| Sure, if the pseudoscientific description of factor analysis applied to images is correct, then it's phyiscs. As-is, it's pseudoscience. What happens when you do a factor analysis on images? You get some measure of the axes of geometrical variance across those images. Are those axes "related" to any physical variables, sure -- but almost never directly. To suppose the system itself had these properties is to suppose, for example, constellations actually exist and cause your personality traits. Everything we want to know is what phyical properties of the system give rise to the observed consistent correlations in geometrical properties. *THAT* is physics. Showing these geometrical properties exist and are consistent is just what we're trying to explain. You cannot go from images to the domain of physics -- there are an infinite number of theories consistent with these images domains. And this is pseudoscience. |
There's no such thing as "physical properties of the system" other than measurable quantities that can be used to make predictions, which is what this does. There's no reason to be sure that temperature, for example, is a "real" physical property of a system rather than just one of many variables that would help us model it and understand it.
Do you think it's pseudoscientific because there's no theory-ladenness in the predictions?