Monday, 5 September 2022

Ludwig Wittgenstein Embraced Contradictions: Alan Turing Didn’t

Wittgenstein once argued that “if a contradiction were actually found in arithmetic, then that would only prove that an arithmetic with such a contradiction in it could render very good service”. He also claimed that “the laws of logic are arbitrary”.

(i) Introduction
(ii) Systems, Systems and More Systems
(iii) Wittgenstein’s Anti-Platonism
(iv) Constructivism and Wittgenstein’s Roads
(v) Part Two: Alan Turing’s Bridge
(vi) Note: Wittgenstein’s Dialetheism?

The Austrian-British philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951) laid his cards on the table when he warned against “the superstitious dread and veneration of contradiction”. Indeed, at one point, Wittgenstein even advocated “a new logic of contradictions”.

In Lectures, Cambridge 1930–1933, Wittgenstein can also be found stating the following:

[T]he laws of logic, for example, excluded middle and contradiction, are arbitrary. This statement is a bit repulsive, but nevertheless true.”

To some readers it may seem like a jump to apply a mode of reasoning about mathematical systems (see later section) to the laws of logic themselves. Alternatively, to other readers the application of this line of reasoning (i.e., about mathematical systems) may seem like a (well) logical consequence of such a position.

Thus, if only on this reading of Wittgenstein, it’s literally all about systems or human creations, then why not create a new logic of contradictions?

Take the cases of Nikolai Lobachevsky (1792–1856) and Bernhard Riemann (1826–1866) and their alternative non-Euclidean geometries.

If Riemann and Lobachevsky felt no qualms about breaking free of the system of Euclidean geometry, then perhaps Wittgenstein might have felt at ease about endorsing the adoption — or creation — of alternative logics. Indeed, at this juncture at least, it doesn’t really matter if such alternative logics are self-contradictory or if they tacitly assume — and even tacitly employ — the aforementioned laws of logic.

That said, what if a contradiction could (in Wittgenstein’s own words) “render very good service”?

Wittgenstein’s following words can be found in the Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics:

[I]f a contradiction were now actually found in arithmetic — that would only prove that an arithmetic with such a contradiction in it could render very good service.”

Wittgenstein also seemed to be a dialetheist when he argued that “an arithmetic with such a contradiction in it could render very good service”. That is, philosophers, mathematicians and even laypersons can indeed work with contradictions.

It’s always possible, of course, that a mathematician (or, more likely, a philosopher) may say that if there were any genuine contradictions, then — by definition — they simply couldn’t “render very good service”. So, in that case, we’d be wrong to class them as workable contradictions at all.

So how, exactly, could we make use of contradictions?

Well, dialethic logicians and philosophers do. What’s more, they cite various concrete examples. For example, dialethic logic can make sense of inconsistent theories in science, moral and political beliefs which clash with each other, the paradoxes of set theory, etc. (See note at the end of this essay.)

However, I don’t really believe that Wittgenstein had the same kinds of thing in mind as the dialetheists. That’s primarily because his central positions on contradictions and the “arbitrary” nature of the laws of logic were purely abstract and metaphilosophical.

Wittgenstein also advanced an (as it were) mathematics-is-use (or pragmatic) position when he argued the following:

“The point is that we all make the SAME use of it. To know its meaning is to use it in the same way as other people do. ‘In the right way’ means nothing.”

When Wittgenstein used the phrase “in the right way” above, it can be taken to imply that some mathematicians and philosophers believed that there’s a right way that’s completely separate from mathematicians and their systems (or completely separate from conventions, symbols and their meanings, etc.). That is, they believed that there could be a right way without literally anyone actually knowing anything about it. (This is the position of mathematical realism.)

Yet Wittgenstein might well have asked what purpose this hidden right way serves.

In other words, if no one actually knows that right way, and no one can even say anything about it, then what role does it have? Indeed can it even be known to exist (or have being) at all?

If we return to Wittgenstein’s position on mathematical systems.

Systems, Systems and More Systems

As found in the book Wittgenstein: Lectures, Cambridge 1930–1933, Wittgenstein wrote (or actually spoke) the following words:

“Reason only applies within a system of rules [] It is nonsense to ask for reasons for the whole system of thought. You cannot give justification for the rules.”

Wittgenstein believed that (to use his own words) the “game” of contradiction-spotting was “pointless” because any such paradoxes or contradictions which do occur (or which even exist) only do so because they’re the consequences of the “system of rules” which the logicians and mathematicians created in the first place. That is, these contradictions and/or paradoxes don’t exist separately from such systems.

That shouldn’t be a surprise.

Take Kurt Gödel’s incompleteness theorems.

These theorems only apply to mathematical systems. What’s more, the so-called “Gödel truths” only occur within the mathematical systems of which they are parts.

So systems (whether logical or mathematical) are in the driving seat here.

Moreover, if such systems are indeed creations — human creations, then one can see where Wittgenstein was coming from.

Wittgenstein’s position seems to have been that those in search of paradoxes and contradictions believed that such things existed separately from the systems in which they were embedded — indeed separately from all human minds.

So even if it can be accepted that such contradictions and paradoxes are hidden, then they’re still only hidden within the systems created by logicians and mathematicians.

The upshot here is that all this is loosely equivalent to someone creating an antidote which, unknown to the creator, would also bring about brain damage when administered. Thus the creator doesn’t know that it can bring about brain damage. However, the antidote is still his own creation. And without the administration of his antidote, such specific cases of brain damage would never occur.

Wittgenstein became even more concrete and radical about systems when he wrote the following words:

[T]here is nothing there for a higher intelligence to know — except what future generations will do. We know as much as God does in mathematics.”

In other words, there are no mathematical equations or timeless abstract numbers in the Platonic ether waiting for mathematicians to discover.

That said, it’s of course possibly — or actually — the case that mathematical structures or equations contain content that no mathematician alive today is actually aware of (i.e., just like the aforementioned antidote).

For example, in The Emperor’s New Mind, Roger Penrose wrote:

“The Mandelbrot Set is not an invention of the human mind: it was a discovery. Like Mount Everest, the Mandelbrot Set is just there!”

However, even in this case it will still require mathematicians (or computer programmes) to bring out that now-hidden content.

Of course a Platonist (or mathematical realist) may now ask this question:

How can you accept that there’s anything hidden (or out there) at all before such so-called “creations” of mathematicians?

In other words, according to Wittgenstein’s (as it were) anthropological position (see here), there can’t be anything hidden. That’s because that something would need to be independent of all mathematicians and all mathematical systems.

Wittgenstein himself uses the words “higher intelligence” as a virtual synonym for Platonic realm. So just as there’s no Platonic realm which contains all mathematics and all mathematical truths (or equations), so there’s no higher intelligence that (as it were) has all of mathematics in His head.

So it can be argued that, at least as far as contradictions and paradoxes are concerned, Wittgenstein was a systemist (rather than, say, a structuralist). That is, he believed that mathematicians and logicians (as well as philosophers of mathematics) can never step outside of the systems they construct.

