Jump to content

cladking

Senior Members
  • Posts

    992
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by cladking

  1. On 7/5/2021 at 2:50 PM, Andrew William Henderson said:

    I'm a keen reader of ww2 history and once read of german and allied submarine crew witnessing ball lighting travelling the length of the inside of the sub whilst been targeted with depth charges and was thought to be the effects of concussion / pressureand humidity of the atmosphere within the sub...🤔

    I heard an unsubstantiated report that a B17 flying in formation suddenly glowed and disintegrated.  

    It was reported lost to enemy fire.  

    I've watched for ball lightning under all sorts of conditions my entire life.  Ironically I was only a few hundred yards away when a machine operator told me he had just seen what looked like a bright ball bounce off a metallic pile and then settle back and disappear.  

  2. There are numerous ways to "cheat" gravity.  We can throw ourselves forward and using our legs to convert the momentum to lifting.  Essentially we can use most of our muscles to lift ourselves rather than just those designed for the task.  As you get older you find that such tricks are less a luxury and more a necessity.  Where you were once able to leap to your feet from a prone position in one single movement you'll find that six or eight movements become needed.  

     

    They say if you can get up in two or fewer movements you won't die for five years.  It's been a long time though since I could do it in two.  

     

    I don't believe there are "laws of physics" but I certainly believe a set amount of work is required to left weight and this amount is fixed.  Efficiency can vary widely though no matter what means is employed.  

  3. 23 hours ago, zapatos said:

    Interesting. What kind of science and which technologies?

    I can not properly address these questions in someone else's thread.  I have threads around in which I'd be happy to address them.

    So far as ancient technology; it is everywhere.  They didn't invent agriculture based on Darwinian beliefs.  They didn't use first year physics to calculate the ideal angle for "ramps".  They  made fantastic shapes like the tri lobed disc of Sabu by unknown means and for unknown reasons.  While they had almost no words in their language most of the nouns (which all invention would need) have no known referent.  It is hardly logical to assume they lacked sophistication and used primitive means when the artefacts are mostly mysterious.  This goes many times over since most of the surviving artefacts are stone clearly implying objects made of more perishable materials are lost.  Other than a few lines from Sumeria that Might be more hyperbole and fiction than reality there is no recorded history from prior to 2000 BC.  All this missing writing about science, technology, and history are necessary to understanding ancient technology.  Ancient technology may be only explicable in terms of ancient science and this does not survive.  Instead we have mostly incomprehensible writing like the "book of the dead" from many centuries after the invention of writing, the advent of history, or the end of the era after which all these mysteries and artifacts arose.  

    How did ancient people before written history exist?  How did they survive and most importantly, how did they accumulate the knowledge which is clearly evident in archaeological excavations?  This is the question here.  

  4. 1 hour ago, dimreepr said:

    shows that you don't understand your knowledge of people, or your ancestors; have a little respect... 

    We are led by our beliefs and the beliefs that we are exactly like our ancestors has led us for centuries.  It did not lead the inventors of modern science and it did not lead early scientists.  If we are wrong then we are off the rails.   I believe the subject of this thread is critically important to the continuation of the human race. 

    Perhaps you think that because I refer to us as "homo omnisciencis" that I have no respect for us.  Far from it!  Our ability to survive (and eventually prosper) despite knowing everything shows a great deal of character and countless positive traits.  

    YOU believe that the ability to survive is good genes and fitness but I do not.  I believe that for us it is science and before science was invented it was ancient technology.  I believe looking for the science that gave rise to this technology is a very important endeavor and I await Einy and The Greeksinterpretation of evidence.  Just seeing what his focus is will be exceedingly interesting to me. 

  5. 2 hours ago, zapatos said:

    Interesting. What kind of science and which technologies?

    This is Einy and The Greeks thread so I'm not going to get into science based on logic and observation instead of experiment and observation.  

