Bmw R 12nineT strizza l'occhio alle corse con il kit Tracker - Mondo Motori - Ansa.it
https://www.ansa.it/canale_motori/notizie/mondo_motori/2025/09/01/bmw-r-12ninet-strizza-locchio-alle-corse-con-il-kit-tracker_f8b9c4f4-1ce6-447f-979a-d1d7c0c5344f.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Motori @motori-AgenziaAnsa
Bmw R 12nineT strizza l'occhio alle corse con il kit Tracker - Mondo Motori - Ansa.it
BMW Motorrad ha presentato The Tracker, un nuovo pacchetto di accessori dedicato alla R 12 nineT che porta sulla strada il linguaggio stilistico delle competizioni flat track. (ANSA)Agenzia ANSA
Citroën C3, il crossover agile e versatile - La Prova di ANSA Motori - Ansa.it
https://www.ansa.it/canale_motori/notizie/la_prova_di_ansa_motori/2025/09/01/citroen-c3-il-crossover-agile-e-versatile_3b4dd45d-91c9-4c29-9c8d-3eb7953254d0.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Motori @motori-AgenziaAnsa
Citroën C3, il crossover agile e versatile - La Prova di ANSA Motori - Ansa.it
La quarta generazione di Citroën C3, presentata nel 2023, si distingue per uno stile da crossover ma anche per spaziosità e versatilità. L'abbiamo provata nella versione Turbo 100 CV con cambio manuale, il cui prezzo di listino che parte da 19.Agenzia ANSA
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- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign
@ipsc.bsky.social
on Blue Sky:
Kneecap at Electric Picnic.
#Gaza #Ireland #KneeCap #Music #Concert #Genocide
@israel @palestine@lemmy.ml @palestine@a.gup.pe
Marcus Jaschen: Rückblick Kalenderwoche 2025-35 marcusjaschen.de/blog/2025/202…
#Blog
Rückblick Kalenderwoche 2025-35
🚵♂️ Tagebaurunde im Lausitzer Seenland und Besuch am Tagebau Welzow-Süd 📐 Besuch in Dessau: Bauhausgebäude und Bauhaus-Museum 🍑 Ertragreiche Pfirsichernte 🎨 Ich wäre so gerne kreativ – Shopping im modulor 🍪 Selbst gebacken: Cantuccini 🔊 Diese Woche …Marcus Jaschen
@Hiker
Also regionale oder thematische Instanzen haben schon einen (kleinen) Vorteil. Allerdings ist dieser technisch absolut nicht notwendig. Da gebe ich dir recht.
PR-Aktionismus gefällt mir. 😉
In meinen Augen war es ein riesengroßes Problem, dass in der Mastodon APP lange Zeit nur die "Hauptinstanz" auswählbar war. Das hat sehr viel kaputt gemacht und dazu geführt, dass viele Neulinge das Fediversum wieder verlassen haben.
@Feditraveler @Momentum @Hiker
Thematische Server bilden aber nie den Menschen ab. Du kannst dich für Bildung interessieren und gleichzeitig ein Fan für Fotografie, Modelleisenbahnen oder Fahrradgeschichten sein. Wofür entscheide ich mich und wie kann ich die anderen Menschen finden, die meine Interessen ergänzen? Über Hashtags? Ja, ok. Das funktioniert manchmal recht übel.
Für diese Zwecke hat das Fediverse Gruppen. Die stellen nicht nur sicher, dass du dich mit den "richtigen" Menschen zusammen schließt. Es löst auch das Problem der unvollständigen Threads. Warum? Die Gruppe stellt einen moderierten Raum zur Verfügung und verteilt alle Beiträge an die Gruppe an alle Teilnehmenden. Perfekt gelöst.
Ukraine arrests suspect in former parliamentary speaker’s murder
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/1/ukraine-arrests-suspect-in-former-parliamentary-speakers-murder?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Europe News @europe-news-AlJazeera
Ukraine arrests suspect in former parliamentary speaker’s murder
A statement from the country’s interior minister suggests that Saturday’s killing had been carefully planned.Al Jazeera
Bublik, servizio killer e un pizzico di follia. Occhio Jannik, ti ha già battuto quest'anno...
https://www.gazzetta.it/Tennis/atp/slam/us-open/01-09-2025/chi-e-bublik-l-avversario-di-sinner-agli-us-open.shtml?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Tennis @tennis-Gazzetta
Bublik, servizio killer e un pizzico di follia. Occhio Jannik, ti ha già battuto quest'anno...