[See my ‘Kurt Gödel, Vacuous Paradoxes and Self-Reference’ and ‘Why Empty Logic Leads to the Liar Paradox’ in which it’s argued that the discussed paradoxes are a result of the systems in which they are embedded.]

Wittgenstein’s Anti-Platonism

Platonism has already been mentioned a couple of times in this piece. So it’s important to note here that not only mathematical Platonists have had problems with Wittgenstein’s philosophy of mathematics.

In any case, the term “Platonism” is — at least partly — used for convenience’s sake in that the words mathematical realist could also have been used.

That said, Wittgenstein does indeed explicitly express his anti-Platonism in the following passage (which was aimed at Alan Turing):

“If you say, ‘The mere fact that a proof could be found is a fact about the mathematical world,’ you’re comparing the mathematician to a man who has found out something about a realm of entities, the physics of mathematical entities.”

Wittgenstein was arguing that the Platonist (or Alan Turing himself) believes that there’s a “mathematical world” which contains “entities”. And this is equivalent to a someone discovering a physical world (or a new country) which is full of physical entities (e.g., animals, trees, mountains, rivers, etc.).

Yet this is a misleading analogy.

In fact the problem is that Platonists don’t even see it as being an analogy at all!

Most people would accept that the physical world (or country) in this analogy would exist regardless of its discovery. However, nothing is known about it. Despite that, it would still exist (or be real).

So can we glide so easily over from that position on an undiscovered physical place (or country) to the existence of an abstract entity in an abstract mathematical world which has so far been undiscovered?

Wittgenstein believed that such a mathematical entity is actually created, constructed or even invented — not discovered. That is, it is brought into existence by the very act of construction (or invention).

This seems to make Wittgenstein an intuitionist or constructivist. (See mathematical constructivism and mathematical intuitionism.) However, as with all “Wittgenstein scholarship”, there are some scholars who accept this conclusion and just as many scholars who don’t. (This isn’t the place to run through what the legions of “Wittgenstein experts” have said on this subject.)

All that said, we still have at least one clear example of Wittgenstein expressing his literal (for want of a better word) constructivism.

Constructivism and Wittgenstein’s Roads

Take Wittgenstein’s image of an unbuilt road. Wittgenstein said:

“Professor Hardy says, ‘Goldbach’s theorem is either true or false.’ — We simply say the road hasn’t been built yet.”

Put simply, Goldbach’s theorem (or “conjecture”) is neither true nor false until a road has been built which leads to it being known to be either true or false. That is, the truth or falsity of Goldbach’s theorem must be constructed! After all, how could its truth or falsity be established without such a construction?

Yet there’s a rather obvious response to that last paragraph.

That response is to argue that although human beings need a road that leads to the destination that is the truth or falsity of any theorem, that truth or falsity still exists even without such a road. So, sure, we don’t know if it’s true or false without such a road (or construction), but it’s still (ontologically) either true or false without it.

Indeed Wittgenstein himself conceded that

[a]t present you have the right to say either; you have a right to postulate that it’s true or that it’s false”.

Of course that’s not much of a concession.

That is, until you built the road, you simply don’t know if a theorem is true or false. So the claim that it’s either true or false regardless is (almost) without substance. Again, according to Wittgenstein’s own logic, it can’t be either true or false until the (or a) road to it is built…

Yet how can a road lead to somewhere that doesn’t, as yet, exist?

In this analogy, then, the building of the road seems to be (at least part of) the actual creation of the place it leads to!

In any case, Wittgenstein elaborated in this way:

“For which road you build is not determined by the physics of mathematical entities but by totally different considerations [].”

In other words, these analogical roads (as just hinted at) literally construct the “mathematical entities”: they don’t “discover them”.

To continue with Wittgenstein’s analogy.

We are free to construct any road we like. Yet this “isn’t because the mathematics says that the road goes there”. It’s “because the road isn’t built until mathematics [or a mathematician] says it goes there”.

It’s of course the case that the place itself doesn’t (as it were) tell the roadbuilders to build the road to it. To use Wittgenstein’s own words: the place doesn’t “say [] that the road goes there”. Instead, a decision has to be made to build the (literal) road. And it’s the roadbuilders who build the road, not the place it’s going to.

Surely (as already hinted at) this analogy is too strained.

That’s because no road is built unless whatever it leads to already exists. In the case of literal roads, no road is built unless it leads to somewhere which already exists (even if not a town or city, then just a given place or area). The road, either during or after being built, doesn’t literally bring into being the place it leads to. The road is built precisely because such a place already exists…

In the end, then, perhaps this is a (scare-quoted) “misreading” of Wittgenstein’s words. (This is often the case when it comes to interpreting the Austrian philosopher’s very-odd prose.)

Finally, if the grammar (or analogy) of a road constructing something is a little odd, then settle for the simple idea that mathematical entities are constructed, not discovered.

All the above contains echos of Alan Turing’s well-known dispute with Wittgenstein.

Alan Turing’s Bridge

In 1939, Alan Turing (1912–1954) attended Wittgenstein’s ‘Lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics’ at Cambridge University. At these lectures, Wittgenstein discussed mathematical contradictions.

More relevantly, Turing strongly disagreed with Wittgenstein’s argument that mathematicians should happily allow contradictions to exist within mathematical systems.

When it came to Wittgenstein himself, he stressed two things:

1) The strong distinction which needs to be made between accepting contradictions within mathematics and accepting contradictions outside of mathematics.
2) The supposed applications and consequences of these mathematical contradictions and paradoxes outside mathematics.

As for 1) above, Wittgenstein said (as quoted by Andrew Hodges):

“Why are people afraid of contradictions? It is easy to understand why they should be afraid of contradictions in orders, descriptions, etc. outside mathematics. The question is: Why should they be afraid of contradictions inside mathematics?”

Wittgenstein can be read as not actually questioning the logical validity or status of these paradoxes and metatheorems. He was making a purely philosophical point about their supposed — as well as numerous — applications and consequences outside of mathematics. (These consequences — if not always applications — usually include the subjects of consciousness, human uniqueness, God, human intuition, meaning, purpose, the universe, religion, arguments against artificial intelligence, etc.)

In terms specifically of contradictions and paradoxes.

All the above means that if mathematics is a human invention, then any contradictions and paradoxes there are (i.e., within mathematics) must be down to… mathematicians and their systems. And if they’re down to mathematical systems alone, then they aren’t telling us anything about the physical world (which includes Alan Turing’s bridge — see later) or even about a Platonic world of numbers.

Turing stated (to put it simply) that if there are any contradictions embodied in the mathematics used to construct a bridge, then that bridge would end up falling down! Yet, according to Wittgenstein, the bridge wouldn’t fall down even if the maths used in its construction did contain a contradiction. (This last statement may actually be an overextension of Wittgenstein’s position.)

Turing himself stated the following words:

“The real harm will not come in unless there is an application, in which a bridge may fall down or something of that sort [] You cannot be confident about applying your calculus until you know that there are no hidden contradictions in it.”

