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Originally posted by spoon:
That's because science has a great track record at solving problems. You call it a "faith statement", I call it betting with the odds on favorite.
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<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">They have a great track record for stuff that can be locally checked, and repeatedly done (physics, electronics, chemestry, et cetera). On things that happened in the distant past, science has a track record of primarily agreeing with popular politics of the day and place.
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Originally posted by spoon:
Of course, the statement should have a conditional in there, like, "...they will LIKELY answer all objections, or provide a new model that does."
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<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Such an alteration fits under the heading of "something like...".
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Originally posted by DavidG:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Jack Simth:
2) An as-yet unrecognized force to overpower the super-gravity at such an event, such as "dark energy"
- "dark energy" is a cop-out; it's an unobserved something (reason for the "dark" in the name) thrown in as a correction factor to fix the problem; it's only thought to exist because the universe hasn't collapsed in on itself over the timeframe the universe is thought to have been around. This energy is unobserved; it is required to make certain models work, so it is assumed. Few suggest that there may be a more fundamental flaw in the model. Such a force is also an act of faith.
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<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Isn't that the way physics works? The theoretician makes some theory which has some unobservable element. Then the applied physicists design experiments to attempt to observe those elements thus proving the theory.
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">To an extent - but you can't properly experiment on the universe to test things.
Also (this is just nit-picking on language use, feel free to ignore): Technically, no theory is ever "proven by" observation or experimentation - only "supported by" or "contradicted by".
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Originally posted by DavidG:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">
Few suggest that there may be a more fundamental flaw in the model.
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<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Thus implying there may be no better theory.</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Not when there is a loosly organized power structure which pretty much controls what gets funding/equipment access for research and publishing space in credited journals that has much work invested in specific theories. Anything too terribly contradictory to those theories gets quietly suppressed; papers/textbooks don't get published (they don't fit with what the review board "knows" is right, so they are deemed "wrong" and left unpublished), grants aren't granted (again, they don't fit with what the review board "knows" is right, so it is deemed a waste of money to research), with the net effect being that there are extreme difficulties involved in researching anything which might threaten the status quo, which in turn means it is neigh impossible to flesh out any potentially better theory to the point where they can be tested against each other (not that one can properly test anything about the distant past in any event).
Sure, that is the peer review system, and it does filter a fair amount of bull - but an amount of bull still makes it through, and it is functionally impossible to determine how much non-bull it also filters, and difficult to tell exactly how much bull successfully masquerades as non-bull.
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Originally posted by DavidG:
if like religion a large majority had different theories then you would have to question it much more.
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<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">As compared to the current state of the larger scientific community where any creditable voice that dissents too much or too loudly on certain topics is discredited and left out of the conversation?
If you were in, say, one of the early North American puritan settlements, and those voicing different beliefs were exiled, you'd almost never hear an argument (much less a coherent, well-reasoned one) against that particular settlement's belief system, regardless of how reasonable or outlandish that particular belief system was. By your implied theory count method of the reasonableness of questioning something, it would not be reasonable to question that belief system under such circumstances, and hence unreasonable to construct an alternative.
[ November 10, 2003, 23:20: Message edited by: Jack Simth ]