[Haskell-cafe] NLP libraries and tools?
wren ng thornton
wren at freegeek.org
Sun Jul 10 01:55:52 CEST 2011
(Psst, the nlp list is <nlp at projects.haskell.org> :)
On 7/9/11 3:10 AM, Jack Henahan wrote:
> On Jul 7, 2011, at 10:53 PM, wren ng thornton wrote:
>> I can't help but be a (meta)theorist. But then, I'm of the firm opinion
>> that theory must be grounded in actual practice, else it belongs more to
>> the realm of theology than science.
>
> Oof, you're liable to wound my (pure) mathematician's pride with remarks
like that, wren. :P
How's that now? Pure mathematics is perfectly grounded in the practice of
mathematics :)
I've no qualms with pure maths. Afterall, mathematics isn't trying to
model anything (except itself). The problems I have are when the theory
branch of a field loses touch with what the field is trying to do in the
first place, and consequently ends up arguing over details which can be
neither proven nor disproven. It is this which makes them non-scientific
and not particularly helpful for practicing scientists. Linguistics is one
of the fields where this has happened, but it's by no means the only one
(AI, declarative databases, postmodernism,...)
There's nothing wrong with not being science. I'm a big fan of the
humanities, mathematics, and philosophy. It's only a problem when
non-science is pretending to be science: it derails the scientists and it
does a disservice to the non-science itself. Non-science is fine;
pseudo-science is the problem. For the same reason, I despise math envy
and all the pseudo-math that gets bandied about in social sciences wishing
they were economics (or economics wishing it were statistics, or
statistics wishing it were mathematics).
--
Live well,
~wren
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