On the map-territory fallacy fallacy
Abstract
This paper presents a meta-theory of the usage of the free energy principle (FEP) and examines its scope in the modelling of physical systems. We consider the so-called `map-territory fallacy' and the fallacious reification of model properties. By showing that the FEP is a consistent, physics-inspired theory of inferences of inferences, we disprove the assertion that the map-territory fallacy contradicts the principled usage of the FEP. As such, we argue that deploying the map-territory fallacy to criticise the use of the FEP and Bayesian mechanics itself constitutes a fallacy: what we call the {\it map-territory fallacy fallacy}. In so doing, we emphasise a few key points: the uniqueness of the FEP as a model of particles or agents that model their environments; the restoration of convention to the FEP via its relation to the principle of constrained maximum entropy; the `Jaynes optimality' of the FEP under this relation; and finally, the way that this meta-theoretical approach to the FEP clarifies its utility and scope as a formal modelling tool. Taken together, these features make the FEP, uniquely, {\it the} ideal model of generic systems in statistical physics.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2208.06924,
title = {On the map-territory fallacy fallacy},
author = {Maxwell J D Ramstead and Dalton A R Sakthivadivel and Karl J Friston},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2208.06924},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
23 pages. Note that this manuscript was changed substantially and has been replaced by arXiv:2406.11630; this version should be considered defunct