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- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 15:30:15 EST
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- From: "Bruce E. Nevin" <bnevin@CCB.BBN.COM>
- Subject: hypotheses non fingo
- Lines: 72
-
- [From: Bruce Nevin (Thu 930107 15:28:31)]
-
- Daughter: Daddy, what is an instinct?
- Father: An instinct, my dear, is an explanatory principle.
- D: But what does it explain?
- F: Anything--almost anything at all. Anything you want it to
- explain.
- D: Don't be silly. It doesn't explain gravity.
- F: No. But that is because nobody wants "instinct" to explain
- gravity. If they did, it would explain it. We could simply
- say that the moon has an instinct whose strength varies
- inversely as the square of the distance . . .
- D: But that's nonsense, Daddy.
- F: Yes, surely. But it was you who mentioned "instinct," not I.
- D: All right--but then what does explain gravity?
- F: Nothing, my dear, because gravity is an explanatory principle.
- D: Oh.
-
- D: Do you mean that you cannot use one explanatory principle to
- explain another? Never?
- F: Hmm . . . hardly ever. That is what Newton meant when he
- said, "hypotheses non fingo."
- D: And what does that mean? Please.
- F: Well, you know what "hypotheses" are. Any statement linking
- together two descriptive statements is an hypothesis. If you
- say that there was a full moon on February 1st and another on
- March 1st; and then you link these two observations together
- in any way, the statement which links them is an hypothesis.
- D: Yes--and i know what _non_ means. But what's _fingo_?
- F: Well--_fingo_ is a late latin word for "make." It forms a
- verbal noun _fictio_ from which we get the word "fiction."
- D: Daddy, do you mean that Sir Isaac Newton thought that all
- hypotheses were just _made up_ like stories?
- F: Yes--precisely that.
- D: Oh. . . . Daddy, who invented instinct?
-
- F: I don't know. Probably biblical.
- D: But if the idea of gravity links together two descriptive
- statements, it must be an hypothesis.
- F: That's right.
- D: Then Newton did _fingo_ an hypothesis after all.
- F: Yes--indeed he did. He was a very great scientist.
- D: Oh.
-
- D: Daddy, is an explanatory principle the same thing as an
- hypothesis?
- F: Nearly, but not quite. You see, an hypothesis tries to
- explain some particular something but an explanatory principle
- --like "gravity" or "instinct"--really explains nothing.
- It's a sort of conventional agreement between scientists to
- stop trying to explain things at a certain point.
- D: Then is that what Newton meant? If "gravity" explains nothing
- but is only a sort of full stop at the end of a line of
- explanation, then inventing gravity was not the same as
- inventing an hypothesis, and he could say he did not _fingo_
- any hypotheses.
- F: That's right. There's no explanation of an explanatory
- principle. It's like a black box.
- D: Oh.
-
- D: Daddy, what's a black box?
- F: [. . .]
-
- --Quoted from G. Bateson, "Metalogue: what is an
- instinct," in _Approaches to Animal Communication_, 1969,
- reprinted in _Steps to an Ecology of Mind_ pp. 38 ff.
-
- I recommend the remainder, let's just have a conventional agreement
- that I won't type any more here.
-
- Bruce
- bn@bbn.com
-