È l'unico che non si chiami Alcaraz capace di battere Sinner quest'anno. È successo a giugno ad Halle, dove poi ha vinto il torneoLorenzo Topello (La Gazzetta dello Sport)
Multiple exposure of one person moving.
#london #streetphotography #multipleexposure #lightandshadow #silhouette #urbanphotography #uk
Maar Tom van Dijk, docent Computer Science aan de Universiteit Twente, trekt aan de bel: blijf van ChatGPT af. „Uiteindelijk word je er kleurloos van.
Ik dacht: dit wordt de toekomst, studenten moeten ermee leren werken. Maar ik ben helemaal om. Voor je vakontwikkeling moet je zelf leren denken, analyseren."
gelderlander.nl/enschede/docen…
Future sul gas risalgono a 31,8 euro al megawattora - Ultima ora - Ansa.it
https://www.ansa.it/sito/notizie/topnews/2025/09/01/future-sul-gas-risalgono-a-318-euro-al-megawattora_447d9bd6-d426-4cbc-bdc5-89cfe9c3db38.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su ANSA Ultima ora @ansa-ultima-ora-AgenziaAnsa
Future sul gas risalgono a 31,8 euro al megawattora - Ultima ora - Ansa.it
I future sul gas aprono la seduta ad Amsterdam in rialzo dello 0,6% a 31,84 euro al megawattora. (ANSA). (ANSA)Agenzia ANSA
“Father Mother Sister Brother”, piccole storie di grandi drammi famigliari
https://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/father-mother-sister-brother-piccole-storie-grandi-drammi-famigliari-AHSU68OC?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Cinema 24 @cinema-24-IlSole24Ore
“Father Mother Sister Brother”, piccole storie di grandi drammi famigliari
In concorso il nuovo film di Jim Jarmusch diviso in tre episodiIl Sole 24 Ore (Il Sole 24 ORE)
If the labor movement does not fight harder than it has since Mr. Trump regained the presidency, its future will be dire.
Latest 𝗩𝗮𝗹𝘂𝗮𝗯𝗹𝗲 𝗡𝗲𝘄𝘀 - 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱/𝟬𝟵/𝟬𝟭 (Valuable News - 2025/09/01) available.
vermaden.wordpress.com/2025/09…
Past releases: vermaden.wordpress.com/news/
#verblog #vernews #news #bsd #freebsd #openbsd #netbsd #linux #unix #zfs #opnsense #ghostbsd #solaris #vermadenday
Valuable News – 2025/09/01
The Valuable News weekly series is dedicated to provide summary about news, articles and other interesting stuff mostly but not always related to the UNIX/BSD/Linux systems. Whenever I stumble upon…𝚟𝚎𝚛𝚖𝚊𝚍𝚎𝚗
The image features a box of beneficial nematodes, prominently displayed against a gradient background transitioning from light blue to a warm brown. The box is predominantly dark blue with white and green text. The top of the box states "7 MILLION LIVE BENEFICIAL NEMATODES" in white text on a green background. The main title "BENEFICIAL NEMATODES" is in large, bold, white letters. Below the title, a green banner reads "NEMATODES HUNT DOWN AND KILL MORE THAN TWO HUNDRED AND THIRTY PESTS." The background includes a subtle illustration of nematodes in blue, enhancing the product's theme. The box is placed on a wooden surface, suggesting a natural setting.
Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B
🌱 Energy used: 0.179 Wh
📢 Content planning can be tricky, especially for small marketing teams. We know it first-hand.
At OpenProject, we use our own software for planning blog posts, social media, and other #Marketing content. By sharing our setup, we want to pass on what works for us – so other teams can save time and learn from our approach.
Not only, but particularly helpful for other Marketing teams.
