To prepare your for the implications of my title, I present some background.Remember THE METATHINK THREE? If not, say, "Howdy-doo!"
- ONTOLOGY (STUDY OF WHAT IS REAL "OUT THERE"): "What's real, Neal?"
- EPISTEMOLOGY (STUDY OF WHAT WE KNOW): "Whaddya know, Joe?"
- AXIOLOGY (STUDY OF WHAT IS OF VALUE OR WHAT WE VALUE): "What's good, Wood?"
Using the notion of probability, I can explain ONTOLOGY, EPISTEMOLOGY, AXIOLOGY to you -- that is, the part Neal, Joe, and Wood will play in your future, especially if you are TAB (temporarily able-bodied).
One of the most famous of debates among great physicists during the 20th century was that between Albert Einstein and the great Danish physicist, Niels Bohr -- who first became known for his "solar system" model of the atom. The debate concerned THE NATURE OF THE PROBABILITY COMPONENT IN QUANTUM THEORY -- the richest physical theory of all times.
Any "quanton" has associated with it a wave. The great German physicist, Max Born (x-y), hypothesized that this is "a probability wave". Its value tells us the probable "location" of a quanton at a given time.
This provoked Einstein to say, "God does not play dice with the Universe!" Einstein accepted the fact that Born's idea led to extremely good predictions. But Einstein argued that this is necessary because of LIMITS IN OUR KNOWLEDGE. Einstein argued that HIDDEN VARIABLE EXIST IN THESE PROCESSES such that discovery and use of these VARIAABLES would preclude the RANDOMNESS presently tolerated. Thus, Einstein was saying that QUANTUM PROBABILITY IS EPISTEMIC ("Whaddya know, Joe?")
But Bohr argued that QUANTUM PROBABILITY IS ONTIC -- that is, "built into Nature" ("What's real, Neal?").