It does seem bizarre that Turing should have even suspected that “hidden contradictions” (his debate with Wittgenstein was primarily about the Liar Paradox) could lead to a bridge falling down. That is, Turing believed — if somewhat tangentially — that a bridge may (or even would) fall down if some of the mathematics used in its design somehow instantiated a paradox or a contradiction.

But surely it’s hard to imagine the precise route from any paradox (especially the Liar Paradox) to the practical (or concrete) applications of mathematics of any kind — let alone to the building of a bridge and then that bridge falling down.

Yet perhaps Turing’s argument is that there could never be such a concrete manifestation. And that’s precisely because the builders wouldn’t even get as far as finishing the bridge because the contradiction would have already shown itself.

So what about Wittgenstein’s response to this line of reasoning by Turing?

Wittgenstein responded by saying that “[b]ut nothing has ever gone wrong that way yet”. That is, no bridge has ever fallen down due to a paradox or contradiction in mathematics.

More generally, of course Wittgenstein was well aware of many of the arguments against embracing contradictions. And he played all of them down.

For example, when discussing the possibility of anything and everything being deduced from a contradiction (see the principle of explosion), Wittgenstein stated the following:

[W]ell then, don’t draw any conclusions from a contradiction; make that a rule.”

Wittgenstein wasn’t actually arguing that everything and anything couldn’t be drawn from a contradiction. He was simply arguing that we shouldn’t draw such conclusions. That is, such ridiculous and/or irrelevant conclusions (see irrelevant conclusion) may indeed be drawn — so simply don’t draw them!

Interestingly enough, there may be a (as it were) Platonist assumption hidden in Wittgenstein’s riposte above. That’s because these bizarre conclusions must — or simply may — still exist in a (as it were) Platonic space. However, we still have a choice as to whether or not to draw (or deduce) them.

It’s worth noting here, then, the many comments written and spoken about “everyday mathematicians” not caring too much about “the foundations of mathematics”, “hidden contradictions” or, indeed, Kurt Gödel’s incompleteness theorems. That’s because — as many mathematicians and others have argued — such things simply don’t impinge on everyday mathematics. (I’m willing to be told otherwise by mathematicians, rather than by philosophers.)

All this is summed up by the mathematician and physicist Alan Sokal when he focussed on Gödel’s metatheorems.

Firstly, Sokal stressed the difference between “metatheorems” and “conventional mathematical theorems” in the following way:

[] Metatheorems in mathematical logic, such as Gödel’s theorem or independence theorems in set theory, have a logical status that is slightly different from that of conventional mathematical theorems.”

And it’s largely because of that difference that Sokal continues with these words:

“It should, however, be emphasized that these rarefied branches of mathematics have very little impact on the bulk of mathematical research and almost no impact on the natural sciences.”

So if such metatheorems (if not the logical sport of contradiction-spotting) have almost zero “impact on the natural sciences”, then surely they have less than zero impact on, say, Turing’s bridge.

*******************************

Note: Wittgenstein’s Dialetheism?

Dialetheists “embrace contradictions”. (See ‘Setting Contradictions Together’.)

Take the dialetheist Graham Priest (1948-).

Is Graham Priest’s own dialetheism about the world (i.e., an ontological position) or is it about what we can — or even should — say about the world? Clearly, if it’s about the world, then it’s far more radical than merely being about our epistemic, scientific or logical takes on the world.

These questions are asked because there’s virtually nothing in Priest’s work where he explicitly states that contradictions exist in the world. In basic terms, it’s all about how “contradictions can be embraced” in logic, epistemology and the philosophy of science — as well as in science itself.

Yet Priest does argue that dialetheism isn’t (purely) a formal logic. He states that it’s “a thesis about truth”.

One way to put all this is in terms of set-theoretic paradoxes, as discussed by Bryson Brown.

Brown says that “the dialetheists take paradoxes such as the liar and the paradoxes of naïve set theory at face value”. That is, it may be the case that dialetheists choose — for logical and/or philosophical reasons — to accept paradoxes and/or contradictions even though they also believe that, ultimately, they aren’t true of the actual world. (What of the abstract world?)

As dialethic logicians have stated, we can accept inconsistent scientific theories if they still prove to be useful and have predictive consequences. In fact scientists (especially physicists) have been fine with this situation for a long time. Priest himself puts it this way:

“Inconsistent theories may have physical importance too. An inconsistent theory, if the inconsistencies are quarantined, may yet have accurate empirical consequences in some domain. That is, its predictions in some observable realm may be highly accurate. If one is an instrumentalist, one needs no other justification for using the theory.”

Bryson Brown also says that our

“best theory of the structure of space-time, Einstein’s general theory of relativity, is inconsistent with our quantum-mechanical view of microphysics”.

Brown also mentions the Danish quantum physicist Niels Bohr within this context.

So did Bohr believe that there were inconsistencies — let alone contradictions — actually in the world? Philosophers have disagreed on this. However, it can be argued that Bohr (as an epistemic anti-realist) might have found it difficult to grasp what an inconsistent world (or any aspect of the world) would — or could — be like. This is at least the case when it comes to worldly contradictions. That is, it is hard to see how A & not-A can be the case at one and the same time (despite the wave/particle duality, etc.).

This means that we need to decide if embracing theoretical inconsistencies (in science, logic, etc.) also means embracing worldly contradictions.

Bryson Brown also acknowledges the fact that, in general, we “accept non-trivial but inconsistent obligations and/or beliefs”. Here again this is really an epistemic and moral matter. More explicitly, it isn’t being argued that, for example, we can believe that “Cats have tails” and also believe that “Cats don’t have tails” at one and the same time. No one believes that an individual cat both has a tail and doesn’t have a tail. So, in that case, A works may work in one context; and ¬A may work in another context. In other words, “Cats have tails” (which, grammatically, doesn’t entail “All cats have tails”) is about cats in the plural; whereas any statement about an individual cat won’t be about all cats. Yet an individual cat both having and not having a tail means that the statements “Cats have tails” and “Cats don’t have tails” are both true. (This, admittedly, is also about cats in the plural.)

In Priest’s own terms, this truth-value indeterminacy (though p’s being indeterminate is itself be seen as a truth value) results in a scientific theory (or logical system) being inconsistent. And that inconsistency is a result of the logician or scientist being unable (at least at a given point in time) to erase certain inconsistencies from his system or theory. (This is something that’s often been said about Bohr’s well-known model of the atom.)

What we say about the world (whether in science, philosophy, mathematics, logic or everyday life) may well be consistent or inconsistent. However, the world itself can neither be consistent nor inconsistent.

Yet if dialethism is about the world, then Priest (to use his own example — see here) could indeed be both in New York and not in New York at one and the same time! If it’s about what we can say, on the other hand, then it’s simply a logic that can helpfully capture and formulate such things as the inconsistencies in scientific theories. Alternatively, dialetheic logic can advance the pragmatic option of seeing two contradictory positions as both being true (or simply usable) — at least for the time being!

Thus nearly all Priest’s examples of dialetheic contradictions are really about human perceptions of — or attitudes towards — the world, not the world itself. They also concern inconsistencies in scientific and (another area mentioned by Priest himself) legal theories about the world. This makes dialetheism either a position in epistemology and/or one in the philosophy of science. So, if all that is the case, then surely dialetheism isn’t a “robust ontology” which happily embraces contradictions-in-the-world at all.