    But the technology is everywhere.  "Agriculture" was a very highly complex and multidisciplinary technology.  They didn't cultivate a few crops or animals as non-human animals have but dozens of different types of plants and animals.  They mined and refined metals and created alloys.  They worked all sorts of stone with results that are impossible to duplicate today.  They invented cities and built megaliths all over the world.  Most of their accomplishments are unknown as to the means, metaphysics or science.  Little survives from before 2000 BC because it has all rotted away so we can only imagine the technology that might be in evidence had it not.   

    Ancient people all believed their ancestors were wise and powerful and that their science and technology had been lost.   All that survived were crafts and those things that could be passed down father to son or journeyman to apprentice.  If there were any science then there was necessarily metaphysics.  It is impossible to know highly complex science  simply by being expert or through observation, trial and error, or referral to authority.   

  6. On 2/24/2021 at 8:28 AM, studiot said:

    A good observation. +1

    As to experiments, I agree that the AG were more theorists than experimentalists, but no (zero) experiments ?

     

    No.  No experiments because experimental science hadn't been invented yet.  The Greeks were successful because they were free and were excellent observers.  Yes, they obviously staged observations which is extremely similar to experiment but it misses the mark.  

    Ancient people left numerous clues to how they invented their technology but we don't think as they did.  They invented agriculture using a different kind of science that generated a different sort of technology.  It is very difficult to see because all our assumptions are wrong and we can't think like they did.  We are for all practical purposes a different species than homo sapiens.  I call us homo omnisciencis because we are so different even though anatomical differences are slight.   

    Seek the metaphysics and you can find the basis of the technology.  

    On 2/24/2021 at 8:56 AM, dimreepr said:

     

     

    Do you think that corresponds to, a wise choice?

    For instance, in order to make biodegradable plastic's for Europe, vast tracks of land in Madagascar are turned into monocultural farm's.

    I'm not sure of your meaning.  I believe all knowledge is "good" and leads to "understanding" which allows "creation".  Ancient science would just be another tool we might use; perhaps a very valuable tool.   It should at the very least lead to a much better understanding of natural systems and the prediction of outcomes we cause.  

    16 hours ago, Einy and The Greeks said:

    Stick with me you'll be underwhelmingly entertained or possibly sublimely enlightened who knows. If you haven't studied the texts its going to be difficult to have much more than an argument, Rather have an informed dissenting opinion than an ignorant argument.

    Sounds interesting.  

    Nothing interests me more than finding ancient knowledge buried in ancient texts or right in plain sight.  

    It's funny how until a few centuries ago everyone believed ancient people were wise and powerful.  Somehow they became stinky footed bumpkins today.  

  7. 12 hours ago, Einy and The Greeks said:

    Speaking of lasers in antiquity circa 1200 BC have you ever read the Epic of Gilgamesh?  Robot comes out of the ground to battle shooting lasers out of its eyes. Now Archimedes toasted some boats with optical calcite, reflectors and the sun. It seems that the high technology was always kept exclusive from the populace. as in the Priests or Magicians. Holy and whatnot. The entirety of the ancient world didn't practice this stuff. Until Greece, the Greeks democratized knowledge and had they kept their Political shit together they probably would've  jumpstarted a technologically advanced world wide civilization. Ill read up on your sea people. Are they the Hyksos clan?

    "Technology" today is an outgrowth of things seen in lab experiments.  The Greeks had no experiments so any technology more complex than the observation that water runs downhill was unlikely for them.  If you want to find ancient science you need to look for the source of ancient technology.  Unfortunately all your sources appear to be corruptions of original writing so the science would be very difficult to see here.  

    Any science you find will necessarily correspond to  ancient technology and ancient knowledge, not to modern experimental science. 

  8. On 10/15/2020 at 2:31 AM, CuriosOne said:

     

    But its said Newton used the pyramids to create calculus...Is this true??

     

     

    No.  It's most probably not true.