Take a look: openproject.org/blog/free-team…
#ContentPlanning #OpenSource #Collaboration #ProjectManagement
Free content planning tool: Practical tips for marketing teams using OpenProject
Marketing teams, we know your struggles. Your content planning deserves better than sticky notes and…Corinna Günther (OpenProject)
Ukraine-Liveblog: ++ Kiew sieht Russland in Parubij-Mord verwickelt ++
Die Ukraine geht davon aus, dass Russland an der Ermordung des Abgeordneten Parubij beteiligt war. Die Vorsitzenden der beiden Koalitionsfraktionen, Spahn und Miersch, besuchen überraschend die Ukraine.
➡️ tagesschau.de/newsticker/liveb…
Ukraine-Liveblog: ++ Spahn und Miersch zu Gesprächen in Ukraine ++
Die Vorsitzenden der beiden Koalitionsfraktionen, Spahn und Miersch, besuchen überraschend die Ukraine. Laut EU-Kommissionspräsidentin von der Leyen arbeitet die EU an konkreten Plänen für die Entsendung multinationaler Truppen.tagesschau.de
Future sul gas risalgono a 31,8 euro al megawattora - Notizie - Ansa.it
https://www.ansa.it/sito/notizie/economia/2025/09/01/future-sul-gas-risalgono-a-318-euro-al-megawattora_e7cbad68-949b-49e2-942b-3e7dfb5edebc.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Economia @economia-AgenziaAnsa
Future sul gas risalgono a 31,8 euro al megawattora - Notizie - Ansa.it
I future sul gas aprono la seduta ad Amsterdam in rialzo dello 0,6% a 31,84 euro al megawattora. (ANSA). (ANSA)Agenzia ANSA
Economia reshared this.
"Chatbot finanziari, di chi è la colpa quando l'intelligenza artificiale sbaglia con i nostri soldi?
Un esperimento della Banca d'Italia mostra che l'intelligenza artificiale finisce per replicare – o peggio, amplificare – le stesse ambiguità che popolano le decisioni umane in finanza"
Lo spread tra Btp e Bund stabile a 86,3 punti - Notizie - Ansa.it
https://www.ansa.it/sito/notizie/economia/2025/09/01/lo-spread-tra-btp-e-bund-stabile-a-863-punti_f4f58990-5c59-447b-9ede-af54bc061e3e.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Economia @economia-AgenziaAnsa
Lo spread tra Btp e Bund stabile a 86,3 punti - Notizie - Ansa.it
Settembre riparte da uno spread tra Btp e Bund tedeschi di 86,3 punti base contro gli 86,2 dell'ultima seduta ad agosto. Il rendimento del decennale italiano sale al 3,61% e quello tedesco al 2,74 per cento. (ANSA). (ANSA)Agenzia ANSA
Economia reshared this.
APOD from 2025-09-01
Callisto: Dirty Battered Iceball
#Jupiter's #moon Callisto, larger than #Mercury and visited by Voyager 2 in 1979, is heavily cratered with a bright icy surface. Its interior may hide a liquid water layer, possibly harboring life. Upcoming ESA and NASA missions aim to study Jupiter's moons further.
HD image at apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap250901.ht… #astronomy #planet #earth
APOD: 2025 September 1 – Callisto: Dirty Battered Iceball
A different astronomy and space science related image is featured each day, along with a brief explanation.apod.nasa.gov
Zeppe reshared this.
