Title: HISTORICAL SCIENCE AND THE INTELLIGENT DESIGN THEORY
1 Common Cause Explanation The Search for a
Smoking Gun
Carol E. Cleland Philosophy Department Center for
Astrobiology University of Colorado (Boulder)
2OVERVIEW
- Myths about the scientific Method.
- Classical experimental science and prototypical
historical science two different but equally
rational and objective patterns of evidential
reasoning. - How evidence acquired through field work
justifies historical hypotheses Common cause
explanation and the search for a smoking gun.
3Part I
4Myths about the Scientific method
- Inductivism Scientists prove theories and
hypotheses by a logical process of induction.
5Myths about the Scientific method
- Falsificationism Scientists falsify theories
and hypotheses by using empirical evidence to
refute them.
6The Logic of Prediction
- All copper expands when heated.
- If sample of copper 4 is heated, then it will
expand - (Heating copper sample 4)
- (Copper sample 4 will expand)
- 1. Hypothesis (H)
- (All Cs are Es)
- 2. Test Implication (I)
- (If x is a C, then x is an E.)
- Test Condition (C)
- 4. Prediction (E)
7The Logic of Evaluating the Results of an
Experiment
- Successful Prediction
- 1. If H, then I
- 2. I
- C. H
- Logical Fallacy affirming the consequent.
- (This is just another version of the problem of
induction.)
8The Logic of Evaluating the Results of an
Experiment
- Failed Prediction
- 1. If H, then I
- 2. Not-I
- C. Not-H
- Valid Argument Form denying the consequent.
- (This explains the appeal of falsificationism.)
9The Terrible Truth about Falsificationism
- The form of the first premise in the previous
argument is - If H and A, then I
- (where A stands for a set of auxiliary
assumptions a1, a2, , an about other
conditions, known and unknown, about the actual
experimental situation.)
10The Terrible Truth about Falsificationism
(continued)
- This changes the form of the argument to
- 1. If H and a1, a2, , an, then I
- 2. Not-I
- 3. Not-(H and a1, a2, , an)
- 4. Not-H or not-a1, a2, , an
- 5. Not-H or not-a1 or not-a2 or or
- not-an
- (by De Morgans theorem)
11The Terrible Truth about Falsificationism
(continued)
- From a logical standpoint, no observation
(whether experimental or in the field), can
conclusively falsify a hypothesis. For it is
always possible to salvage the hypothesis in the
face of a failed prediction by denying an
auxiliary assumption.
12More Nails in the Coffin of falsificationism
- Falsificationism is not only logically but also
historically flawed. - Faced with failed predictions scientists have
historically denied auxiliary assumptions, e.g.,
perturbations in the orbits of Uranus Mercury. - Falsificationism is inconsistent with the
practice of scientists training of young
scientists - Faced with failed predictions scientists
typically deny and indeed are trained to deny
auxiliary assumptions rather than the target
hypothesis.
13Conclusion
- Neither inductivism nor falsificationism
provides a satisfactory account of any scientific
practice the scientific method of yore is a myth.
14Part II
- Differences in the methodology of classical
experimental science and prototypical historical,
natural science - Is historical natural science methodologically
inferior to experimental science?
15The structure of Classical Experimental Science
- Focus Is on a single (sometimes complex)
hypothesis which typically has the form of a
universal generalization (All Cs are Es). - Central Research Activity Consists in repeatedly
bringing about the test conditions specified by
the hypothesis and controlling for extraneous
conditions that might be responsible for false
positives and false negatives.
16The Experimental Program vs. Solitary Experiment
- Failed predictions do not result in the
rejection of hypotheses they are best
interpreted as attempts to protect the hypothesis
from false negatives. - Successful predictions Are not followed by
risky tests (in Poppers sense) they are best
interpreted as attempts to protect the hypothesis
from false positives. - Acceptance/rejection of a hypothesis occurs only
after a hypothesis is subjected to a series of
experiments controlling for plausible auxiliary
assumptions that could explain predictive
successes and predictive failures.
17The structure of Prototypical Historical Science
- Focus Is on proliferating multiple, rival
hypotheses to explain a puzzling body of traces
of past events (data) encountered in field work. - Central Research Activity Consists in searching
for a smoking gun a trace(s) that sets apart
one or more hypotheses as providing a better
explanation for the body of traces thus far
acquired than the others.
18A Case StudyThe Alvarez Hypothesis
- Two-pronged hypothesis 1) impact 2) extinction.
- Initially many different explanations for the
end-Cretaceous mass extinction pandemic,
evolutionary senescence, climate change,
supernova, volcanism, and meteorite Impact. - Discovery of an iridium anomaly (smoking gun)
in K-T boundary sediments narrowed it down to two
possibilities volcanism and meteorite impact.
