Positivism vs Realism
James Francis Lyons-Weiler
weiler at ERS.UNR.EDU
Thu Dec 11 10:08:49 CST 1997
On Thu, 11 Dec 1997, Byron Adams wrote:
> I thought this was a clever way of illustrating the suboptimal
> position of trying to divorce science from metaphysics. But isn't this
> what one of you is accusing some research programs of doing?
My comments are not intended to place cladistics firmly into
metaphysics, but rather to say as formulated it appears to
be closer to the metaphysical end of the spectrum of
perspectives on reality than I am comfortable with.
>
> I get lost trying to keep track of who is saying what on taxacom as
> I follow the threads - but it seems to me that either James or Tom is
> accusing a particular research program of relying on the tenets of logical
> positivism (or something other than realism) as a part of its discovery
> operations. In order to do this, it would be helpful if they (again, I
> can't remember who is accusing who of being a positivist) could show that a
> particular research program defies realism in some critical aspect of it's
> methodology or interpretation. This means that you should be able to show
> that at some point, the discovery operations employed behave as if what is
> true is not independent of what we know, do, or believe as scientists.
I think the fundamental point, and the one that seems to creep
into any discussion between Tom and I, is whether parsimony
represents a critical test as it is claimed to by (some) of
its proponents. Parsimony is a criterion, but the belief that
the criterion will lead to meaningful estimates of the past
requires a bolus of faith I'd rather not choke on. The LEAST
positivistic position, in my view, is the one that allows that
more than we might expect could have happened - and this allows
for numerous intrusions into the data that can mislead parsimony
in particular, and other methods as well (some to a lesser
degree). Congruence is expected sometimes, but not always -
descent with modification only partly explains the distribution
of states among taxa, and it does not always occur in a clean
manner. The intrusions include homoplasy, of course, but
also population-based processes during speciation such as
differential lineage sorting. Parsimony from this position is a
useful inductive tool for hypothesis formulation. At the other
end of the spectrum is the MOST positivistic position, that
parsimony will provide the best estimate of the past, regardless
of the number or scope of the possible intrusions, because it is
so - and the tree itself (a set of relationship statements) is
directly corroborated by the level of congruence found among
individual hypotheses of homology. This position is at odds with
the first in that
(1) Popper indicated that the degree of corroboration is
inversely related to how expected a result is. If we include
too much "background knowledge" in the formulation of the
hypothesis (i.e., winnow away unreasonable hypotheses of
homology on other grounds, say, development), then the degree of
corroboration afforded by the existence of congruence among
the characters (individual sets of hypotheses of homology)
is decreased, and approaced zero if we include all of the
background knowledge that is in fact accurate and relevant
(in which case we have a tautology). Bold hypotheses receive
a higher dose of corroboration because they are not expected
to survive a truly critical test; i.e., they represent
hypotheses which may run counter to expectation. In the case
of cladistics, if we have done our biology right, our set
of hypotheses of homology is expected to be congruent. This
expectation diminishes the level of corroboration for those that
are found to be congruent RELATIVE TO the level that which should
be achieved under a truly critical test. When hypotheses
of homology are revised to account for those found to be
discordant, either by calling them homoplasy or by
re-examining the material, then Popperian corroboration is
conveniently dismissed - i.e., it is applied to the
hypotheses of congruence homologies, but it is not allocated
to the emergent hypotheses of discordant homologies, and
yet they represent the archetype of bold hypotheses because
they were unexpected. This reveals the positivism of the
bare-bones parsimony approach - congruence is expected.
(2) The first position views parsimony as an inductive
step in hypothesis formulation - which is fine. Popper
said that it doesn't matter how we formulate our hypotheses;
what matters most is how we test them. The position that
parsimony is a test belies the fact that most consider
published trees to be hypotheses in a long series of
attempts to model the past - not as theories or
truth, but mere hypotheses. To expect otherwise is
positivistic. Some of the greatest contributors to phylogenetics
have become skeptical of the utility of the trees that get
published - Swofford and Maddison come to mind.
)
> > For example, I am now trying to recover the
evolutionary
> relationships among some insect parasitic nematodes. My *opinion* of what
> happened is independent of the reality that cladogenetic events millions of
> years ago produced the diversity and relationships among nematodes I am
> trying to recover. Or, as Ghiselin points out in his defense of realism,
> "How could any scientist's beliefs or opinions possibly affect whether or
> not chordates have a more recent common ancestor with echinoderms than they
> do with flatworms?"
This is, I think, closer to my own position - how could any
scientists' faith in parsimony possibly effect whether
the data they have collected are informative or misleading?
This would not be problematic if parsimony did not provide
a set of optimal trees for ANY data set with variable
character states. Evolution has allocated various states to
various organisms - and in this way can directly influence
our ability to discern homology. Tom's opinion of parsimony is
independent of whether or not, in a particular case, parsimony
tests and provides corroboration, or has merely summarized the
set of best hypotheses of homology in a congruent manner, which
even then mau remain misleading. The focus
should be on the evidence present in the data, and not what the
data look like after they have been structured on a tree.
>
> It seems reasonable to me that any scientific research program or
> methodology employing discovery operations subservient to positivism should
> be exposed as such. I think this is a very clever and valid way to
> criticise a research program or methodology, and I would like to see it
> continue. So far (from reading the threads) I am not convinced that this
> argument has been clearly made or defended.
>
>
You have outlined some rather decent criteria for demonstrating
positivisitic thought. I agree that the goal of the development
of science should remain focused on identifying it whereever
it exists, and then trying hard to fix things where they
fall short.
James L-W
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