1,000-year-old lost temple discovered in Bolivia: Trade hub of ancient civilization revealed
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life-style/travel/1000-year-old-lost-temple-discovered-in-bolivia-trade-hub-of-ancient-civilization-revealed/articleshow/123628606.cms?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into LIFESTYLE @lifestyle-TimesofIndia_
1,000-year-old lost temple discovered in Bolivia: Trade hub of ancient civilization revealed
Archaeologists have unearthed the 1,000-year-old Palaspata temple complex in Bolivia, revealing insights into the Tiwanaku civilization. The site, feaTOI Lifestyle Desk (The Times Of India)
Il processo a Grillo jr a un passo dal verdetto. Ecco i due elementi di scontro tra accusa e difesa
https://www.lastampa.it/cronaca/2025/09/01/news/processo_grillo_jr_sentenza-15290559/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Le notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo @le-notizie-dall-italia-e-dal-mondo-LaStampa
Il processo a Grillo jr a un passo dal verdetto. Ecco i due elementi di scontro tra accusa e difesa
La sentenza prevista fra mercoledì e giovedì. Gli avvocati degli imputati presentano le ultime memorieLa Stampa
House Price Headwinds
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-09-01/uk-house-prices-soften-under-pressure-from-more-for-sale-possible-tax-hikes?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Emerging Markets @emerging-markets-bloomberg
Test genetici per le donne dell’atletica leggera: così lo sport ripudia la sua funzione
La scienza, certificando che la specie umana non è esattamente divisibile in due, ci invita alla riflessione. Ma è la cultura sportiva che deve ... Scopri di più!Antonella Bellutti (Domani)
Turkey’s Quarterly Growth Accelerates Despite Shock Rate Hike
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-09-01/turkey-s-quarterly-growth-accelerates-despite-shock-rate-hike?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Emerging Markets @emerging-markets-bloomberg
Spatial Computing: The Next Digital Frontier. From innovation hubs to the global stage, AR, VR, MR & 3D mapping are redefining industries.
Read: intellitrongenesis.com/2025/09…
#Augmentedreality #Virtualreality #google #3D #artificialintelligence #ai #technology #tech #meta #metaverse #drone #quantum #quantumcomputing #supercomputer #facebook #instagram #business #mastodon #SpatialComputing
Spatial Computing: The Next Digital Frontier
Spatial Computing: The Next Digital Frontier is transforming industries in Mumbai and worldwide through AR, VR, MR, and 3D mapping innovations.dYxRRWkP (Intellitron Genesis)
reshared this
🇵🇸La flotilla pone rumbo a Gaza desde el puerto de Barcelona arropada por miles de personas.
✍🏻Fabiola Barranco.
📷Álvaro Minguito.
elsal.to/43804
Passkey für Chat-Backup: WhatsApp führt passwortlose Sicherung ein
WhatsApp führt die passwortlose Sicherungsfunktion über Passkeys für Chat-Backups ein. Derzeit steht sie Nutzern der Beta auf Android-Geräten zur Verfügung.
heise.de/news/Passkey-fuer-Cha…
#IT #Passkey #Security #WhatsApp #news
Passkey für Chat-Backup: WhatsApp führt passwortlose Sicherung ein
WhatsApp führt die passwortlose Sicherungsfunktion über Passkeys für Chat-Backups ein. Derzeit steht sie Nutzern der Beta auf Android-Geräten zur Verfügung.Andreas Floemer (heise online)
Putin: "Crisi ucraina nata da un colpo di stato provocato dall'Occidente"
https://www.lastampa.it/esteri/2025/09/01/video/putin_crisi_ucraina_nata_da_un_colpo_di_stato_provocato_dalloccidente-15290582/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Le notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo @le-notizie-dall-italia-e-dal-mondo-LaStampa
Putin: "Crisi ucraina nata da un colpo di stato provocato dall'Occidente"
Il presidente russo Vladimir Putinì, in Cina per il vertice SCO, ha dichiarato di essere alla ricerca di una soluzione alla crisi ucraina", sottoli…La Stampa
🚀 Il viaggio nell'innovazione non ha confini! La Founder Mode sta rivoluzionando la direzione aziendale, ma sarà solo una moda o autentico cambiamento? #DirigereInnovativamente #FounderMode.
🔗 tomshw.it/business/dirigere-un…
Dirigere un'azienda con la Founder Mode, solo una moda o vera innovazione?
Founder Mode, teorizzata da Paul Graham, spinge i leader a un coinvolgimento diretto sul prodotto, sfidando la gestione tradizionale. Ma è un'innovazione o un'anticamera del micro-management?Valerio Porcu (Tom's Hardware)
Our Android app (v.2.5.4) is on the way to the Play Store, and FRdoid has been notified.
