle tasks of the special sciences.
- The scale relativity of ontology (Ladyman and
Ross) - The renormalization group view of the world
(Sokal and Bricmont) the renormalization group
describes transformations that allow the number
of degrees of freedom in the Hamiltonian of a
system to be massively reduced while still
recovering the critical behaviour of the system.
45Complexity
- The special sciences are possible because the
world is to some extent algorithmically
compressible. At certain levels of description
it is possible to use much less information to
predict the behaviour of systems described in an
approximate and probabilistic way, than would be
needed to describe their microstates. - For example, Keplers laws, the ideal gas laws,
the HardyWeinberg law, In fact all laws in the
special sciences are like this. The special
sciences rely upon reduction in the degrees of
freedom of the system. - There are real patterns in the world that are
only visible at the right scales of resolution
and degrees of approximation. If you dont see
them you are missing something about reality and
that is good enough to allow us to say that the
objects, properties and processes described by
the special sciences are real.
46Computational Approaches to Emergence
- between order and randomness
- logical depth, thermodynamic depth, statistical
complexity, information theoretic entropy,
algorithmic complexity, - complex systems involve hierarchical organisation.
47Real Patterns
- Daniel Dennetts notion of real pattern is a
computational one. - The idea is based on the compression of data and
the reduction of information processing made
possible by a high level description of a system
that could in principle be described at a
fine-grained level but at a much greater
computational cost.
48- John Conways Game of Life is based on a simple
implementation of cellular automata that makes a
particular range of stable dynamic attractors
highly salient to people. - A person using the system naturally book-keeps
its state sequences by reference to a typology of
emergent objectsgliders, eaters,
spaceships, etc.that have only virtual
persistence. (That is, two successive instances
of the same glider share only structure, and
common participation in structures larger than
themselves. - A glider is clearly mereologically composed of a
small number of illuminated cells. However, its
successive instances are composed of different
cells, and successive instances a few steps apart
have no cells in common.) - Once this descriptive stance is adopted towards
Life, almost all users spontaneously track the
dynamics in terms of causal interactions among
instances of these typesfor example, a glider
will be caused to disappear through interacting
with an eater. That is, Life users naturally
begin logging causal generalizations about the
types of virtual objects, and thereby seem to
commit themselves to their objective existence. - (All the above paragraphs are taken from Ladyman
and Ross (2007), chapter 4.)
49- One should be cautious in using the Game of Life
as a metaphysical model of the universe. - It is useful for the purposes to which Dennett
puts it, because it shows how patterns can emerge
at grains of analysis coarser than the grain at
which what is analogous to the fundamental
microphysical level is studied, even when all
causal processes governing the latter are
non-complex, known, measurable, and
deterministic. Life is thus a good antidote to
romantic interpretations of emergence. - However, because in Life there is an unambiguous
fundamental level composed of the aggregation of
a finite number of little things, and because no
higher-level object types cross-classify the
dimensions of any models of the game relative to
classifications in terms of cells, Life differs
greatly from the universe with respect to the
kinds of reductionism sustainable in it. Life
admits of complete decomposition the universe
might not. - (All the above paragraphs are taken from Ladyman
and Ross (2007), chapter 4.)
50Definition of Real Patterns (Ladyman and Ross,
2007, chapter 3
- To be is to be a real pattern and a pattern is
real iff - it is projectible under at least one physically
possible perspective and, - it encodes information about at least one
structure of events or entities S where that
encoding is more efficient, in information-theoret
ic terms, than the bit-map encoding of S, and
where for at least one of the physically possible
perspectives under which the pattern is
projectible, there exists an aspect of S that
cannot be tracked unless the encoding is
recovered from the perspective in question.
51- According to RP, the utility of the intentional
stance is a special case of the utility of
scale-relative perspectives in general in
science, and expresses a fact about the way in
which reality is organizedthat is to say, a
metaphysical fact. The fact in question is what
we (but not Dennett) call the scale relativity of
ontology. - Scale relativity of epistemology isnt
controversial. To borrow an example from Wallace
(2001), if you want to predict what a hungry
tiger will do when confronted with a deer, you
should study whole behavioural patterns of whole
tigers, not individual tiger cells or molecules.
It is clearly motivated by any thesis to the
effect that models of complex systems are
scientifically useful. - (All the above paragraphs are taken from Ladyman
and Ross (2007), chapter 4.) - trade offs between scope, accuracy and simplicity
52- Real patterns are preserved on theory change -
cf. Butterfield on the Krebs cycle.
53- Dennetts paper is notoriously unclear about
whether real patterns should be regarded as
real or as useful fictions. - realism versus pragmatism - metaphysics versus
epistemology
54- Conservative metaphysicians would complain, the
eater is a redundant causal factor, since the
program underlying Life, which in its declarative
representation quantifies only over cells, is
strictly deterministic. We are reminded that an
eater or a glider is, at any given time, made
of cells and nothing else. Then we are invited
to agree that a thing cannot have causal efficacy
over and above the summed causal capacities of
the parts with which it is allegedly identical.
The result is supposed to be reductionism, and
instrumentalism about gliders and eaters. - (The above paragraph is from Ladyman and Ross
(2007), chapter 4.)
55- Real patterns are defined modally.
- They are there to be discovered.
56- David Wallace advocates what he calls a
functionalist account of ontology based on the
notion of real patterns in his elucidation of the
Everettian interpretation of quantum mechanics. - His ontology is two-tier in that only
higher-order entities such as cats and tables are
understood in terms of real patterns, whereas the
wavefunction or whatever else proves to be
fundamental in physics is understood in
categorical rather than functional terms.
57- On the other hand, James Ladyman and Don Ross
(2007) advocate a real patterns account of
ontology across the board. - All real patterns are real but there is an
asymmetric relation among them. - The relation is not composition since emergent
structure is not reducible to the sum of the
parts - no building blocks (Healey)
58- Real patterns theory can be developed in terms of
the dynamics of phase spaces rather than in
computational terms. (Jenann Ismael suggested
this.) - Reducing the number of degrees of freedom by
finding objects. - There are synchronic patterns too of course but
they could be represented in terms of laws of
co-existence.