Metaphysical Underdetermination: Why Worry? Steven French Dept. of Philosophy University of Leeds Steven French Dept. of Philosophy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is Biophysics? Short answer: Application of physics methods to biological systems. To get a better perspective, we consider a very brief history of.
Advertisements

Quantum One: Lecture 1a Entitled So what is quantum mechanics, anyway?
Lect.3 Modeling in The Time Domain Basil Hamed
Mechanisms and Causality in Sociology
Discourse Analysis of Students’ Research Papers Roman Taraban Texas Tech University July 2010.
Hot topics in Modern Cosmology Cargèse - 10 Mai 2011.
HUMAN NATURE AND MODERN PHILOSOPHY HUME PHILOSOPHY 224.
Ontology From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia In philosophy, ontology (from the Greek oν, genitive oντος: of being (part. of εiναι: to be) and –λογία:
The fate of ‘particles’ in quantum field theories with interactions Doreen Fraser Department of Philosophy University of Waterloo
Everett and Evidence Wayne C. Myrvold Department of Philosophy University of Western Ontario.
1 LMU The ontology of physics 15 October 14 The beginning of natural philosophy: from the Presocratics to Newton Michael Esfeld LMU-MCMP & Université de.
Should Christians be Structural Realists? * Elise Crull History and Philosophy of Science University of Notre Dame Christian Perspectives in Science Seminar.
Human Evolution Session I Matter-Universe A multidisciplinary anthropic focus.
One assumes: (1) energy, E  (- ℏ /i)  /  t (2) momentum, P  ( ℏ /i)  (3) particle probability density,  (r,t)  = i  /  x + j  /  y + k  / 
Limitations to Underdetermination of Theory Building and their Role in Fundamental Physics Richard Dawid.
Prepared By Jacques E. ZOO Bohm’s Philosophy of Nature David Bohm, Causality and Chance in Modern Physics (New York, 1957). From Feyerabend, P. K.
Thermodynamics can be defined as the science of energy. Although everybody has a feeling of what energy is, it is difficult to give a precise definition.
Knowledge Acquisitioning. Definition The transfer and transformation of potential problem solving expertise from some knowledge source to a program.
Chapter Two SCIENTIFIC METHODS IN BUSINESS
Kent Where causal dualism comes from Monika Koeppl Causality, Cognition and the Constitution of Scientific Phenomena Department of Philosophy University.
Symmetries and conservation laws
PHY 042: Electricity and Magnetism Introduction Prof. Pierre-Hugues Beauchemin.
Science and Engineering Practices
Modeling of interactions between physics and mathematics
An Introduction to Field and Gauge Theories
Philosophy of Chemistry Ashok Pratap Singh. What is chemistry? Chemistry is in a sense the typical laboratory science. While astronomers have to get along.
1 Summer school “Physics and Philosophy of Time”, Saig, Quantum non-locality and the philosophy of time Michael Esfeld Université de Lausanne
The Dependence of Objects on Structure: Tailoring our Metaphysics to Fit the Physics Steven French Dept. of Philosophy University of Leeds.
Definitions of Reality (ref . Wiki Discussions)
McGraw-Hill © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Nature of Research Chapter One.
Category Theory By: Ashley Reynolds. HISTORY OF CATEGORY THEORY  In 1942–45, Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane introduced categories, functors,
Modular Tensor Categories and Topological Quantum Computing Prakash Panangaden and Eric Paquette.