Here's the list of new features and fixes: github.com/owntracks/android/r…
Release v2.5.4 · owntracks/android
New features Galician Translation (thanks to Miguel Anxo Bouzada) Hebrew Translation (thanks to Ahiel and Natan) Dutch Translation (thanks to all contributors) Setting a preference that doesn't ac...GitHub
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj Can two and four be simultaneously true?
Or asked another way, if 4 is true, does that cast doubts on #2?
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj Potentially, yes, but if a tool helps you fool yourself, it may well give you an inflated perception of the usefulness of the tool.
Can a human brain, fundamentally inductive as it is, actually have "true premises" in the sense required here?
Capital-t True?
Can we really say we find the truth through deduction, if the truth is about reality, for which we have no axioms?
In deduction, we either work from axioms or we work from bald assertions. In the domain of reality, then, we deduce from bald assertions.
Is that a great way to find truth?
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Metaphysical Truths with a big T might well be a different story, but in the realm of physical sciences and mathematics, I'd say that the results speak pretty well for deductive reasoning as a powerful tool for finding at least some truths.
Math exists in the world of rationality where your point about reality lacking axioms doesn't hold, but math does seem to apply to the real world quite often.
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj Physical sciences are done at costly experimental facilities, though.
Because the deductive part and the math are simply not reliable until verified empirically.
Yes, we use math to describe relations we find in nature, but the truth of the relations is not found mathematically, just described that way.
And that applies to deduction as well: We use it a lot for rhetorical aims: For convincing others.
We do not tend to use it for finding truth at all.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Is an experimental result disproving a theory not an exercise in deduction which results in new knowledge generated?
"P1: A correct theory correctly predicts experimental outcomes. P2: Theory XYZ predicted an incorrect outcome. Conclusion: Theory XYZ is incorrect."
I would consider that conclusion to be a truth found through deductive reasoning.
While crafting hypotheses is inductive reasoning, deduction is also a crucial part of the wider process.
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj
Does deduction have an intake port for evidence?
It does not.
Learning from the past == induction.
If you rely on evidence to learn, you are learning inductively.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj Yes?
If you're not using deduction, you're not using deduction.
Dressing an inductive conclusion up in deductive rags makes it less good, not better.
To show your point, giving examples of deduction pretending to find truth is not enough. You must show that you are in fact using deduction to find those things, not merely for presenting them after the fact.
And we already know the limitations of deduction, which includes an inability to learn from example. In fact, deduction is incapable of learning, period. It has no learning mode. It can only reconfigure that which is already known (or imagined).
So, the answer is clear from the start: You did not use deduction to learn from evidence.
And yet deduction is happy to pretend it is capable of doing it.
In short: This was an example of self-deceit, not of deduction finding truth.
Androcat
in reply to Androcat • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj
Less polemically:
Deduction can be used to reconfigure inductive findings - but:
1) This does not constitute learning, as the knowledge was already there. With deduction, the knowledge is always already there. Deduction puts existing knowledge into new configurations, and sometimes can reveal that we already knew the answer.
2) It is unreliable: In science, such deductive work must be further corroborated with evidence. It is unreliable, because such findings have been found to be wrong a very large number of times. Deduction can pinpoint a good place to start the search, but the search is never done using Deduction, because Deduction is categorically incapable of doing it.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •I believe we've been talking about different levels of learning here. You consider learning to be the generalizations we draw from evidence, while I'm talking of the more elaborate framework which we use to seek truths, which is the scientific method. Sure, generalizing observations is induction and that's what we use most of the time in our daily lives, but the scientific method additionally requires the feedback of deduction to drive that induction in the right direction.
A car with an engine will get somewhere, but not too far unless it also has steering. If we made theories from observations without steering the experimentation to critically evaluate the possibly correct, perhaps incorrect knowledge of every single new theory, we wouldn't have gotten to where we are now. Deduction is needed to figure out what to observe and which experiments to make. You say that deduction serves to pinpoint a starting point, but I'd say it's also crucial in guiding the iterative process that follows. It's an endless loop, after all.
With this in mind, I would still consider my original statement of "Deduction is a great tool for finding truth" to hold true.
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj Science doesn't require deduction.
Deduction can simplify the scientific work, but ultimately it is possible to conclude directly from evidence.
