Elegance is more than an aesthetic quality, or some ephemeral sort of uplifting feeling we experience in deeper forms of intuitive understanding. Elegance is formal beauty. And formal beauty as a philosophical principle is one of the most dangerous, subversive ideas humanity has discovered: it is the virtue of theoretical simplicity. Its destructive force is greater than Darwin's algorithm or that of any other single scientific explanation, because it shows us what the depth of an explanation is.
Elegance as theoretical simplicity comes in many different forms. Everybody knows Occam's razor, the ontological principle of parsimony: Entities are not to be multiplied beyond necessity. William of Occam gave us a metaphysical principle for choosing between competing theories: All other things being equal, it is rational to always prefer the theory that makes fewer ontological assumptions about the kinds of entities that really exist (souls, life forces, abstract objects, or an absolute frame of reference like electromagnetic ether). We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances—Isaac Newton formulated this as the First Rule of Reasoning in Philosophy, in his Principia Mathematica. Throw out everything that is explanatorily idle, and then shift the burden of proof to the proponent of a less simple theory. In Albert Einstein's words: The grand aim of all science … is to cover the greatest possible number of empirical facts by logical deductions from the smallest possible number of hypotheses or axioms.
Of course, in today's technical debates new questions have emerged: Why do metaphysics at all? Isn't it simply the number of free, adjustable parameters in competing hypotheses what we should measure? Is it not syntactic simplicity that captures elegance best, say, the number fundamental abstractions and guiding principles a theory makes use of? Or will the true criterion for elegance ultimately be found in statistics, in selecting the best model for a set of data points while optimally balancing parsimony with the "goodness of fit" of a suitable curve? And, of course, for Occam-style ontological simplicity the BIG question always remains: Why should a parsimonious theory more likely be true? Ultimately, isn't all of this rooted in a deeply hidden belief that God must have created a beautiful universe?
I find it fascinating to see how the original insight has kept its force over the centuries. The very idea of simplicity itself, applied as a metatheoretical principle, has demonstrated great power—the subversive power of reason and reductive explanation. The formal beauty of theoretical simplicity is deadly and creative at the same time. It destroys superfluous assumptions whose falsity we just cannot bring ourselves to believe, whereas truly elegant explanations always give birth to an entirely new way of looking at the world. What I would really like to know is this: Can the fundamental insight—the destructive, creative virtue of simplicity—be transposed from the realm of scientific explanation into culture or onto the level of conscious experience? What kind of formal simplicity would make our culture a deeper, more beautiful culture? And what is an elegant mind?
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Wednesday, February 01, 2012
Simplicity itself.
I have to pass on this brief essay by one of my heroes, Thomas Metzinger:
couldn't you have used fewer words to say that?
ReplyDelete:-)
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There is one problem with Ockham's razor though - it can't deal with solipsism! See Eric Schwitzgebel's note on that subject.
ReplyDeletehttp://schwitzsplinters.blogspot.com/2012/01/is-solipsism-simple.html
A formal simplicity that would make our culture deeper and more beautiful?
ReplyDeleteRealizing that "self" is not a corporeal definition. We are only selves insofar as particles are also waves. #waveparticleduality
An elegant mind?
One that bestows an infinite number of points-of-view with which to observe SELF.
(One of my heroes too.)
ReplyDeleteElegance will only work to the extent that the world is elegant, which it often seems to be.
There's another layer to this: an explanation is only an explanation when it's within human mental capabilities. Some problems can be solved but are just incredibly complex, like weather prediction and (I think) economics. Even if a computer does a zillion calculation to get the answer we can still complain as did physics Nobel laureate Eugene Wigner: “It is very nice that the computer understands the problem. But I would like to understand it, too.”
We can't do a zillion calculations but we may be able to frame the problem in a way that allows our conceptual spatial mind to picture the problem and do our own kind of calculation to get the result. This is a slightly different kind of elegance, minimising the number of human conceptual components, which each of which may include massive built-in levels of integration, rather than minimising the number of bits of information in a formal information-theory sense.
Jim, A very useful point of view...thank you!
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