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by lisper
1260 days ago
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> This is exactly what induction means. No it isn't. You got it right the first time. Induction "presupposes that we have faith in the proposition that something will happen again because it has happened in the past". But that is wrong. Science does not presuppose this. > Science does presuppose that observations mean anything related to more general rules No, it does not. It observes that the world behaves according to general rules. It does not presuppose that it does. |
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We don't check each and every room in the country to see if general relativity holds there, and then fall in despair once we realize it might have randomly stopped holding in one of them yesterday.
> No, it does not. It observes that the world behaves according to general rules. It does not presuppose that it does.
I'd like to see you explain how you can you observe a rule. Are you God? Can you see all of space and time and all possible dimensions? Science observes particulars and tries to formulate general rules based on these observations. If science would not use induction, any observation would be meaningless, because the exact circumstances the observation was carried out in would cease to exist the moment the observation was concluded.
Therefore, science is susceptible to the induction problem.