I want to find out the fundamental truths in this world

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This discussion centers on the quest for absolute truths within the realm of science, highlighting that no scientific theory can be 100% provable due to the inherent nature of scientific inquiry, which is conditional and falsifiable. Participants emphasize that while certain statements, such as "humans and gorillas share a common ancestor," can be deemed factual, they are not devoid of error margins. The conversation also touches on philosophical implications, asserting that certainty is elusive, even in established scientific principles like the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of scientific methodology and falsifiability
  • Familiarity with the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
  • Basic knowledge of evolutionary biology and common ancestry
  • Awareness of Gödel's incompleteness theorems
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  • Research the implications of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle in various scientific fields
  • Explore Gödel's incompleteness theorems and their impact on mathematics and philosophy
  • Study the principles of evolutionary biology and the evidence supporting common ancestry
  • Investigate the philosophical debates surrounding the nature of truth and knowledge
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Philosophers, scientists, students of science, and anyone interested in the intersection of science and philosophy regarding the nature of truth and certainty.

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After having some quite philosophical debates about the nature of truth and the limits of what we can truly understand, I've been trying to find out what is 100% scientifically provable to be an absolute truth. I know that this is quite wishy-washy question but I'm hoping to find answers on here as i cannot accept that we can't really know anything.
 
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S.daniels009 said:
After having some quite philosophical debates about the nature of truth and the limits of what we can truly understand, I've been trying to find out what is 100% scientifically provable to be an absolute truth. I know that this is quite wishy-washy question but I'm hoping to find answers on here as i cannot accept that we can't really know anything.

Welcome to the PF.

You came to the right place to ask scientific questions! But keep in mind that the PF rules (see Info at the top of the page) do not permit philosophical discussions any more. We have just found them too hard to Moderate well. :smile:
 
berkeman said:
Welcome to the PF.

You came to the right place to ask scientific questions! But keep in mind that the PF rules (see Info at the top of the page) do not permit philosophical discussions any more. We have just found them too hard to Moderate well. :smile:
Beat me to it. :smile:

To the OP, be sure to check out the Physics Forums Global Guidelines (Terms and Rules in the INFO tab).
 
S.daniels009 said:
After having some quite philosophical debates about the nature of truth and the limits of what we can truly understand, I've been trying to find out what is 100% scientifically provable to be an absolute truth. I know that this is quite wishy-washy question but I'm hoping to find answers on here as i cannot accept that we can't really know anything.

There is no 100% provable absolute truth in science. All scientific knowledge is conditional. One of the big requirements for a scientific theory is that it is falsifiable. Thus in theory, and scientific theory can be proven wrong. We are of course reasonably certain that stuff like the theory of gravity works, but we can never be 100% certain of this.
If you are looking for absolute truths, science is not the place to look.
 
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micromass said:
Thus in theory, and scientific theory can be proven wrong.
I think there's a typo in there, but I'd still like to reword:

Thus, any scientific theory can only be proven wrong.

In other words, you can prove a theory wrong, but you can't prove it right - the best that can be said is a particular experiment or group of experiments agrees with the theory to within a certain error margin.
 
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This is even true in the realm of mathematics - many truths may exist which you can never prove. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gödel's_incompleteness_theorems

If you don't like that or want to accept it, as Feynman might say then go live in some other Universe where the laws of nature and logic are more convenient for you.
 
S.daniels009 said:
After having some quite philosophical debates about the nature of truth and the limits of what we can truly understand, I've been trying to find out what is 100% scientifically provable to be an absolute truth. I know that this is quite wishy-washy question but I'm hoping to find answers on here as i cannot accept that we can't really know anything.

Physics deals in principles not truths and those principles give birth to ideas that, the deeper you go, lead only to more questions ultimately. For me it's easier to believe that truth only exists in human psychology. On this Earth, a true story can be told in a thousand different ways depending on who's telling it. I don't know if the principles of physics are true, but they work until they don't.
 
Many thanks for your responses, they have been very helpful. I suspected that i would get those sorts of answers.

Graciously,

Sam.
 
micromass said:
There is no 100% provable absolute truth in science.