Instanton representation of Plebanski gravity Eyo Eyo Ita III Physics Department, US Naval Academy Spanish Relativity Meeting September 10, 2010.
Conformally flat spacetimes and Weyl frames Carlos Romero Cargèse - 11 Mai 2010.
1 The Methods of Biology Chapter Scientific Methods.
A NONCOMMUTATIVE FRIEDMAN COSMOLOGICAL MODEL. 1.Introduction 2.Structure of the model 3.Closed Friedman universe – Geometry and matter 4.Singularities.
ME 254. Chapter I Integral Relations for a Control Volume An engineering science like fluid dynamics rests on foundations comprising both theory and experiment.
WHAT IS SCIENCE? WHAT IS SCIENCE? An organized way of gathering and analyzing evidence about the natural world.
LOGIC AND ONTOLOGY Both logic and ontology are important areas of philosophy covering large, diverse, and active research projects. These two areas overlap.
Thomas Kuhn ( ) All research presupposes a world-view,a collection of fundamental objects, natural laws, definitions, and above all a definition.
The Quantum Theory of Atoms and Molecules The Schrödinger equation and how to use wavefunctions Dr Grant Ritchie.
1 CS 385 Fall 2006 Chapter 1 AI: Early History and Applications.
Quantum Two 1. 2 Evolution of Many Particle Systems 3.
Being and Time Introduction Chapter One Philosophy 157 G. J. Mattey ©2002.
Welcome to Physics--Jump in!
2 Time Physics and Field theory
Quantum New way of looking at our world. Classical vs Quantum Typically a student develops an intuition about how the world works using classical mechanics.
Transient Unterdetermination and the Miracle Argument Paul Hoyningen-Huene Leibniz Universität Hannover Center for Philosophy and Ethics of Science (ZEWW)
First Steps Towards a Theory of Quantum Gravity Mark Baumann Dec 6, 2006.
Key Stage 3 National Strategy Misconceptions in Key Stage 3 science.
Monday, Apr. 4, 2005PHYS 3446, Spring 2005 Jae Yu 1 PHYS 3446 – Lecture #16 Monday, Apr. 4, 2005 Dr. Jae Yu Symmetries Why do we care about the symmetry?
Canonical Equations of Motion -- Hamiltonian Dynamics
How Particle Physics Cuts Nature At Its Joints Oliver Schulte Department of Philosophy Simon Fraser University `
1-1: What is Physics? Objectives: Identify activities and fields that involve the major areas within physics Describe the process of the scientific method.
Equivalence of Lagrange’s & Newton’s Equations Section 7.6 The Lagrangian & the Newtonian formulations of mechanics are 100% equivalent! –As we know,
Ch. 2: Variational Principles & Lagrange’s Eqtns Sect. 2.1: Hamilton’s Principle Our derivation of Lagrange’s Eqtns from D’Alembert’s Principle: Used.
Goro Ishiki (University of Tsukuba) arXiv: [hep-th]
From physical assumptions to classical Hamiltonian and Lagrangian particle mechanics Gabriele Carcassi, Christine A. Aidala, David John Baker and Lydia.
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY Research and Development Research Approach Research Methodology Research Objectives Engr. Hassan Mehmood Khan.
The Quantum Theory of Atoms and Molecules
Properties, Statistics and the Identity of Quantum Particles
The Logic of Science And Teaching Physics. By: Gnerikh Golin
Lecture 12: Metaphysics and science
ece 627 intelligent web: ontology and beyond
Quantum One. Quantum One So what is quantum mechanics, anyway?
Ariel Caticha From Information Geometry to Newtonian Dynamics
MODELS AS INFERENTIAL MACHINES
Key Ideas How do scientists explore the world?
String Theory: A Status Report Institute for Advanced Study
Quantum One.
Presentation transcript:

Metaphysical Underdetermination: Why Worry? Steven French Dept. of Philosophy University of Leeds Steven French Dept. of Philosophy University of Leeds

Acknowledgments Thanks to members of the Structuralism Reading Group: Angelo Cei, Laura Crosilla, Kerry MacKenzie and Juha Saatsi (but of course, they are in no way to be held responsible for what I’m about to say!) Thanks to members of the Structuralism Reading Group: Angelo Cei, Laura Crosilla, Kerry MacKenzie and Juha Saatsi (but of course, they are in no way to be held responsible for what I’m about to say!)

Van Fraassen’s Challenge ‘The phenomena underdetermine the theory. There are in principle alternative developments of science, branching off from ours at every point in history with equal adequacy as models of the phenomena. Only angels could know these alternative sciences, though sometimes we dimly perceive their possibility. The theory in turn underdetermines the interpretation. Each scientific theory, caught in the amber at one definite historical stage of development and formalization, admits many different tenable interpretations. What is the world depicted by science? That is exactly the question we answer with an interpretation and the answer is not unique.’ (B. Van Fraassen, Quantum Mechanics: An Empiricist View, OUP 1989)

Kinds of Underdetermination Modal Underdetermination ‘Jones’ Underdetermination Metaphysical Underdetermination

Modal Underdetermination Underdetermination via possible alternative theories –Weldon’s non-Mendelian genetics G. Radick,, “Other Histories, Other Biologies”, Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements, 80 pp. 3-4, 2005 –Problems: evidence & conceivability S. French, ‘Genuine Possibilities in the Scientific Past and How to Spot Them’, forthcoming in Isis, special issue. ‘Problem of Unconceived Alternatives’ –K. Stanford, Exceeding Our Grasp: Science, History, and the Problem of Unconceived Alternatives, OUP, –Problems: discovery & heuristics

‘Jones’ Underdetermination Realism ‘… envisions mature science as populating the world with a clearly defined and described set of objects, properties, and processes, and progressing by steady refinement of the descriptions and consequent clarification of the referential taxonomy to a full-blown correspondence with the natural order.’ (p. 186) R. Jones, ‘Realism About What?’, Philosophy of Science 58 (1991) pp

‘Jones’ Underdetermination Consider undergraduate education in classical mechanics Different sets of world-furniture  different ontological commitments E.g.: Hamiltonian vs. Lagrangian formulations

Response: Appeal to Metaphysics ‘… physics has to look to metaphysics to help decide (fallibly, of course) between experimentally undecidable alternatives.’ (p. 696) A. Musgrave, ‘Discussion: Realism About What?’, Philosophy of Science 59 (1992) pp physics is continuous with metaphysics (cf. ‘Principle of Naturalistic Closure’, J. Ladyman and D. Ross, Everything Must Go, OUP 2007) metaphysics ≠ ‘mere philosophical whim and prejudice’

Hamiltonian Mechanics Hamiltonian equations: q. = ∂ H/∂p p. = ∂H/∂q Obtained from Newton’s equations Hamiltonian represents total energy of system and encodes dynamical content Underlying structure: cotangent bundle

Lagrangian Lagrangian equations: d/dt (∂L/∂q. ) = ∂L/∂q Reduce to Newton’s equations Underlying structure: tangent bundle Applying Legendre transformation to Lagrangian, yields Hamiltonian

(Brief) Comparison Content of Newton’s equations encoded in structures defined over certain spaces –Hamiltonian: space = space of initial data for equations = space of possible instantaneous allowable states –Lagrangian: space = space of solutions to equations = space of allowable possible worlds G. Belot, ‘The Representation of Time and Change in Mechanics’, in J. Butterfield and J. Earman (eds.), Handbook of Philosophy of Physics, North-Holland, 2006.

Pooley’s Concerns On ‘most straightforward characterisations of structure’ (e.g. set-theoretic) different formulations  different structures Inter-relation between formulations not enough –‘single, unifying framework’ needed which can be interpreted as corresponding more faithfully to reality than alternatives Underdetermination may be broken –via heuristic fruitfulness O. Pooley, ‘Points, Particles and Structural Realism’, in D. Rickles, S. French and J. Saatsi (eds.), Structural Foundations of Quantum Gravity, OUP 2006, pp

Responses Distinguish between representation and characterisation of structure (see French, Banff & Paris talks) ‘Single, unifying framework’ revealed by moving to underlying structure (see later) Is heuristic fruitfulness sufficient to break underdetermination? –Now: promissory note (future breaking) –Subsequently: different theory (retrospective breaking)

Underdetermination Breaking 1 Lagrangian: configuration space with (Riemannian) metric structure Hamiltonian: phase space has symplectic structure Distance measure vs. volume element More structure vs. less Symplectic structure is sufficient J. North, ‘The “Structure” of Physics: A Case Study’, forthcoming in Philosophy of Science

The Structure of the World is… ‘I think modern physics suggests that realism about scientific theories is just structural realism: realism about structure. Modern geometric formulations of the physics suggest that there is such a thing as the fundamental stucture of the world, represented by the structure of its fundamental physics. There is an objective fact about what structure exists, there is a privileged carving of natures at its joints, along the lines of its fundamental physical structure.’ (North, pp )

… Phase space Structure ‘Take the mathematical formulation of a given theory. Figure out what structure is required by that formulation. This will be given by the dynamical laws and their invariant quantities (and perhaps other geometric or topological constraints). Make sure there is no other formulation getting away with less structure. Infer that this is the fundamental structure of the theory. Go on to infer that this is the fundamental structure of the world, according to the theory.’ (North, p. 24)