Of course Priest’s next move may be to question this possibly bogus distinction between the world and our statements about — and knowledge of — the world. Actually, he does question this distinction. He even uses the term “social constructionism” about his own position.

All in all, then, it can be said that Priest uses positions in epistemology and the philosophy of science as means to back up (or defend) his (seemingly) very-radical logical dialetheism.

But what about Wittgenstein himself?

Wittgenstein wasn’t a dialetheist primarily because he wasn’t talking about contradictions-in-the-world, but contradictions-as-creations-of-systems. Indeed it can be suspected that Wittgenstein would have had a problem with the very notion of contradictions-in-the-world.

However, it’s still not clear (to me at least) if dialetheists actually do believe that there are contradictions-in-the-world.

Take the words of Bryson Brown again, in his paper ‘On Paraconsistency’. He writes:

[Dialetheists] hold that the world is inconsistent, and aim at a general logic that goes beyond all the consistency constraints of classical logic.”

Deriving the notion of an inconsistent world from our psychologistic and/or epistemological limitations (as well as from accepted notions in the philosophy of science) is problematic (see psychologism). In other words, the epistemological acceptance of inconsistencies can’t also be applied to the world itself.

So it may be the case that dialetheists choose — for logical and/or epistemological reasons — to accept paradoxes and contradictions (just like Wittgenstein) even though they also believe that, ultimately, they aren’t true of the world (or of bridges). Then again, Brown continues by saying that dialetheists “view these paradoxes as proofs that certain inconsistencies are true” …

But true of what?

True only of the logical, linguistic and systemic expressions of the paradoxes or true of the world itself?

Nonetheless, Graham Priest does mention “reality” when he talks of consistency and inconsistency. For example, when discussing the virtue of simplicity, Priest asks the following question:

“If there is some reason for supposing that reality is, quite generally, very consistent — say some sort of transcendental argument — then inconsistency is clearly a negative criterion. If not, then perhaps not.”

As it is, how can the world be either inconsistent or consistent? Indeed a position can be taken on this which is similar — or parallel — to Baruch Spinoza’s philosophical — and perhaps moral — point that the world can only… well, be.

All this may be betraying my implicit (naïve) realism. Yet it must still be stated that what we say about the world (whether via science, philosophy, mathematics or logic) may well be consistent or inconsistent. (We may also say, with Spinoza, that the world is “beautiful” or “ugly”.) However, the world itself — along with its bridges — can be neither consistent nor inconsistent.



Wednesday, 31 August 2022

Hilary Putnam Against Philosophical Formalisers and For Context-Dependence

Hilary Putnam claimed that analytic philosophers “still suffer from the idea that formalising a sentence tells you what it ‘really’ says”; and that “philosophy stands almost entirely apart [] giving much too much significance to an ideal language”. What’s more: “Wittgenstein and J.L. Austin would argue that sentences do not normally have context-independent truth conditions.”

The American philosopher Hilary Putnam (1926–2016) once discussed the various (analytic) philosophers who’d defended the notion of context-independence when it came not only to the meanings of words and expressions; but also to the truth conditions of statements (or sentences). Indeed Putnam argued that if we have one, then we must also have the other. That is, the contextuality of meaning determines the fact that truth conditions must also be contextual in nature.

[Think here of Putnam’s well-known “cherry on the tree” example.]

Putnam argued:

[] Wittgenstein and [J.L.] Austin well before us, would argue that sentences do not normally have context-independent truth conditions. It’s the meaning of the sentence or the words plus the context that fixes the truth conditions.”

Putnam meant that we can’t even begin to “fix the truth conditions” of words or sentences if we haven’t already fixed the meanings of those words or sentences. And that fixing of meaning will be a contextual matter.

So we must move from the

context-dependent meaning of the word “cat” and the whole sentence “The cat is on the mat”

to the

context-dependent truth conditions of the sentence “The cat is on the mat”.

Indeed we can’t even have a meaning (or Fregean sense) of the word “cat” unless we also have the intension of the sentence “The cat is on the mat” (at least according to Gottlob Frege’s context principle).

As with salient or relevant causal facts, we must also determine which truth conditions to focus upon. (Think again of Putnam’s “cherry on the tree” example.)

Not only that: according to Alfred Tarski’s Convention T, truth conditions are simply the named sentences once disquoted. Thus:

(T) S is true iff p.

Or:

(T) The sentence “Snow is white” is true iff snow is white.

All this can be summed up in the following way:

(i) If the truth conditions are the disquotation of the former named sentence, and that sentence requires a meaning that is context-dependent, 
(ii) then it follows that the truth conditions (or simply the disquoted sentence) will also be context-dependent.

So truth conditions are not only dependent on the context of the meaning of the sentence “Snow is white”; but also on the context of the truth condition snow being white (or white snow).

(This isn’t, however, a choice we can make with Convention T.)

The Philosophical Formalisers

Hilary Putnam believed that one of the main reasons for the denial of context-dependence (or context-sensitivity) was the desire to make philosophy (or at least its semantics) more scientific and logical in nature. The Formalisers wanted to secure the “determinacy of sense or meaning” and the objectivity of language as a whole (see here). As Putnam put it:

[P]hilosophy stands almost entirely apart from [linguistics, semantics, and lexicography], giving much too much significance to ideal language, mathematical logic and all that.”

In the first half of the 20th century many philosophers in the analytic tradition (at least, roughly, from 1905 to 1940 — see ‘Ideal Language’) virtually ignored work in linguistics, semantics and, most definitely, in lexicography. Even P.F. Strawson (1909–2006) — who was one of the first to reject the ideal of an ideal language and even its possibility (see here) — didn’t spend much time on linguistics and semantics.

These formalising philosophers were dealing primarily with what they believed to be abstract entities (such as senses, meanings and propositions). They did so with the tools of logic. Thus it’s hardly surprising that such philosophers had no time at all for linguistics and semantics. To think that a linguist could have told them the sense or proposition (as it were) behind a word or sentence would have seemed outrageous (or ludicrous) to them. Linguistics and semantics are largely empirical disciplines (or so it seemed to such philosophers); whereas philosophy of language and logic were a priori disciplines which dealt with what must be taken as a Platonic realm (or Frege’s Third Realm). This was even the case when such philosophers weren’t Platonists in general terms — i.e., when it came to ethics, other areas of metaphysics, etc.

The antipathy towards the ideal of an ideal language, on the other hand, was neatly expressed by Putnam himself in the following passage:

I think that we still suffer from the idea that formalising a sentence tells you what it ‘really’ says. Perhaps we are now doing something similar with Chomskian linguistics.”

More broadly, it’s not just arrogant when a philosopher tells us “what we really mean”: it’s also wrong. It can’t be done. What such philosophers really told us (if they told us anything about our actual meanings) is what they believed we should have said or meant. And that hidden normativity (i.e., within their pronouncements) would have depended on the prior ontological and logical commitments of the philosophers concerned.