    Newton studied the pyramids largely because he thought the builders knew the size of the earth (probably true) and he needed the data to test his theory of gravity.  While he never found it he did ironically translate the Emerald Tablets of Hermes from Syriac to English.  

    He was truly a remarkable man.  He couldda moved heaven and earth if he had google.  😎

  9. I can't defend the idea "intelligence" exists  on earth but the word appears (per Mercer) in the oldest writing known to man;

    1701a. To say: Nun has begotten N. on his left hand

    1701b. a child; the intelligence of N. is not.

    1701c. N. is freed from the evil gods;

    1701d. N. is not given to the evil gods.
     

    https://www.sacred-texts.com/egy/pyt/pyt47.htm

    It appears twice in fact;

     

    411a. N. is disgusted when he licks the emetics which are in the red crown,

    411b. (but) he is delighted when their magic is in his belly.

    411'c. The dignities of N. shall not be taken from him,

    411d. (for) he has swallowed the intelligence of every god.

    412a. The lifetime of N. is eternity, its limit is everlastingness

    While the text dates only to ~2400 BC it is believed by Egyptologists to have been composed many centuries earlier and might even pre-date writing.  "Intelligence" may have meant something just a little different to the writers of this work and they certainly used the word "heart" in many instances we'd use the word "head".  

    Some individuals simply think a great deal faster than others and some are more adept at coming up with useful ideas.   

    I should think even animals display and note differences in the speed and importance (accuracy) of "thought".  

  10. 3 hours ago, swansont said:

    My point was that "we can't know everything" is not equivalent to "we know nothing" and you have done nothing to rebut that.

    I  don't rebut that.  

    My point is that we don't know everything about anything.  This leaves open the possibility that our ignorance is far broader and deeper than anyone can imagine. 

    Even a butterfly can use hot air rising from a fire to gain altitude but that hardly means he "understands" any kind of scientific theory whatsoever.  

    3 hours ago, dimreepr said:

    Then you know where you are, but not where you're going...

    Yes.

    Additionally to not being able to predict the future due to chaos and subtle effects we obviously don't even know all the fundamental "laws" which govern any event.  

  11. 3 hours ago, IDoNotCare said:

    The difference in time particles (4D graviton topologies) can be interpreted as lp1*9^28=hG/c^3 ->c^3=hG/lp1*9^28->c=cuberoot(hG/9^28lp1)...

    Thank you for taking the time to explain that but you lost me early.  

    By "not being able to quantify anything at all" I merely meant that no event can occur in which all variables will ever be quantifiable.  We quantify conditions or possibilities using as much knowledge as we can.   But words and thought are much more events than conditions.  

    Good luck in your work.   

  12. 12 hours ago, IDoNotCare said:

    Yes you can.

    Sanity is an axiomatic platitude, as is the notion of subjective and objective views as well as, for that matter, all philosophy and sensory perception. The only reality is numerical quantification. That which is not numerically quantified in sum, ergo, sum is an ontological fallacy. You have no points, I do have points, very specific points in a graph.

    If I understand you correctly (I'm not at all sure) then our positions are not so very different.  

    In light in the fact that we essentially exist as individuals by virtue of our ability to recognize patterns then how could it be possible to not have philosophy?  

     

    So long as we use words to think how could it ever be possible to quantify words?   

     

    Our primary agreement I think is that we see the quantifiable as the basis of reality but, then I don't believe we'll ever have enough knowledge to quantify anything at all.  

  13. 19 hours ago, joigus said:

    I personally don't take offence at the concept of science being wrong, even though I use my leisure time mostly to learn more about it and I've made of it my method to try and understand the world better, like most of us here I would say. I don't think science aims for absolute truth. It's not about being right or wrong beyond any doubt. It's about being more right and certain and less wrong and uncertain, and pushing the limits of doubt and ignorance. Science doesn't provide us with a magic wand to dictate ethics either. It evidences correlations, most of them of statistical nature. It sheds light on plausible causal connections, it refutes previous ill-conceived ideas. If we do that, we are in a better position to take better decisions, diagnose better, tackle evil before it happens. But this can only be achieved by adding to the structure more layers of rational thinking and open discussion.

