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Lecture Three: Problems of Induction

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Title: Lecture Three: Problems of Induction


1
Lecture ThreeProblems of Induction
Confirmation
  • Dr
  • Emma Tobin
  • Philosophy
  • Bristol

2
Science vs Pseudo-ScienceDemarcation Criteria
  • (1) Truth
  • (2) Induction
  • (3) Assign Probabilities
  • (4) Explanatory Power
  • (5) Testability
  • (6) Falsifiability
  • (7) Puzzle-Solving
  • Traditionally, (1) was the chief demarcation
    criteria.

3
The Aristotelian Method
  • The tool Deductive logic
  • Account of knowledge deduction from first
    principles.
  • The truth of the conclusion is guaranteed by the
    truth of the premises in a valid argument
  • All things seek their natural place
  • The natural place of the element fire is at the
    top of the
  • terrestrial sphere.
  • ?Therefore, flames near the surface of the earth
    rise.
  • No expansion of knowledge from the premises to
    the conclusion because knowledge of the
    conclusion is contained in the premises.

4
Problems with the Deductive Arguments
  • Science aims to generate novel predictions/theorie
    s.
  • But, in deductive arguments, we never move beyond
    the premises from the conclusion.
  • The role of sensory experience and
    experimentation is marginal.
  • Difficult to test the major premise in a
    deductive argument. How do we test P1?
  • (P1) All things seek their natural place
  • (P2) The natural place of the element fire is at
    the top of the
  • terrestrial sphere.
  • ?Therefore, flames near the surface of the earth
    rise.

5
Bacons Naïve Inductivism
  • (1) Observation (2) Induction
  • Observation must be undertaken free of prejudice
    (free from the 4 idols and background theory.)
  • The data of observations must be collated in
    observation statements.
  • A host of observation sentences collated together
    will result in the formulation (by induction) of
    scientific laws and theories.

6
Examples of Induction
  • Commonsense example
  • I have observed that (in the past) the sun rose
    in the east and set in the west everyday .
  • ?The sun will always rise in the east and set in
    the west.
  • Scientific Example
  • Galileos law of free fall (All bodies fall with
    a uniform acceleration).
  • Legend has it that Galileo climbed to the top of
    the leaning tower of Pisa and dropped
    simultaneously heavy and light balls. He observed
    that they hit the ground at the same time.
  • He induced that All bodies fall with a uniform
    acceleration from these observations.

7
The Problem of Induction
  • When can we legitimately infer a law/theory from
    a set of observation sentences?
  • How many observation sentences is enough?
  • How can we perform unprejudiced observations?
    Is observation theory-independent?
  • Can we assume that the world is uniform?
  • Is there a Principle of Induction that
    sanctions our inference from observation
    sentences to universal generalisations? (Humes
    problem)
  • Does the inductive method produce knowledge?

8
David Hume (1711-1776)
Humes A Treatise of Human Nature was published
in 1739. Re-cast later as the First Second
Enquiries Concerning Human Understanding.
9
Humes Skeptical Problem of Induction
  • All induction is based on the assumption that
    there is uniformity in nature.
  • We believe that the sun will rise tomorrow,
    because it has done in the past and we assume
    that nature remains uniform.
  • The inference from the constant conjunction of
    regularities to the positing of a power of
    necessary connection that underpins those
    regularities is often made.
  • Humes sceptical problem for induction is how can
    we justify our assumption that nature will remain
    uniform?

10
  • We have sought in vain for an idea of power or
    necessary connection in all the sources from
    which we could suppose it to be derived. It
    appears that, in single instances of the
    operation of bodies, we never can, by our utmost
    scrutiny, discover any thing but one event
    following another without being able to
    comprehend any force or power by which the cause
    operates, or any connection between it and its
    supposed effect. (E Sec VII, Pt II 58)

11
Humes Argument
  • P1) All knowledge is either known by experience
    (matters of fact) or intuition (relations of
    ideas).
  • P2) We do not intuit the Uniformity of Nature.
  • P3) We do not experience the Uniformity of
    Nature.
  • ?We do not know that there is uniformity in
    nature.
  • Hume concludes that induction is not a rational
    procedure at
  • all, but a psychological habit.