All that said, it’s now worth stating that poststructuralists, structuralists, postmodernists, literary theorists (as well as other kinds of “theorist”) etc. were — and still are — just as guilty of all this as any early-20th-century analytic philosopher. Such (as it were) non-analytics might have gone about it in different ways (i.e., they didn’t and don’t employ logic or the technical terms/devices of analytic philosophy) but they were — and still are — interpreting (sometimes very freely) what laypersons say and believe.

Still, let’s stick to analytic philosophy.

Now take the case of Bertrand Russell’s well-known ‘On Denoting’, which was first published in 1905.

Bertrand Russell is still widely known for once telling us what we (or at least philosophers) really mean when we use the words “The king of France is bald”. Yet, arguably, what Russell really meant when he attempted to (as it were) improve that sentence is simply tell us that we’re making philosophical and logical mistakes when we use it. Alternatively, Russell believed that philosophers and laypersons (when uttering “The king of France is bald”) were committed to things which they didn’t realise they were committed to. Thus Russell was telling us what we should say and also what we should be logically and/or philosophically committed to.

That said, Russell wasn’t telling folk that they actually are (i.e., consciously) committed to the existence of bald French kings, etc. And, the argument here is, Russell certainly wasn’t telling folk what they really meant.

In most cases (though not all), if people had wanted to say something else by what they said, then they would have said something else.

Would we say, for example, that when a young child states that “4 + 2 = 7” that he really meant to say “4 + 2 = 6”? No — the child was simply doing faulty arithmetic. Similarly, what if an adult says that “Jim is a shit” and a philosopher says that he really meant to say “Jim is a bad person”? Perhaps he should have said “Jim is a bad person”. Yet the adult who said “Jim is a shit” still didn’t really mean Jim is a bad person; otherwise he would have said that and meant that.

The formalising of a sentence (whether by Russell or by anyone else) is thus a little like psychoanalysis. In my stereotype, the psychoanalyst tells us what our dreams (or our locutions) really mean; even though we don’t ourselves know what they really mean. Indeed, almost by definition, the psychoanalyst (in these cases at least) believes that we mustn’t (or can’t) really know what we mean by what we say (or what our dreams really mean).

This means that the psychoanalyst has skills (or so he/she believes) that we don’t have and is thus automatically entitled to tell us what we really mean by something or other.

So, who knows, perhaps the psychoanalyst is being normative too in that he’s not really telling us what we really mean.

Similarly, the formalising philosopher also tells people that (almost by definition) they can’t know what they really mean because laypersons haven’t got the philosophical and logical skills to fully know (or know at all) what they really mean.

It’s strange, then, that on this interpretation of what the formalising philosophers did, they were essentially being normative when it came to formalising our sentences. That is, they were telling what we should mean given the ontological and logical implications of what we do actually say. Not only that: the Formalisers believed that we should be ontologically and logically committed to things that we aren’t actually committed to.

This means that instead of discovering the deep truths about propositions and meanings, the Formalisers were really offering deep truths about themselves — or about what it was they were logically and ontologically committed to.

And, if that was indeed the case, then perhaps the Formalisers should have come clean and told everyone that this was what they were doing.

Another way to put all this is to agree with Wittgenstein and say that there are no deep — logical or otherwise — truths about what we say.

Wittgenstein

So is everything really on the surface when it comes to what we say and what we mean? (As Wittgenstein put it: “Nothing is hidden.”)

This meant (at least to Wittgenstein and others) that any depths there actually are belong to the minds of the philosophers who create those depths. Yet if they’re only illusory depths (“cast by the shadows of our language”), then we have good reasons to ignore what the philosophers tell us about what it is we really mean.

In that case, then, perhaps the aforementioned psychoanalysts should have cast their nets into the depths of the minds of these formalising philosophers and told us what they, not us, really mean.

Putnam then offered us an interesting and ironic take on these philosophical formalisers. Putnam said:

I think part of the appeal of mathematical logic is that the formulas look mysterious — you write backward Es!”

[These formalising philosophers might have argued — if they were still around when Putnam stated these words — that Putnam’s analysis of what they do is psychologistic or even one large ad hominem.]

To add detail to Putnam’s remarks; as well as to include some off-road Wittgensteinian forays.

Can’t it be argued that the Formalisers believed that the use of mathematical logic automatically took them nearer to the truth about such matters? Yet just because mathematical logic is arcane and an extra-special specialism (indeed just because it’s also “mysterious” — with its “backward Es”), then does that automatically mean that it will be of value when it comes to discovering anything about the non-formal matters of philosophy?

[It’s worth mentioning an appositely titled book by Bertrand Russell - ‘Mysticism and Logic’ (1914).]

That said, logic may well help us in certain — or indeed many — ways. (It will help us formalise our problems for a start.) However, wouldn’t we reach a point at which it would be of no help whatsoever?

So was mathematical logic seen by such Formalisers as the strange and arcane symbols of ancient myths and religions were seen by people in ancient cultures? Indeed did the Formalisers see their logical symbols as the sacred keys required to take them into an otherwise impenetrable (though deeper) world?



Sunday, 28 August 2022

A Case Against Contemporary Theoretical Physics and Cosmology

The controversial American polemicist David Berlinski states that “contemporary cosmologists feel free to say anything that pops into their heads”. He also compares the Big Bang theory to Norse mythology. This essay discusses his claims.

(i) Introduction
(ii) Berlinski on Metaphysical Speculation
(iii) Berlinski on Lee Smolin’s Cosmological Natural Selection
(iv) Berlinski on the Big Bang Theory
(v) Berlinski on Alan Guth’s Inflationary Theory

David Berlinski is a well known and controversial writer and polemicist.

Berlinski rejects — or, perhaps, simply questions — the Big Bang theory, the theory of evolution and the cosmological inflationary theory. He also rejects (or simply questions) the existence of black holes, the multiverse, etc.

Perhaps Berlinski’s broader perspective on science is best expressed in his book The Devil’s Delusion: Atheism and its Scientific Pretensions (2008). More concretely, Berlinski is a signatory to A Scientific Dissent from Darwinism, which was a statement issued by the Discovery Institute in 2001.

One aspect of Berlinski’s critique of science is itself scientific (or perhaps philosophical) and the other part is almost purely sociological and political. (Berlinski writes: “If knowledge is power, then physicists have [] been given an enormous privilege.”)

Some commentators have stressed the fact that Berlinski has only a limited scientific background. The Wikipedia-like website RationalWiki goes further and basically claims that David Berlinski has no scientific credentials whatsoever. (It writes: “Although often referred to as a ‘mathematician’, Berlinski has done no research in mathematics.”) Yet the Discovery Institute (which Berlinski writes for) provides a biography of Berlinski which reads as follows:

“David Berlinski received his Ph.D. in philosophy from Princeton University and was later a postdoctoral fellow in mathematics and molecular biology at Columbia University. He is currently a Senior Fellow at Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture. Dr. Berlinski has authored works on systems analysis, differential topology, theoretical biology, analytic philosophy, and the philosophy of mathematics, as well as three novels. He has also taught philosophy, mathematics and English at such universities as Stanford, Rutgers, the City University of New York and the Universite de Paris. In addition, he has held research fellowships at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Austria and the Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques (IHES) in France.”