    I'm a big fan of science as well.   It is the chief means by which we can arrive at true knowledge; visceral knowledge.   

    19 hours ago, joigus said:

    What kind of philosophy marginalizes individuals?

    Any philosophy that denies free will or the life, liberty, and happiness.In practice there are always trade-offs but this is politics, not philosophy.     

     

    18 hours ago, Strange said:

    When science produces a result it is equally valid whatever your personal ideas are.

    Only individuals think or come up with new ideas.   Only when an idea becomes theory can  it benefit science or people.  

    18 hours ago, Strange said:

    When it comes to science, for example gravity or evolution, we do not each have a unique model.

    Of course we do!  If our models were identical we'd come to the same conclusions and make the same predictions.  There are even sexual differences such as women tending to navigate by landmarks and men routes.  

    18 hours ago, Strange said:

    One of the roles of philosophy is to explore what the roots of belief and knowledge are.

    Many scientists believe philosophy is irrelevant (different models).  Yes, we explore roots and meaning but most of this exploration is really uncovering language.  A perspective from outside of language can not be found easily.   Even when we look at something from a new angle or step outside the box we take language with us.  In very real ways "I think therefore I am" is the root of science but thought as we know it doesn't exist outside of language.   Seen from this angle philosophy becomes navel gazing and science just so much lint.  

     

    18 hours ago, Strange said:

    Please provide some evidence that "most people" believe this. 

    I'm surprised you'd dispute the idea that scientists believe in laws of nature.  

     

    18 hours ago, Strange said:

    So you don't believe in "laws" but you do believe in "logic" underlying reality. Would that be the "laws of logic", by any chance. 

    Logic is logic.  It behaves no laws per se but rather just is.  Math is the same thing but is quantized rather than manifested logic.  

  14. On 8/13/2020 at 10:26 AM, joigus said:

    It's a network of interrelationships, cross checks, that makes it all solid. Narrowing down the chances of being mistaken.

     

     

    "History warns us that it is the customary fate of new truths to begin as heresies and to end as superstitions"

     

    I am not suggesting that real science is wrong about everything or anything.  I am  merely saying that science looks at everything from the same perspective which is reductionistic and dependent on definitions and axioms.  Since all ideas and all progress are individual it is also dependent on models and language for all practical purposes.  Just because 2 + 2 = 2 x 2 does not make our models correct or like one another.  Each of us has a unique model and each of us sees the interrelatedness  of scientific and mathematical knowledge but this can't make any of us correct about anything either.  

    Philosophy falls by the wayside because everyone's understanding is solid, so who needs mere words to ruin the wonderful symmetry found in nature?   Of course the problem is we have no roots in anything except beliefs, language, and ephemeral definitions and meaning of language.   We have no roots except our models constructed from our interpretation of the reality disclosed by proper experiment.   "Philosophy" becomes irrelevant when our understanding is complete.   

    I am saying that philosophy could contain a broader perspective if it had a vocabulary with fixed definitions but mostly I am saying that any philosophy that marginalizes individuals  is evil.  

  15. 23 hours ago, dimreepr said:

    why?

    Just as for most people who believe all of reality behaves laws of nature, is mathematical, and reducible to/by induction, I believe none of this.   Just as they believe that these "laws" must underlie all of science and philosophy I believe that the laws are illusory and a laboratory manifestation of the logic which underlies existence itself.   Just as they believe observation, experiment, and history all support their beliefs, I believe they are misinterpreting everything and failing to see the role of language in data acquisition from the earliest times through today.   I came to Wittgenstein's conclusions largely from another direction  but more importantly I found extensive direct evidence that our perspective is not only unique but also highly limiting.  