12
P1 - All knowledge comes from matters of fact or
relations of ideas
  • All the objects of human reason can naturally be
    divided into two kinds
  • Relations of Ideas are analytic a priori truths
    (e.g. 224)Propositions of this kind are
    discoverable by the mere operation of thought,
    without dependence on anything existent in the
    universe. (E Sec IV20). It is impossible that
    these truths could have been otherwise.
  • Matters of Fact are synthetic a posteriori
    truths (e.g. London is the capital of England.)
    These are contingent. (E Sec IV21)
  • Any idea or fact that does not come about by
    either abstract reasoning concerning quantity or
    number or experimental reasoning concerning
    matters of fact is not knowledge. Humes Fork

13
P2 - We do not intuit the uniformity of nature
  • The uniformity of nature cannot come from
    intuition (e.g. like 2 2 4).
  • It is not a matter of logical necessity that the
    future must resemble the past.
  • We can conceive of a chaotic, radically
    contingent world.
  • So the principle of induction is not logically
    necessary.

14
P3 - We do not experience the uniformity of
nature
  • An Inductive judgment is neither a direct report
    of our experience nor logically inferred from it.
  • Objection we know many facts about experience
    that we do not directly see or infer from
    experience (e.g. that smoking causes cancer)
  • How can we know such facts?

15
Causation
  • Hume claims that we all reasoning that goes
    beyond past and present experiences in based on
    cause and effect.
  • We believe in cause and effect!
  • We have an intuition that like causes always
    bring about like effects.
  • We make causal inferences based upon past
    experience. (e.g. We believe that because
    descending objects have fallen towards the ground
    in the past that the ball that I am about to drop
    will fall to the ground now.)

16
We do not get the idea of the necessity of cause
and effect from experience.
  • Hume is sceptical
  • When we look about us towards external objects,
    and consider the operation of causes, we are
    never able to, in a single instance, to discover
    any power or necessary connexion any quality,
    which binds the effect to the cause, and renders
    the one an infallible consequence of the other.
    We only find that the one does actually, in fact
    follow the other. (E Sec VII P1 50)

17
We do no get the idea of necessity of cause and
effect by intuition.
  • From the first appearance of an object, we never
    can conjecture what effect will result from it.
    But were the power or energy of any cause
    discoverable by the mind, we could foresee the
    effect, even without experience and might at
    first pronounce with certainty concerning it, by
    the mere dint of thought and reasoning.
  • (E Sec VII, P 1 50)

18
ConclusionCausation is not in the world.
  • We have sought in vain for an idea of power or
    necessary connection in all the sources from
    which we could suppose it to be derived. It
    appears that, in single instances of the
    operation of bodies, we never can, by our utmost
    scrutiny, discover any thing but one event
    following another without being able to
    comprehend any force or power by which the cause
    operates, or any connection between it and its
    supposed effect. (E Sec VII, Pt II 58)

19
Humean Analysis of Causation
  • (1) Events of Type A precede events B in time.
  • (2) Events of Type A are constantly conjoined in
    our experience with events of Type B.
  • (3) Events of Type A are spatio-temporally
    contiguous with event of Type B.
  • (4) Events of Type A lead to the expectation that
    events of Type B will occur.

20
Instinct/Habit vs Reason
  • It is always possible that a causal relation
    could be different in the future, independent of
    how many observtions of it that we have made in
    the past.
  • But, in the past we have observed causal
    relations and believed that they will continue to
    hold and been right!
  • Humes reply If we assume that the future will
    resemble the past, because the future has
    resembled the past, in the past, then we have no
    independent grounds for believing it.
  • There is no rational foundation for our belief in
    causation it is merely a custom of habit.

21
Some Influential Replies to the Problem of
Induction
  • Induction is rational (Common-sense Response)
  • Develop a method(s) for inductive proof.
    (Mill/Carnap/Reichenbach)
  • Induction is justified by a principle of the
    uniformity of nature (Kant)
  • There really are necessary causal relations that
    we can discover (laws/causal relations)
    (Armstrong).

22
Induction is rational (Common-sense Response)
  • Induction is rational in an everyday sense.
  • All laypeople assume in common sense that
    induction is rational and use it accordingly.
  • Hume puts too strict a requirement for
    rationality in his epistemology.
  • The skeptical problem of induction should be
    ignored.
  • It is the speculative problem of a philosopher.