The Earth is more massive than the moon
The sun is more massive than the earth
Humans and gorillas share a common ancestor, and that common anscestor shared a common ancestor with all apes.
And since I was in the John Snow last weekend - cholera was transmitted in water
 
  • #10
William White said:
The Earth is more massive than the moon
The sun is more massive than the earth
Humans and gorillas share a common ancestor, and that common anscestor shared a common ancestor with all apes.
And since I was in the John Snow last weekend - cholera was transmitted in water

Sure, those are very likely. And I am certain of all them for 99.999%. But not absolutely certain.
 
  • #11
As a defense for that position, I say that it is always possible that my brain is plugged into a machine which provides it with certain stimuli which makes my entire world appear the way it is. Very unlikely, but it would be dishonest of me to rule it out as completely and utterly impossible.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_in_a_vat
 
  • #12
This is why physicists need to get a grip on reality,,,

these things are as certain as your own existence ...now if you cannot be certain of your own existence, then you are certain of nothing...AND you are no longer talkng science.

I'm quite happy to say that the statement "gorillias and humans share a common ancestor" is a FACT. It is as factual a statement that it is possible to state.

Its as true as "Australia is bigger in area than the United Kingdom".

It is not dishonest to rule out the possibility that the United Kingdom is larger in area than Australia.
 
  • #13
William White said:
now if you cannot be certain of your own existence, then you are certain of nothing...

I am indeed absolutely certain of nothing.

AND you are no longer talkng science.

Science does not deal with absolute certainties and nobody every claimed it did.
 
  • #14
micromass said:
As a defense for that position, I say that it is always possible that my brain is plugged into a machine which provides it with certain stimuli which makes my entire world appear the way it is. Very unlikely, but it would be dishonest of me to rule it out as completely and utterly impossible.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_in_a_vat
I think all of you are a computer simulation, created for my amusement.
 
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  • #15
russ_watters said:
I think all of you are a computer simulation, created for my amusement.

Twisted kind of amusement you have then.
 
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  • #16
micromass said:
Science does not deal with absolute certainties and nobody every claimed it did.

so, if you measure the area of Australia, you are not absolutely certain that it is larger in area than Belgium?maybe its better to stop twisiting this into philosophical twaddle and just stick to the word FACTS (and not go into one redefining the word fact, when everybody knows what it means)

There are many things that we know to be FACTS.
 
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  • #17
William White said:
these things are as certain as your own existence...
Agreed: Certainty of one's own existence is not possible in science.
now if you cannot be certain of your own existence, then you are certain of nothing...
Agreed.
AND you are no longer talkng science.
Disagree.
I'm quite happy to say that the statement "gorillias and humans share a common ancestor" is a FACT. It is as factual a statement that it is possible to frame.
The thing you are missing in all of this is that all facts have error bars. The probability of error might be vanishingly small for something like the mass of the Earth and moon and still pretty small for the origin of species, but it is not zero. Indeed, due to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, it cannot be zero.

[edit] Perhaps then the only certain thing about knowledge is the lack of certainty!
 
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  • #18
russ_watters said:
Agreed: Certainty of one's own existence is not possible in science.

Agreed.

Disagree.

The thing you are missing in all of this is that all facts have error bars. The probability of error might be vanishingly small for something like the mass of the Earth and moon and still pretty small for the origin of species, but it is not zero. Indeed, due to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, it cannot be zero.

twaddle - using that wrong-headed logic you can say that there is a probability that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is wrong (and therefore there is no uncertainty - and go round in circles!).

I'd much rather lay my last tenner on the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle being wrong than the theory of evolution (which IS a FACT) being wrong.
 
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  • #19
William White said:
so, if you measure the area of Australia, you are not absolutely certain that it is larger in area than Belgium?

No, I am not absolutely certain of it, because I could be a brain-in-a-jar in which case Australia and Belgium don't exist at all in reality.

I'm happy to call "Australia bigger than Belgium" a fact. But then I would have to say that I cannot absolutely be certain of facts. I'm fine with that.
 