Do these credentials impress RationalWiki? Obviously not. That seems to be mainly because Berlinski hasn’t written any academic papers on physics or science generally. (RationalWiki also states: “It is worth noting that his books on mathematics are popular books.”)

As for theoretical physics and cosmology specifically (i.e., not the Darwinism Berlinski has a serious problem with).

The American biologist Jerry Coyne (who — to be a contrarian myself — has a Darwinian horse in this race) sums Berlinski’s general position up in the following manner:

“Science has no answers to ‘The Big Questions’ like ‘why is there something instead of nothing?’ (the answer that ‘it was an accident’ is fobbed off by Berlinski as ‘failing to meet people’s intellectual needs’, which of course is not an answer but a statement about confirmation bias); ‘where did the Universe come from?’; ‘how did life originate?’; ‘what are we doing here?’, ‘what is our purpose?’, and so on. Apparently Berlinski doesn’t like ‘we don’t know’ as an answer, but as a nonbeliever I’d like to know his answer! He has none; all he does is carp about science’s ignorance.”

Jerry Coyne’s words have just been quoted specifically because they more or less square with some of the positions which will be advanced in the following essay.

As stated, Berlinski seems to be primarily motivated by the (for want of a better term) sociology of science, politics and the defense of religion. This means that it’s hard — at least at first — to see why that would motivate him to be so strident when it comes to so much contemporary theoretical physics and cosmology.

Is this because Berlinski connects literally all contemporary theoretical physics and cosmology to atheism (which he certainly has a big problem with)?

So it’s deeply ironic that many other defenders of religion — or the belief in God — only ever mention physics or quote scientists when such mentions and quotes can be squared with (or connected to) their prior religious or “spiritual” views. Thus such people have written entire books or articles in which they cite scientific data which they believe doesn’t conflict with religious views at all — quite the opposite. Yet, even in these cases, science is hardly mentioned at all outside of their own personal religious or theistic contexts.

All that said, much has also be written about Berlinski’s contrarianism (i.e., not his scepticism) being an end in itself.

[See the critical article Ode to the Contrarian’, which mentions Berlinski. This piece, however, lumps all supposed contrarians together and fails to distinguish those people who are — well — contrarian about a single scientific subject/issue from across-the-board contrarians like Berlinski himself.]

In the following essay, most of the quotes from Berlinski come from his ‘Was There a Big Bang?’. The subheading to that essay reads as follows:

“The universe, cosmologists affirm, came into existence in an explosion; but the evidence for this thesis is more suspect [].”

The essay ends with this paragraph:

“Like Darwin’s theory of evolution, Big Bang cosmology has undergone that curious social process in which a scientific theory is promoted to a secular myth. The two theories serve as points of certainty in an intellectual culture that is otherwise disposed to give the benefit of the doubt to doubt itself. [] Myths are quite typically false, and science is concerned with truth. Human beings, it would seem, may make scientific theories or they may make myths, but with respect to the same aspects of experience, they cannot quite do both.”

Now for a final introductory comment.

I can’t claim to be an expert on David Berlinski and I certainly haven’t read everything — or even much — that he’s written. So I’ve simply tackled his words and arguments as they’re expressed in his aforementioned essay on the Big Bang (as well as a spattering of his words from elsewhere). ‘Was There a Big Bang?’ is long. It’s almost 9,000 words in length — i.e., twice as long as my own response here. (That makes it slightly longer than the average academic paper.) What’s more, virtually every sentence within Berlinski’s essay is expressed in an extremely literary (or poetic) manner. (Berlinski calls his own writing style “rhapsodic and florid”.) And that may explain why some of it — to be honest, though not sarcastic — went over my head.

It also needs to be said here that when it comes to a lot of the scientific issues and theories discussed in this essay, I’m not completely on top of all the technical details. Put simply: I’m not a mathematical physicist…

Then again, I’m pretty sure that the very same thing can be said about David Berlinski himself.

Berlinski on Metaphysical Speculation

In his essay ‘Was There a Big Bang?’, Berlinski is often vague, rhetorical and very literary about the issue of speculation in theoretical physics and cosmology. However, he does actually cite various concrete examples. He also offers some technical detail.

For example, Berlinski writes:

“Unhappy examples are everywhere; absurd schemes to model time on the basis of the complex numbers, as in Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of Time, bizarre and ugly contraptions for cosmic inflation; universes multiplying beyond the reach of observation; white holes, black holes, worm holes, and naked singularities; theories of every strip and variety, all of them uncorrected by any criticism beyond the trivial.”

Berlinski seems to take the extreme and (to use his word) absurd position that all speculation — and indeed all hypothesising — in theoretical physics (perhaps all physics) and cosmology is beyond the pail. Yet if such a position on speculation were ever (as it were) made law, then that would have destroyed all physics from day one.

Berlinski also seems to be ignorant of the history of science (or simply one aspect thereof) when he uses phrases such as “there is [] no evidence whatsoever in favour of” various contemporary theories in theoretical physics and cosmology. He should — and probably does — know that all sorts of theories which began life as hypotheses — or even straight speculations — were later backed up by observations, tests, experiments, data, etc. All this was true of Maxwell’s kinetic theory, Paul Dirac’s postulation of an “anti-electron”, Murray Gell-Mann’s “quark model”, etc. There are, of course, many other examples. Indeed it can be assumed that physicists themselves could provide a list that’s as long as their collective arm…

Unless, that is, Berlinski rejects all these theories and entities too.

As it is, it’s hard to know what precise technical problems Berlinski has with using “complex numbers”, the “bizarre and ugly contraptions for cosmic inflation”, “worm holes”, “naked singularities”, etc. So perhaps this has nothing to do with Berlinski’s own technical problems with such arcana. Perhaps Berlinski has purely aesthetic, religious, political and/or philosophical problems with these theories and speculations.

Alternatively, perhaps Berlinski’s contrarianism-as-an-end-in-itself is at the heart of the matter.

So the question is whether Berlinski has a problem with what may be called pure speculation. Or to ask a simpler question:

Is Berlinski ruling out all future observational and experimental backup for all speculations in theoretical physics and cosmology a priori?

Take the American theoretical physicist and cosmologist Alan Guth (1947-), whose inflationary theory is targeted by Berlinski (see later section).

The American theoretical physicist Lee Smolin (who’s also targeted by Berlinski) argues that “the theory of inflation predicts that omega should be equal to one.” He continues:

“Therefore the inflationary theory is subject to experimental tests, observational tests. These tests are going to occur in the next ten of fifteen years.”

And, lo and behold, that’s what happened!…

Well, not quite.

It’s true that the basics of inflationary theory (if there are such things) are accepted by most physicists. That’s primarily because many of Guth’s predictions have been confirmed by observation. More specifically, Guth’s theory accounts for the homogeneity of the observable universe. It also accounts for the observed flatness. Indeed, since Guth’s early work, much of his theory has received further confirmation. This is especially the case when it comes to the detailed observations of the cosmic microwave background made by the Planck spacecraft.