Discovery of extensive quantities of a rare form
of shocked mineral subsequently cinched the case
for impact over volcanism.
19A Case Study The Alvarez Hypothesis (cont)
- Paleontologists werent convinced They agreed
that there had been a meteorite impact but many
doubted that it caused the end-Cretaceous
extinctions. - The discovery of extensive pertinent fossil
evidence (especially small organisms such as
foraminifera and ammonites, and fern spores and
angiosperm pollin) on either side of the K-T
boundary was pivotal in changing their minds,
providing the needed smoking gun for the second
prong (mass extinction) of the hypothesis.
20Lessons from the Alvarez hypothesis The
evaluation of historical hyotheses is
- Not grounded in prediction
- Historical predictions are not risky in
Poppers sense too many highly plausible
extraneous conditions (e.g., iridium poor
meteorite, geological processes of concentration
and dispersal, unrepresentative samples of K-T
boundary) capable of defeating them. - Predictions are typically vague, e.g., Wards
prediction about Cretaceous ammonites they
serve more as roadmaps for looking for a smoking
gun than predictions.
21The Evaluation of Historical Hypotheses (cont.)
- A hypothesis may be rejected on the basis of
evidence that does not refute it, e.g., the
contagion hypothesis for the end-Cretaceous
extinctions. - The acceptance of a hypothesis does not require a
successful prediction, e.g., the iridium anomaly
was not and could not have been predicted or
retrodicted.
22The Evaluation of Historical Hypotheses(cont.)
- Grounded in explanatory power
- Hypotheses are accepted and rejected in virtue of
their power to explain (vs. predict) puzzling
bodies of traces discovered through field work. - The Alvarez hypothesis explains an otherwise
puzzling association (correlation) among traces
better than any of its rivals. It is for this
reason that it is viewed as confirmed and its
rivals are no longer seriously entertained by
scientists.
23Part III
- Common cause explanation and the search for a
smoking gun
24Common Cause explanation
- Reichenbachs Principle of the Common Cause
seemingly improbable associations (correlations
or similarities) among traces are best explained
by reference to a common cause. - C
- Presupposes that the temporal structure of causal
relations in our universe is such that most (not
all) events form causal forks opening from past
to future (leave many traces in the future).
E1 E2 E3 E4
25Common cause explanation (cont.)
- But is there any reason to believe the
- principle of the common cause is true?
26YES!The Asymmetry of Overdetermination
- A time asymmetry of causation
- Most local events structures overdetermine
their past causes (because the latter typically
leave extensive and diverse effects)and
underdetermine their future effects (because they
rarely constitute the total cause of an effect) - Much easier to infer an ancient volcanic eruption
than a near future volcanic eruption.
27The Asymmetry of Overdetermination (cont.)
- Physical source is controversial but it
characterizes all wave (radiative asymmetry)and
particle (2nd law of thermodynamics) phenomena
above the quantum level an objective and
pervasive physical feature of world. - Physically (vs. logically or strictly
metaphysically) grounds the Principle of the
Common Cause and the methodology of historical
natural science the Search for a smoking gun.
28An illustration The colors of dinosaurs
- Asym of OD Asserts that the present is filled
with - overdetermining traces of the past hence
- one can never completely rule out finding a
smoking gun - for any scientific hypothesis about the past.
The - methodology of historical field work is based
upon - this possibility.
29Conclusions
- Historical Scientists exploit the
overdetermination of the past by the localized
present by searching for a smoking gun to
discriminate among competing hypotheses the
asymmetry of overdetermination guarantees there
are likely to be many such telling traces. The
problem is recognizing them for what they
represent.
30Conclusions
- 2. Experimental scientists try to circumvent the
underdetermination of the future by the localized
present by constantly testing for false positives
and false negatives that might yield misleading
confirmations or disconfirmations of their
hypotheses the asymmetry of overdetermination
guarantees that this is always a threat. - There are no records of the future.
31Conclusions
- 3. The methodology of historical science is
different from that of classical experimental
science but it is not inferior each practice is
designed to exploit the differing information
that nature puts at its disposal.
32References
- Common cause explanation and the search for a
smoking gun in Baker, V. (ed.), 125th
Anniversary volume of the Geological Society of
America (forthcoming). - Prediction and Explanation in Historical
Natural Science, British Journal of Philosophy
of Science 62 (2011), 551-582. - Philosophical issues in natural history and its
historiography in Tucker, A. (ed.), Blackwell
Companions to Philosophy A Companion to the
Philosophy of History and Historiography. Oxford
Blackwell Pub. (2009), pp. 44-62. - Methodological and Epistemic Differences
Between Historical Science and Experimental
Science, Philosophy of Science 69, (2002), pp.
474-496. - Historical science, experimental science, and
the scientific method, Geology 29, (2001), pp.
987-990.