Specifically, there is categorically no way for deduction to interface with evidence or experiment.
Deduction has no way to take uncertainties into accout, nor can it deal with the variability of observations.
And by categorically, I mean there is no such inference in the finite list of deductive inferences.
Again: I am not counting rhetorical use of deduction for presenting findings in an ordered and convincing way as "finding truth". The actual science is ALWAYS empirical, and that means deduction is not in the driver's seat.
In short, for science, the engine is experimentation, and the driver is observation. Deduction is the wind shield wipers, except sometimes they just spread dirt around the windshield (i.e. deduction sometims provides results that are then refuted by evidence).
And I think you are already aware of this point: Observation inductively produces predictions as well as generalizations.
Famously, the fact that sun rose today and yesterday and every day before that cannot deductively lead to a prediction on whether it will rise tomorrow.
The yellow part of the diagram has an entire circuit all on its own, it's just that sometimes there is a shortcut through the blue pathway.
The blue pathway is a mere shunt on the side.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •You continue to talk about the inability of deduction to ingest observational data, when I thought that we already moved on from that. That's not the purpose that deduction has as part of the process. Deduction does interface with experimentation by identifying which experiments are best for testing a theory. The direction of the arrow in the diagram is relevant.
An example: Gravitational-wave observatories weren't built just for the hell of it. They were built because gravitational waves were predicted to exist through **deduction** from the theory of relativity and what we know about waves as dynamic disturbances in fields. There was no empirical evidence for or against their existence before the observatories were built and did their thing.
In this case the the theory and the deduced prediction held true and thanks to that there's a new subfield of astronomy and Einstein's ghost got another feather in his hat. To say that the theoretical groundwork made a hundred years prior to the actual discovery wouldn't constitute "actual science" is just silly. Theoretical physics is definitely science.
I never said that deduction would be in the drivers seat. I said that it's the steering mechanism which allows us to keep the experimentation pointed in the right direction. I believe my example above illustrates how deduction is not just rhetorical and "presenting findings in an ordered and convincing way", but in fact a great tool for finding truth, just as steering is a great tool to have in a car if you want to get to a destination, even if the steering isn't what causes the car to go forward.
The Sun rising every morning, coupled with other observations about the night sky can be formed into a theory about celestial mechanics, from which a prediction can be deduced that the Sun will rise tomorrow morning, even if the next sunrise after that will be during a total eclipse. This prediction can be made even if a total eclipse has never occurred during sunrise before. Deduction is what allows us to predict things which have never happened before. If the prediction turns out to be false due to false premises, then we know to make a U-turn, backtrack a little and try the other avenue in refining our theories about the universe.
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj
There was no deduction involved, though.
What was involved was:
1) Observations of objects and energy leading to theory of fields and waves.
2) Mathematical mapping of the theory - this is akin to a rhetorical presentation: it's a way to communicate the finding, but the finding was based on inductive activities (i.e. dealing with evidence and making predictions).
3) Extrapolation from the mathematical model. Yet extrapolation is fundamentally the sort of thing deduction is incapable of, vis a vis the inability to predict the sun coming up tomorrow.
If you call extrapolations "deductions", you're committing a category error.
Deduction is never extrapolative.
It never indicates a direction.
It just does what it says on the package:
if p then q
p
q
That's all.
Again: If a tool is very good at facilitating self-deceit, it may give rise to inflated views of that tool's applicability.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •The theory or mathematical model isn’t extrapolated further, because it’s already an extrapolation itself. The extrapolation happens all the way back at the start when the hypothesis is formed. Forming the hypothesis is an induction and thus extrapolation is possible here. ”The measurements behave in an interesting fashion. There’s probably some universal law that is at play.” See ”generalization” in the diagram I posted earlier.
Then the causes and effects are considered and the hypothetical law is formulated mathematically. New measurements are made and they’re used to improve the accuracy of the constants in the equations. The equations and explanations grow into a theory, which is now the best way to explain the phenomenon in question. As such and without apparent faults, the theory is considered to hold true.
