Pavel said:
Fair enough. I'm of the same opinion as you are, but if this was that easy, no scientist would open their mouth and preach "the survival of the fittest". That ain't the case, and you have to give them some benefit of the doubt. There's something bothering me about this, and I don't think it's just an impression of a roundabout way, as you put it. I think there's some legitimacy behind my concern, but I can't pinpoint it and I was wondering if anybody could do it.
Let me throw you another example. I don't believe "The first prime number" and the "the first natural even number" refer to exactly the same thing. While it appears to be 2, it's not the same 2 as an ontological entity that has a property of being the first prime number and the first even number. It's two separate conceptual entities, yet which, in the same number theory, stand to each other in a relation of logical equivalence (it's first prime, if and only if it's first natural even number) . To me, I thought, "adapt" and "survive" are completely different ontological entities, yet which are logically equvalent...
Pavel.
If you define numbers in a given way, and you define "even" "prime" and all those other properties in a given way, then it will necessarily be the case that "the first prime number" is "the first natural even number." Those properties will necessarily belong to the same number. Again, it follows from definition (from the definitions of a great number of things, like "natural", "number", "even", "prime", "first", etc.), but it follows from definition nonetheless.
Prima facie we can sort of imagine "the first prime" and "the first even natural" as having different referrants, but this would not have any basis in reason.
In an intuitive sense, we see the two predicates as being different, and this helps us. Sometimes, it is helpful to focus on the primeness of 2, sometimes, its evenness. But "x is the first prime" implies "x is the first prime" and "x is the first even natural." The implications of the statement are the same regardless of if you say, "x is the first prime" or "x is the first even natural." In a strictly logical sense, they mean the same thing (as the statements yield the same implications), but intuitively, we distinguish the two.
If I look at a bottle which is black on one side, and white on the other, it might appear to be black one day, and white the next.
Prima facie, it appears that I am observing two different things. When viewed in full context, they are the same. At first glance, it appears that the two properties for "2" are different, and sometimes, it might be useful to just focus on one aspect, or it might be useful to just talk about the black half of the bottle, and ignore the white half entirely, but that white half will necessarily be there, and it is no less part of the bottle than the black part, even though we like to focus on one part at a time. Similarly, the two properties, in truth, mean the same thing, we simply like to focus on one aspect at a time.
As for scientists who claim "survival of the fittest," yes, we do give them the benefit of the doubt. Induction is inherently imperfect, but in every day life, in a practical sense, we treat inductive reasoning as justified reasoning. In an absolute sense, it is not, but we're normally not concerned with such things. So, scientists can claim "survival of the fittest," and if they show that this always holds true in experiment, we'll accept "survival" and "fittest" to have some sort of "practical equivalence," and in our everyday lives, we'd treat it no different than logical equivalence, even though we know that in truth (and in a less pragmatic sense) they are not equivalent, or at least, inductive reasoning has not, and can not, show them to be.