While ideally aiming at understanding an empirical phenomenon, and at the same time predicting its behaviour, scientists often focus only on one of these two aspects. Is this the dilemma of a trade off, a psychological bias, or a philosophical conundrum?

It is as if A is asked a question by B, and tries to give the correct answer. A could aim at understanding what is in the mind of B, grasping the rationale of the question that leads to the answer. Alternatively, A could simply aim at predicting the correct answer, from other lines of reasoning (knowing B personally, remembering things B once said, imitating others that have already replied, replicating a pattern, etc.).

This underscores fundamental psychological and philosophical differences in the personal approach of scientists to knowledge. Indeed, it is possible to optimise either conceptual/formal or predictive aspects of scientific models. At a higher scale, these often correspond to the fundamental and applied methodological approaches, respectively.

Would we rather predict the behaviour of a phenomenon that we don't understand; or understand it, while being unable to accurately predict its behaviour?

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