Predictions are then deduced from this theory. We start with the assumption that the theory is true and just input some values into that equation. Place (x,y,z) can be a somewhere we’ve never been to and time (t) can be in the future. Because the theory is about a universal law, this isn’t an issue. We plop our coordinates and the time in there, and deduce from our model that the Sun will be rising above the horizon tomorrow morning, or if the Moon will instead be in front of it.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj You're using the word "deduce", but you are not actually using the very specific method of deduction to look at some math you learned how to use from experience, and using that experience to see what it indicates.
Whenever I ask scientists to overtly do deduction, they just make up some incoherent nonsense in the loose form of a syllogism, because deduction isn't what they use, and they're not logicians. Logicians at least know that logic is a game that has to be played by very precise rules to avoid self-deceit. Scientists are not aware of that, generally.
As Hume pointed out, humans are very bad at logic. We could never have survived if we actually used deduction for anything important.
Please remember that deduction is great at self-deceit. This includes giving a veneer of certainty to something you've just learned by rote. And the very fact you learned it should tell you what method was really used. The only learning mode we have is inductive. There is nothing else that allows us to obtain new information.
Dark matter is the only example that is sort of relevant, as that is the result of an embarrassing process of elimination. And a process of elimination has deductive components:
The evidence says there should be more mass to make galaxies move as they do.
(P1: There is mass.)
And we can't see anything that could be massive.
(P2: We would be able to see interactions from any known massive material.)
So: Something massive must hang out in galaxies, and it doesn't interact with literally anything else than gravity
(C: There is an unknown massive material that does not interact.)
I took a liberty of negating a term, but it's close enough to validity that you can see the pattern of deduction involved.
Embarrassing and incomplete.
That's deduction, because there is literally no evidence to help us get further.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •But the math I'm using isn't from my experience. It's something that I simply trust to work because it was handed to me and I was told that it's the best we've got. I don't have the experience of formulating the theory myself, nor do I need to have the experience of looking at all the astronomical measurements which lead to the theory. "Standing on the shoulders of giants" as they say. We trust the work of others, because to not do so would result in starting from scratch.
When a prediction is made based on a theory, that theory is purposefully assumed to be rock solid, because if it's not, we'll find out. Induction can never be certain, so how would you make such a certain prediction to test against? If you predict with uncertainty, you leave room for ambiguity where a clear answer would be desirable to the question "Was the theory correct in predicting this?"
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj
That is what learning by rote means.
And you know how to apply it by rote, just like you know how to use a spanner by rote.
It's still experience, and learning is still inductive (always, always, there is literally no existing alternative) even if it is shallow.
Why did you call it deducing, if you're not doing it in steps, with utmost precision?
If you're just doing it on the fly, you should know that's not how deduction works, in the rare cases that it does work.
A case where deduction does work: Logical puzzles designed to be solved with deduction.
And you do it in pieces, carefully, deliberately, and make sure all the terms match exactly.
And "assuming certainty" is not deduction. Theories are trusted because they are heavily evidenced.
Making categorical statements or using "either", "and" and "or" also does not a deduction make.
That's rhetoric, not truth-tracking.
"Induction can never be certain" is true to the extent you are uncertain about your own name. Are you?
To a meaningful degree?
Do you wake up and wonder, hey am I Tuomas or Tomas?
I would predict that you do not. Because induction becomes plenty certain.
Just as certain as the sun rising tomorrow.
davidhume.org/texts/e/full
Hume Texts Online
davidhume.orgTuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj
Does a logician learn deduction by rote?
Or do they labor to internalize the method?
Using some bit of random math because "this seems to work well" is, I hope you will concede, not very logical.
That's not the general form of a deductive process.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •Fair enough. And I agree, applying a theory blindly isn't logical.
[To get back to a line of thought I was about to embark on before I got sidetracked into making my previous response:]
The important bit where deduction comes in is exactly when it results in a failed prediction, detecting the inconsistency between the imperfect theory and reality. Not proving a theory with A ⇒ B, but disproving it with ¬B ⇒ ¬A.
P1: The current location and velocity of Mercury is (xyz).
P2: Newton's laws say that from this situation it will travel along trajectory (abc).
P3: Newton is always right about everything.
