freediver wrote on Apr 18
th, 2007 at 8:29am:
Conversely, if a scientific theory is derived through purely mathematical methods, does that mean it is no longer science but maths?
It is not possible to derive a scientific theory through purely mathematical methods. Of course, this comes back to the definition of maths.
But that is exactly how Einstein derived his theories of relativity, they could not be empirically tested for decades, indeed nobody even knew how they might be. The fact that they eventually were tested is irrelevant to the argument,at the time it was impossible to say how they might be. Relativity was constructed entirely using mathematical methods only.
Quote:The only reason maths is useful is that mathematicians limit themselves to developing useful mathematics. It is quite easy to develop entire branches of mathematics that are internally consistent, and therefor correct from a mathematical perspective, but which are entirely useless.
I did actually mention this. String theory is a good example, however there is much debate in the scientific community as to whether string theory is scientific since it cannot be tested, it was derived from purely mathematical methods and yet it attempts to describe the universe. Many have said that while string theory may not be testable, neither was relativity (and often still isn't) and yet relativity was derived in the exact same way that string theory was - using maths and maths alone.
Quote:I think it was an engineer for example who developed impulses as mathematical constructs and it wasn't until there usefulness was demonstrated that the idea got published. It's like developing a new language. Many words have been added to the English language, or taken on a completely different meaning due to their use by scientists. Force, distance etc actually mean different things in Newtonian and Einsteinian mechanics. That doesn't mean that science is mathematical or literary, as it is a simple matter, from a philosophical perspective, to differentiate the different tools being used. A hammer designed using FEM software is not a mathematical tool.
So you are trying to tell me that if maths is used in science, it ceases to be maths?
Quote:It is my belief that the methods of science and the methods of maths are very often indistinguishable from each other
Only because very few people take the time to distuinguish them. Not many people bother with philosophy or epistemology these days.
I have taken the time to distinguish them, yet there is still crossover. The world is not clear-cut black and white, not ever, everything overlaps and interrelates with everything else.
Quote:not that they are identical always, but they overlap enough to say that science is a mathematical process and maths is a scientific one, to a degree in each case at least
They only overlap to the extent that individual people use two different tools at the same time. To someone more familiar with philosophy, this argument may look like someone claiming that a screwdriver and a hammer are the same thing because they can't see how a mechanic does different things with them.
Now you see this is just a different way of wording exactly what I have said, no a hammer and a screwdriver are not the same thing, but yes they are both mechanical tools. This is what I am saying.
Quote:The reason maths is used so extensively as the method of scientific modelling, and that so many say that 'maths is the language of science' is because they both rely on the same methods of logic.
Maths is dependent on logic. Science relies on entirely different methods.
Science does not rely on logic?
I believe that science and maths both rely on the same logic for a large part, and this is why maths is so perfectly suited to scientific models, and is so often used to extend scientific models through entirely mathematical methods.
Quote:In maths it is possible to invent your defining qualities as sense pointed out and in science they are arrived upon through empirical study
What defining qualities? Science requires creativity in developing new theories. Empiricism is just a way of testing them. In maths, if you invent something properly in the first place then it is correct because it is built on logic, not an attempt to describe nature.
The ones you and sense outlined: "It constructs its own rules/axioms and then proves other things within itself from this and only from these rules/axioms.". Science really does this too - no scientific model is anything more than a human construct that roughly approximates what a human witnesses in nature, and as such is only true within the rules/axioms that define the model. The only real difference s that science aims to produce models that have a meaningful outcome and limits itself to the description of nature. Again since science is the process not the outcome, it is still really very similar to maths, often identical.
Again, I am not trying to say that maths == science, I am trying to point out where they use the exact same processes of logic.