  • #20
William White said:
so, if you measure the area of Australia, you are not absolutely certain that it is larger in area than Belgium?

maybe its better to stop twisiting this into philosophical twaddle and just stick to the word FACTS (and not go into one redefining the word fact, when everybody knows what it means)

There are many things that we know to be FACTS.
The problem with your logic is that while you feel comfortable applying it to really really sure facts, you will have to define a line across which you cease to be 100% certain. Is it when the difference between the masses you are measuring is 10:1? 5:1? 2:1? Does it depend on the measurement method? Because the jump from "somewhat uncertain" to "absolutely certain" cannot have a clearly defined line, you cannot be absolutely certain of where that line is.
using that wrong-headed logic you can say that there is a probability that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is wrong (and therefore there is no uncertainty - and go round in circles!).
So I indeed added the bit about the HUP, but regardless, due to the problem I outlined above, the logical flaw lies with you.
 
  • #21
russ_watters said:
Certainty of one's own existence is not possible in science.
What about Descartes' "I think, therefore I am,"?

If there is thinking taking place, then something must exist to be doing the thinking. "Nothing" can't think.

We can extend it to perception, "I perceive, therefore I am." It's irrelevant to the issue of one's own existence if the perception is illusory or not. It is the fact of perception that scientifically proves the existence of a perceiving entity.
 
  • #22
Zoobyshoe, Thank you. You seem to have hit the nail on the head. Although the issue isn't really about if perception is illusory or not, but how i can be sure the perception is accurate or not.
 
  • #23
S.daniels009 said:
Zoobyshoe, Thank you. You seem to have hit the nail on the head. Although the issue isn't really about if perception is illusory or not, but how i can be sure the perception is accurate or not.
I guess I'm not sure what you mean here by "accurate."
 
  • #24
S.daniels009 accuracy is not a concern. In this matter we perceive and that alone stands to prove that we interact with reality and therefore exist. That logical reasoning stands to prove that the validity of the perception is not of concern because regardless that perception is still there and by extension our existence is certain.
 
  • #25
russ_watters said:
I think all of you are a computer simulation, created for my amusement.
Right. Now we're going to stop, smarty pants.
 
  • #26
zoobyshoe said:
What about Descartes' "I think, therefore I am,"?

If there is thinking taking place, then something must exist to be doing the thinking. "Nothing" can't think.
I probably needed another word or two in there: it's the nature of our existence we can't be sure of.
 
  • #27
A fact is merely truth beyond a reasonable doubt. In math this would be termed an axiom. Godel summed up the case for truth and axioms nicely a century ago.
 
  • #28
russ_watters said:
Agreed: Certainty of one's own existence is not possible in science.

<Snip>

The thing you are missing in all of this is that all facts have error bars. The probability of error might be vanishingly small for something like the mass of the Earth and moon and still pretty small for the origin of species, but it is not zero. Indeed, due to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, it cannot be zero.

[edit] !
Doesnt HUP apply only at the micro scale? Or are you arguing that if we are uncertain at the micro level-- and AFAIK, under the accepted QT, things get much wilder at this level, in that standard laws, logic break down at this level -- we cannot be certain at any level, or is it just that we do not (yet?) have irrefutable methods of proof/disproof?

EDIT:
@S.daniels009 :
An idea for you to reach your goal, or at least to get you closer to it: research all known cognitive biases and train yourself to overcome them. Then train yourself to avoid all known fallacies. This should get you closer to what you want, if not there.
 
Last edited:
  • #29
WWGD said:
Doesnt HUP apply only at the micro scale?
No, it applies at all scales - the probability is just a function of the scale, so the relative error due to the HUP is smaller the larger the thing being measured.
 
  • #30
russ_watters said:
Thus, any scientific theory can only be proven wrong.

In other words, you can prove a theory wrong, but you can't prove it right - the best that can be said is a particular experiment or group of experiments agrees with the theory to within a certain error margin.

Hi Russ:

This maybe a matter of definition, and I suppose it might be controversial, but from my late teen years many years ago I have always understood that mathematics is a field of science, although with somewhat different protocols. Math theorems are expected to be 100% proved to be mathematically true, although there are ocassionally from time to time erroneous proofs that survive for decades before someone, typically a graduate student, sees the flaw. (One example is the four color theorem as "proved" in te 19th century.)

Regards,
Buzz
 

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