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Abstract

In this essay, I argue that the idea that there is a most fundamental disci­pline, or level of reality, is mistaken. My argument is a result of my experiences with the “science wars”, a debate that raged between scientists and sociologists in the 1990s over whether science can lay claim to objective truth.

These debates shook my faith inphysicalism, i.e. the idea that everything boils down to physics. I outline a the­ory of knowledge that I first proposed in my 2015 FQXi essay on which knowledge has the structure of a scale-free network. In this theory, although some disciplines are in a sense “more fundamental” than others, we never get to a “most fundamen­tal” discipline. Instead, we get hubs of knowledge that have equal importance. This structure can explain why many physicists believe that physics is fundamental, while some sociologists believe that sociology is fundamental. This updated version of the essay includes an appendix with my responses to the discussion of this essay on the FQXi website.

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Source: Aguirre A., Foster B., Merali Z. (Eds.). What is Fundamental? Springer,2019. — 189 p.. 2019

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