this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2024
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[โ€“] zeca@lemmy.eco.br 2 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

It seems weird to me that the null-hypothesis there should be that dogs are non-sapient. It seems to be common for scientists to default on non-existence until evidence of existence is found. But in some situations existence and non-existence should have equivalent weights. In the field of mathematics, the existence of a thing can be logically equivalent to the non-existence of another thing, and we dont know which of the two exists, but we cant default to assuming neither of the two. Science is a bit different from pure mathematics though, but im not sure in what ways.

[โ€“] Soleos@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

You are right to think through this question, and as you imply, there are different forms of knowledge, i.e. epistemologies. Science geneologically derives from empiricism, the epistemological idea that true knowledge comes from sensory experience and observation--philosophy has moved on from this idea. But accepting empirocism, the default is necessarily no knowledge, as absence of knowledge precedes knowledge from observation. Science applies empirical methods and deductive/inductive reasoning to generate new knowledge; while you may reason a theory, that theory must ultimately be tested against observation. So empirically, we cannot conclude/know sapience exists somewhere without observing it. Now the idea of "null hypothesis" can be thought of as a formalization of this. It comes from statistics in the 1920s when they were trying to determine a relationship between two data sets. As per empiricism, the null hypothesis is always that there is no relationship and therefore observations are due to random chance. And the purpose of the tests are to see if this null hypothesis should be rejected/disproven.

Another dated, but still helpful approach to thinking of the scientific question is Karl Popper's falsifiability. It is possible to falsify the theory that "dogs cannot possess sapience by" observing one instance (not due to random chance) of sapience in a dog. However you cannot falsify the theory that "dogs can possess sapience" unless you can observe all dogs throughout space and time and show they don't possess sapience.