However, an important minority of scientists have serious problems with Guth’s inflationary theory. And that, in a strong sense, is both a good and a bad thing (as Popperians would argue) for theoretical physics and cosmology . To Berlinski, on the other hand, all such disagreements (or anomalies) are portrayed as being deeply profound and disturbing. And that’s precisely why he uses such disagreements as weapons against contemporary science.

Berlinski goes on to write:

“What are discovering is that many areas of the universe are apparently protected from our scrutiny, like sensitive files sealed from view by powerful encryption codes.”

Now that passage could be about the multiverse theory, the extra dimensions and branes of string theory and God knows what else. Yet it must be said here that such critical and sceptical words have also been uttered by some well-known and high-ranking physicists themselves (even if their prose styles are not at all like Berlinski’s own).

For example, much has been written by (ironically) Lee Smolin about the purely mathematical and speculative nature of string theory. (The main claim is that string theory suffers from an “absence of falsifiable predictions”; and what predictions it does offer aren’t “unique”.) Smolin even wrote the following words (i.e., in his book The Trouble With Physics: The Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science, and What Comes Next) about string theory:

“The feeling was that there could be only one consistent theory that unified all of physics, and since string theory appeared to do that, it had to be right. No more reliance on experiment to check our theories. That was the stuff of Galileo. Mathematics [alone] now sufficed to explore the laws of nature. We had entered the period of postmodern physics.”

Another example is theoretical physicist Brian Greene’s (non-literary and non-rhetorical) take on the idea of a multiverse. He states:

“The danger, if the multiverse idea takes root, is that researchers may too quickly give up the search for such underlying explanations. When faced with seemingly inexplicable observations, researchers may invoke the framework of the multiverse prematurely — proclaiming some phenomenon or other to merely reflect conditions in our own bubble universe and thereby failing to discover the deeper understanding that awaits us.”

And, finally, the British astrophysicist and cosmologist Martin Rees says more or less the same thing Brian Greene in the following:

“If people believed that some features of the universe were not fundamental but just accidents, resulting from the particular way our domain in the meta-universe cooled down, then they’d be less motivated to try to explain them.”

If we return to pure speculations.

Are such speculations (i.e., from theoretical physicists and cosmologists) automatically “metaphysics” simply because there’s no observational and/or experimental evidence for them? Indeed would the metaphysical status of such speculations automatically be a bad thing if, at least in principle, future findings, tests, observations, experiments, etc. would turn them (as it were) non-metaphysical?

So what does Berlinski himself believe?

He believes the following:

“This scrupulousness has been compromised. The result has been the calculated or careless erasure of the line separating disciplined physical inquiry from speculative metaphysics. Contemporary cosmologists feel free to say anything that pops into their heads.”

Some readers may think that a person like Berlinski (i.e., as a strong critic of contemporary science and the social/political — his word — “power” of physicists) would have some time for metaphysics — if not also for “speculative metaphysics”. (It has been said that all metaphysics is speculative.) Who knows. Perhaps Berlinski does have time for metaphysics; just not when it’s carried out by those scientists he has no time for.

In any case, Berlinski singles out Lee Smolin’s cosmological natural selection in which (to use Berlinski’s own words) “the Big Bang happened within a black hole”.

Berlinski on Smolin’s Cosmological Natural Selection

Berlinski writes:

“There is, needless to say, no evidence whatsoever in favour of this preposterous theory. The universes that a bubbling up are unobservable. So, too, are the universes that have bubbled up and those that will bubble up in the future. Smolin’s theories cannot be confirmed by experience. Or by anything else. What law of nature could reveal that the laws of nature are contingent?”

Of course quarks and all the other particles are (to use Berlinski’s own word) “unobservable” too. Strictly speaking, the four forces of physics are unobservable — even if their effects aren’t. So too is the past, the future, other minds, the earth’s core, numbers, etc.

[The line between what’s observable and what’s not is vague and the issue is complicated. See ‘The Image of Observables’ by Valerie Gray Hardcastle.]

Physicists postulated atoms, particles and other fundamentals of physics primarily via theory and mathematics and only then did experiments and (indirect) observations save the day. Indeed pure speculation has often been what got the scientific ball rolling.

However, it’s not being argued here that Smolin’s theory of cosmological natural selection is in exactly the same ballpark — and in every respect — as, say, Murry Gell-Mann’s quark model (i.e., as it was before any experimental confirmation) and other well-known cases.

What’s more, even if a claim or theory is indeed speculative, then does that automatically mean that it must have simply (as Berlinski puts it) popped into the head of the speculator — especially if that speculator is a theoretical physicist or cosmologist?

Ironically, it’s possible that Berlinski has (as it were) borrowed some — or even all — of his (sceptical/contrarian) criticisms of theoretical physics and cosmologists from physicists — as the quotes above show. So perhaps his alternatives (although he rarely — if ever — states them) might be borrowed from physicists too.

Take the English cosmologist, theoretical physicist and mathematician John D. Barrow (who died in 2020).

Barrow himself seemed to be referring to Smolin’s theory — and, perhaps less directly, to the idea of a multiverse — when he wrote the following words:

“There has grown up, even amongst many educated persons a view that everything in Nature, every fabrication of its laws, is determined by the local environment in which it was nurtured — that natural selection and the Darwinian revolution have advanced to the boundaries of every scientific discipline.”

Berlinski on the Big Bang Theory

Despite the lack of details for some wild statements — and the lack of any alternatives — in his essay ‘Was There a Big Bang?’, Berlinski does offer a fair amount of technical detail when he discusses the case against the Big Bang. His main (or indeed only) technical point is that the redshift isn’t conclusive evidence — or evidence at all — for the Big Bang. He cites the work of the American astronomer Halton Arp (1927–2013) to back up his own position. Alternatively put: perhaps Berlinski’s case against the Big Bang theory is entirely due to Arp’s work.

[Arp was a critic of the Big Bang theory who advanced what’s called a non-standard cosmology — see here.]

In any case, Berlinski main weapon against contemporary theoretical physics and cosmology is to stress disagreements among theoretical physicists and cosmologists and then draw hugely negative conclusions from them (as well as failing to realise — or simply note — that most physicists embrace anomalies).

Berlinski also questions the Big Bang metaphor of the switching on of a light and the subsequent creation of time itself. Yet he also rejects the existence of the multiverse, which could provide an answer to his questions. Indeed so too could Lee Smolin’s cosmological natural selection, which he calls “preposterous”.

Yet, as already stated, there is some substance (underneath the literary rhetoric) within Berlinski’s words. Take the following passage:

[T]he image of the fundamental laws of physics zestfully wrestling with the void to bring the universe into being is one that suggests very little improvement over the account given by the ancient Norse in which the world is revealed to be balanced on the back of a gigantic ox.”

The fact is that some theoretical physicists and commentators have also stated as much — even if Berlinski’s comparison with Norse mythology is cheap and rhetorical. That is, some theoretical physicists themselves have seen the problems here. (Again, Berlinski might have actually borrowed these arguments from such physicists.)

