Today's post, When Science Can't Help was originally published on 15 May 2008. A summary (taken from the LW wiki):
If you have an idea, Science tells you to test it experimentally. If you spend 10 years testing the idea and the result comes out negative, Science slaps you on the back and says, "Better luck next time." If you want to spend 10 years testing a hypothesis that will actually turn out to be right, you'll have to try to do the thing that Science doesn't trust you to do: think rationally, and figure out the answer before you get clubbed over the head with it.
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That is the minimal model I currently prefer, yes. And "the whole enterprise of trying to reason about whatever might underlie those observations" is not misguided, it's useful for coming up with better models, but that's all it is useful for. Assigning it any ontology is unnecessary.
I am not drawing any distinction, neither matters in the approach "build models and test them". You are the one who started discussing some metaphysical "X", I simply pointed out that your suggestion of a single "X" is not a requirement.
You raised the question of whether X refers to a "single coherent whole" entity or refers to multiple entities (e.g., multiple repeatably testable models).
Which, as I said, puzzled me, since my understanding was that on your account that's a meaningless question.
And it sounds like we agree that on your account it's a meaningless question.
I'm still not really sure why you chose to raise it in the first place, but I hope we can agree that the proper thing to do with a meaningless question is to point out why it's meaningless and otherwise ignore it.