23
Method(s) for inductive proof.
  • John-Stuart Mill (A System of Logic BK III)
    assumes that induction is justified.
  • Mill argues that induction is the only tool that
    science has and it is the role of the philosopher
    to analyse inductions, to distinguish between
    inductive proof as opposed to
    pseudo-inductions.
  • Induction is proof it is inferring something
    unobserved from something observed it
    requires therefore, an appropriate test of
    proof and to provide this test is the special
    purpose of inductive logic. (IIIII5198)

24
Mills Methods
  • Mill argues that all induction is not simple
    enumerative induction as Hume supposed.
  • He proposes 4 methods for arriving at inductive
    proof.
  • Agreement (Soap)
  • Difference (Gunshot)
  • Residues (weight)
  • Concomitant Variation (Varying the Heat)

25
Induction is justified by a theory of
probability.
  • Scientific theories have a high probability (e.g.
    Carnap/Reichenbach)
  • Inductive logicians define the probabilities of
    different theories according to the available
    total evidence. If the mathematical probability
    of a theory is high then it is scientific, if it
    is low or zero it is nonscientific.
  • This replaces the strict science/pseudoscience
    demarcation with a relative scale for determining
    how scientific a theory is.

26
Induction is justified by a principle of the
uniformity of nature
  • Kant denies Humes fork i.e. that all knowledge
    comes from either relations of ideas or matters
    of fact.
  • Kant argues that there are truths which are both
    synthetic and a priori. (e.g. Space/Time/Casuality
    ).
  • The fact that they are a priori explains the
    uniformity in nature.
  • Nature is uniform because it is structured by the
    way we see it in space/time etc.
  • Space/Time are a priori preconditions of us
    having any experience at all.

27
There really are necessary causal relations that
we can discover
  • Modern necessitarians (e.g. Armstrong) argue
    that there are necessary causal relations in the
    world.
  • These are the result of laws of nature which
    relate particulars.
  • They deny the empiricist dogma of direct
    observation and provide a metaphysical account of
    causation and laws.

28
Goodman Confirmation
  • The problem of induction is not a problem of
    demonstration but a problem of defining the
    difference between valid and invalid predictions.
  • The validity of deduction depends upon conformity
    to the valid rules of the deductive syllogism.
    (e.g the laws of logic).
  • According to which inductive rules can we
    validate for inductive predictions?
  • The problem of Induction is replaced by the
    problem of defining confirmation.

29
The Ravan Paradox
  • A is a raven and A is black confirms all
    ravens are black.
  • Then
  • A is non-black and is a non-raven, confirms
    All non-black things are non-ravens.
  • Because they are logically equivalent to all
    ravens are black.
  • Hence All ravens are black is confirmed by the
    observation of a white cloud! (a non-black,
    non-raven).

30
The New Riddle of Induction
  • Suppose the future is like the past! (i.e. Humes
    Problem of Induction has been solved.)
  • Every emerald that I have come across in the past
    was green.
  • All emeralds are green
  • Suppose that there is a property of objects
    grue (green before 2006 and blue after 2006).
  • Every emerald that I have come across in the past
    was green.
  • ? All emeralds are grue
  • My observations confirm All emeralds are grue
    just as
  • much as they confirm All emeralds are green.

31
The Naturalist Reply
  • Only projectible predicates can support
    confirmations and yield predictions.
  • Projectible predicates are those that have been
    entrenched by the history of their use in
    inductive practices.
  • Entrenched predicates generally pick out real
    natural kinds of thing.
  • Grue is an artificial predicate and does not
    refer to a natural kind. It has not been
    successfully used in past inductive practices, so
    it cannot be confirmed.

32
The Case of Jade
  • Every piece of Jade that I have come across in
    the past was green
  • ? All Jade is green
  • However, true jade can be either of two
    different minerals, jadeite or nephrite.
  • It is a theoretical possibility that all the
    past positive instance of Jade were really
    instances of Jadeite.
  • So Jadeite is green would be confirmed rather
    than Jade is Green.

33
Observation
  • Even if we solve Humes problem then Goodmans
    problem remains.
  • The possibility of predicates like Jade and
    Grue means that some predicates are projectible
    and others are not.
  • Which predicates are projectible?
  • How do we know whether we can trust the words
    that we use to record our observations?
  • Perhaps we cannot free ourselves from Bacons
    idols to allow unprejudiced observation after
    all.

34
Popper
  • Popper takes the problems of induction seriously
    and claims that induction should play no role in
    the logic of science whatsoever.
  • He will propose an alternative method for
    science. (Falsificationism)
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