So: Mercury will obey Newton's laws and do as expected.
Conclusion: Mercury is predicted to travel along trajectory (abc).
Now we have a prediction and get to the second deduction.
P4: The prediction is correct.
P5: Observations say otherwise.
So: At least one of P4 and P5 is wrong. If P4 is wrong, that means that at least one of P1, P2 and P3 is also wrong. We check the observations and they are right. We check our initial observations (P1) and our math (P2) and they are also right. Therefore, having eliminated all other possibilities, it's only possible that Newton isn't always right about everything (P3 is incorrect).
Conclusion: Newton's laws are not universal.
A new frontier of research is identified and a bunch of wild hypotheses are induced, among them one about some mysterious relativity thing with time dilation.
Dark matter is just the same except that it's questioning the validity of the observations instead of the theory (looking for something we can't see). You already conceded that a pattern of deduction was involved, even wrote it out. Dark matter isn't a satisfying explanation because it's a hypothesis (so an induction, you went a bit too far with your deduction) to an open question, not a theory in its own right. So of course it's incomplete if evaluated by those standards. The arrows on the deductive side of the diagram I posted a while back flow away from theory, not towards it.
Deduction doesn't directly result in theories explaining the world, that's the job of induction as you have been saying all the time. I apologize if I've been unclear, but that's not what I have been (trying) to disagree with.
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj
Indeed, but basically every single proponent of deduction will claim (at one point in this path of contention) that deduction gives wrong answers (only) when applied incorrectly.
This is quite important, because if flawed responses result from correct applications, then the reliability% of deduction trivially drops into the low single digits, if that.
And a proponent of deduction should not deign to have their cake and eat it too. I get to reject the excluded middle if I so desire, but the proponent of deduction ought to pick one of the two options: Either deduction is only unsuccessful when misapplied, or the true reliability of deduction is very low.
(I will accept the latter, the former is a doomed position)
As for the latter, I have never seen an argument like that in an actual article.
What I see is "We would expect to see X, but we do not, see figure a. A cursory examination would suggest the following explanation for the deviance: [and here we have induction running in reverse, which some call Abduction]"
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •How do you differentiate between flawed applications and flawed premises?
The first part of my deduction produces an incorrect conclusion because of an incorrect premise (P3). I wouldn't consider it an incorrect application of deduction since it was a prerequisite for the final conclusion, which is correct. But taken out of that context, It's only wrong because of a false premise.
Would it be possible to incorrectly apply deduction with correct premises (assuming that the logic stays valid)?
Androcat
in reply to Tuomas Aumala • • •Sensitive content
@aumalatj To return to the poll in the OP, I am distinctly not offering the option "deduction is useless", that's not in scope.
I do believe #4 is definitely true.
And I think in most cases people can be brought to concede that it is (at least somewhat) overrated, i.e. option #3.
Just in general, it is very amusing, that in science we apply deduction as a test of falsehood in premises, because deduction as such lacks any sort of test for the premises - in its usual textbook application. It's a fun sort of hack, in my opinion.
In general, in the few instances where a scientist uses deduction in the normal syllogistic way, people should be extremely suspicious: Science is the study of something that we cannot define into existence, so people like Chomsky, who apply logic as if it can tell us what is real and not, are engaging in dangerous (and often hilarious) tomfoolery.
Tuomas Aumala
in reply to Androcat • • •I think it's a neat cog in a wider mechanism, filling a purpose that would be quite difficult to replace with something else, but agreed, by itself it isn't nearly as powerful as induction is, even if that wider machine is a great tool for finding (or at least seeking) truth.
And I agree that its rhetorical use does inflate its footprint, especially online.
The example you gave in your previous message about what you see in articles is just a shortened form of a deduction that since predictions and observations contradict, the prediction and the model it's based on is lacking (the very same process that I wrote out in full about Mercury and Newton). Usually it's just shortened like that, same as with most of the work with the math in a research paper. And then immediately after that a new hypothesis is presented, because we apes sure like to speculate.
This has been a fun an educational exchange, but now that it seems to have reached at least some sort of mutual understanding, I think I'll call it quits before I spend another day at it 😁
Thanks and good day!