… or More Precisely, Symplectic Structure Structure of world = symplectic structure –momentum becomes fundamental property Crucial step: reject surplus, ‘superfluous’ structure Concern: heuristic fruitfulness of surplus structure –Lagrangian and field theories D. Wallace, ‘In Defence of Naiveté: The Conceptual Status of Lagrangian Quantum Field Theory’, Synthese 151, 2006, pp

Commonalities Common structures: ‘It is a fact of primary importance that for well behaved theories the space of initial data and the space of solutions share a common geometric structure—these spaces are isomorphic as symplectic manifolds.’ (Belot, p. 17) solutions mapped to initial data (actions of groups implementing time translation (Lag) and time evolution (Ham) intertwined)

The Structure of the World is … Dynamical Structure Example: electron –structure given by Hamiltonian or Lagrangian formulation of electron theory –evidence for structure via ‘historically stable properties’ J. Bain, and J. D. Norton, 'What Should Philosophers of Science Learn from the History of the Electron?', in Buchwald, J. and A. Warwick (eds.), Histories of the Electron: The Birth of Microphysics, Cambridge: MIT Press, (2001), pp

Dynamical structure ≠ Group structure Dynamical structure encoded not just in invariants of relevant groups, but also in spaces that carry representations of groups Example: dynamics of Y-M theories encoded not just in invariants (twistors) but in geometric structures defined over projective carrying space Contra French (boo!) J. Bain, ‘Toward Structural Realism’ preprint.

Metaphysical Underdetermination Implications of quantum physics: –Non-individual objects (described via quasi-set theory) –Individual objects (subject to state accessibility constraints) Challenge to realism? –Object-Oriented Realism (Psillos)

Why worry? Metaphysical underdetermination wrt everyday objects –e.g. substance vs bundle Realist not expected to resolve this A. Chakravartty, ‘The Structuralist Conception of Objects’, Philosophy of Science 70 (2003) pp

You Should Worry (if you’re a realist!) Metaphysical underdetermination in QM more problematic –everyday objects: non-structural access and distinguishability  objecthood unproblematic –quantum ‘objects’: structural access and indistinguishability  objecthood problematic cf £ in bank vs. £ in pocket

Underdetermination breaking 2 Particle-as-individuals  haecceity, primitive thisness … Weak discernibility  ‘thin’ individuality Role of metaphysics again –structural identity; cf. North S. Saunders, ‘Are quantum particles objects?’, Analysis 66 (2006), pp Particle-as-non-individuals meshes with QFT Heuristic fruitfulness again

Underdetermination breaking 2 cont. Particle-as-individuals  inaccessible states Surplus structure again M. Redhead, and P. Teller, ‘Particles, Particle Labels, and Quanta: the Toll of Unacknowledged Metaphysics’, Foundations of Physics 21 (1991) pp M. Redhead, and P. Teller,‘Particle Labels and the Theory of Indistinguishable Particles in Quantum Mechanics’, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 43 (1992) pp Problem: heuristic fruitfulness of surplus structure (eg parastatistics, anyons etc.)

Commonalities Relevant structure = group-theoretical French, S. (1999). Models and mathematics in physics: The role of group theory. In J. Butterfield and C. Pagonis, eds., From Physics to Philosophy, pp Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ‘Object’ structures vs. dynamical structures Presenting objects and representing structure K. Brading, and E. Landry, ‘Scientific Structuralism: Presentation and Representation’, Philosophy of Science 73 (2006), pp. 571– 581

Conclusion The role of surplus structure in breaking or supporting underdetermination –problematic as methodological principle The role of heuristic fruitfulness in breaking or supporting underdetermination –problematic as guide to truth The role of metaphysics in breaking or supporting underdetermination –problematic for realist (?)

Structuralist Lessons Underdetermination  focus on ‘essential structure’ Essential structure = object structures + dynamical structures {state space, dynamics, symmetries} (Bain, p. 24; motivated by Ruetsche, L. (2002), 'Interpreting Quantum Theories', in P. Machamer and M. Silberstein (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Science, Malden: Blackwell, pp )