Here’s another passage from Berlinski:

“The image of a light switch comes from Paul Davies, who uses it to express a miracle without quite recognizing that it embodies a contradiction. A universe that has suddenly switched itself on has accomplished something within time; and yet the Big Bang is supposed to have brought space and time into existence.”

Berlinski must know that there are many answers (if not necessarily correct or acceptable answers) to this issue in theoretical physics and cosmology. The problem is that he doesn’t like any of these answers either.

So now take these words from Lee Smolin (again):

“But if time does not end, then there is something there, happening. The question is, What? This is very like the question about what happened ‘before the Big Bang’ in the event that quantum effects allow time to extend indefinitely into the past.”

The problem here is that this passage also includes references to Berlinski’s unobservables. (Is Berlinski a 19th-century positivist or Machian?) So Berlinski wouldn’t like Smolin’s alternative either. This effectively means that Berlinski doesn’t like the idea of time suddenly being switched on… And he doesn’t like any of the alternatives either.

So perhaps Berlinski should just “put up or shut up” instead! (To requote Jerry Coyne: Berlinski “has none” of the answers. “All he does is carp about science’s ignorance.”)

All that said, some physicists can be adopted (or co-opted) to express Berlinski’s problems and worries.

Take the the physicist John Archibald Wheeler and Berlinski’s (now repeated) words

“the image of the fundamental laws of physics zestfully wrestling with the void to bring the universe into being”.

Wheeler had (kinda) already expressed Berlinski’s own position when he provided a good riposte to (for want of a better term) Pythagoreanism in physics.

The fairly-well-known story is that Wheeler used to write many obscure and technical equations on the blackboard and then stand back and say to his students:

“Now I’ll clap my hands and a universe will spring into existence.”

[According to Pythagoreans, however, the equations are the universe.]

Then Stephen Hawking (a physicist Berlinski also criticises) outdid Wheeler with an his even-better-known passage. He wrote:

“Even if there is only one possible unified theory, it is just a set of rules and equations. What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?”

Yet the science writer Kitty Ferguson offers a (possible) Pythagorean answer (as already hinted at) to Hawking’s question when she says that “it might be that the equations are the fire”. Alternatively, could Hawking himself have been “suggesting that the laws have a life or creative force of their own?”.

Again, is it that the “equations are the fire”?

This hint at Pythagoreanism is expressed by both the friends and the foes of contemporary theoretical physics and cosmology.

For example, this is how a non-scientist friend of science puts it:

“While some cosmologists are speculating that the laws of physics might explain the origin of the universe, the origin of the laws themselves is a problem so unfathomable that it is rarely discussed [] Is there a way in which the universe may have organized itself?”

So Berlinski could now legitimately ask theoretical physicists and cosmologists this question:

What, exactly, “breathes fire into the equation to make a world”?

Alternatively, we could ask Berlinski himself that very same question! (Berlinski, please put up or shut up!)

Berlinski on Alan Guth’s Inflationary Theory

As partially stated in the introduction, I don’t know all the technical details on this specific issue…

But does David Berlinski?

It may be tempting to assume that Berlinski is missing something when it comes to the Big Bang and the parallel something-from-nothing scenario (which is not from Norse mythology). Alternatively, perhaps Berlinski has simply misinterpreted (or simplified) this scenario in the haze of his flamboyant prose.

All that said, surely Berlinski’s statements are broadly legitimate. Or to put that in a weaker way: Surely non-experts (as well as experts themselves) are right to ask the questions which Berlinski asks.

So it may help readers when Berlinski actually offers some technical details here. Berlinski writes:

“Having entered a dark logical defile, physicists often find it difficult to withdraw. Thus, Alan Guth writes in pleased astonishment that the universe really did arise from ‘essentially… nothing at all’: as it happens, a false vacuum patch ‘10⁻²⁶ centimetres in diameter’ and ‘10⁻³² solar masses’.”

He concludes:

“It would appear, then, that ‘essentially nothing’ has both spatial extension and mass. While these facts may strike Guth as inconspicuous, others may suspect that nothingness, like death, is not a matter that admits of degree.”

It does — again — seem that Berlinski has a point…

But that’s only if he’s characterised Alan Guth’s position correctly. (It could of course be the case that Berlinski’s quotes from Guth are artfully out of context.)

Yet, on the surface at least, it does seem that Berlinski has (more or less) expressed Guth’s position correctly.

So here’s Guth himself on the “false vacuum”:

[A] ‘false vacuum,’ which is the driving force behind inflation. We discovered that a large enough region of false vacuum would create a new universe, which, as I described earlier, would rapidly disconnect from ours and become totally isolated.”

More relevantly:

“Since the mass density of the false vacuum is approximately 10⁶⁰ times larger than the density of an atomic nucleus, it would certainly not be easy.”

Guth then admits to a degree of speculation when he concludes:

“Nonetheless, one can speak about the physics of universe creation as a matter of principle, and I find it a very interesting question.”

It’s worth noting here that Guth’s position is now almost standard among many theoretical physicists and cosmologists. For example, take the words of Marcelo Gleiser (1959-), a Brazilian physicist who states the following words:

“We plow ahead, proposing tentative models that join general relativity and quantum mechanics where the universe pops out of nothing, no energy required: All is due to a random quantum fluctuation.”

It may be wondered if Berlinski is conflating a vacuum (or a false vacuum) with nothingness. After all, in the last quote above Guth doesn’t even use the word “nothing”. (Gleiser does!) In any case, it’s crystal clear that the two notions of a vacuum and a false vacuum (in physics) aren’t even meant to be cases of literal nothingness — at least not the nothingness which has often been discussed by philosophers, theologians and others.

Yet, despite that last sentence, let’s still ask this obvious question:

How can nothing have “both spatial extension and mass”?

It may be relevant here that, even according to Berlinski’s own first quote, Guth does prefix his word “nothing” with the word “essentially”. It can now be argued that the words “essentially nothing” actually mean not quite nothing. So perhaps this is an odd and uncareful use of the word “essentially”. And no doubt Guth, as a physicist, would have a problem with such pedantry here…

[The word “pedantry” is used because physicists often do have a problem with philosophers and other people nit-picking the words they use. See my ‘Why Richard Feynman (the Superstar Physicist) Hated Philosophy and Philosophers’.]

But that’s too easy.

It’s too easy because it’s surely acceptable to ask what Guth means by “essentially nothing”. After all, if there is a difference — even a big difference — between nothing and essentially nothing, then that will have a profound impact on the nature of the Big Bang. In other words, the (possible) pedantry above is simply a means of clarifying the actual physics. Many physicists, of course, will argue that only better mathematics and clearer physics can do any of the clarifying which needs to be done…

Finally, perhaps David Berlinski believes that Alan Guth (qua physicist) is playing God. That is, in the best-selling book The Inflationary Universe (published one year before Berlinski’s own ‘Was There a Big Bang?’), Guth speculated as to whether or not it would be possible to create a new universe in his own basement laboratory!