    "Science", our science, requires few definitions and axioms but all our philosophy at this time require extensive givens and premises.  For this reason philosophy often doesn't dovetail with experimental results and state of the art.  It is often irrelevant to most scientists who tend to have nuts and bolts philosophys.  Nobody cares about why an equation works but when I point out the failings and shortcomings of beliefs in laws of nature or the role of thought and language which underlie these beliefs it is considered off topic.   

    "Philosophy" and applied science have  largely failed to keep up with the times and this is largely caused by the failure to build on the work of previous greats.  This failure is, I believe, the result of the inability of language to accurately reflect very highly complex inductions or complex thought.   It's impossible to build on what isn't properly understood while every listener has a different understanding.   Such problems can be redressed but this won't happen so long as we each believe we understand or so long as it is believed that philosophy is irrelevant.  

  16. On 8/10/2020 at 9:23 AM, joigus said:

    Read some Wittgenstein. And then some modern cognitive scientists. They've already developed the point you're trying to make.

    The whole modern conception of the world is founded on the illusion that the so-called laws of nature are the explanations of natural phenomena. Thus people today stop at the laws of nature, treating them as something inviolable, just as God and Fate were treated in past ages. And in fact both were right and both wrong; though the view of the ancients is clearer insofar as they have an acknowledged terminus, while the modern system tries to make it look as if everything were explained.

    — Wittgenstein, Tractatus, 6.371-2
     
     
     
     
    I could expand on this statement but, oddly enough, it would all be considered off topic.  
     
    My point remains that there is good and bad philosophy regardless of whether any part of it is inductive or deductive.  It is simply irrelevant that science and/ or philosophy can be "strictly" deductive.   
     
    There's a whole nother world beyond reductionism and induction but it lies outside of the way people think.   It's not necessarily better or worse but it is different and provides a broad spectrum of different perspectives.   Wittenstein apparently could see this world and arrived there principally through deduction.  
     
     
     
  17. 1 minute ago, Strange said:

    Even for you, that is a pretty bold position.

    It is the crux of my every argument.

    There are no two cats alike so therefore it follows not more than a single "cat" can exist.   "Cats" can't exist because there can be no hard and fast definition to put all things into the categories of "cats" and "not cats".  

    For instance at what exact point does a pregnant cat become "two cats"?  

  18. 12 hours ago, joigus said:

    Thinking is hard, and you have opted for a simplified version of it. You've thrown away tens of thousands of years of human knowledge right there.

    I remember when I gave it up as a child.  That it was hard was certainly known to me but had little to do with why I quit it.  Certainly intuition is orders of magnitude faster and easier though honing that intuition required far more effort than I'd have ever predicted.   I gave it all up principally because I realized that none of life's important questions could ever be addressed through science in my lifetime but also because I never wanted to believe something that wasn't true and it's quite apparent that induction can lead straight to such beliefs.  I don't believe that any amount of poison that might or might not have been consumed can possibly have any effect at all on the population of felines because there's no such thing as "cats" and the question lies outside my metaphysics.  

    While inductive reasoning has been around for only 4000 years, science has been around for only 400.   I am not rejecting "science" but merely the interpretations based on taxonomies.  Reality can be seen through experiment though only the narrowest spectra at a time.  The real irony here is that I believe we can't see 40,000 years of deduction based science that was supplanted by induction based on taxonomies that led us through many centuries of dark ages and may now be leading us back into a new one.

    Again though the subject is good and bad philosophy.  False taxonomies, bad science, and poor metaphysics can easily drive a bad philosophy;  So, too, can beliefs that are not consistent with the point of philosophy; to better humans and to better understand our humanity both collectively and individually.  I am holding out certain yardsticks and definitions against which almost any philosophy can be measured and adjudged. All philosophy is not created equally and much of it ruinous to not only the philosopher but to everyone.   

    One can't practice real science by means of any sort of philosophy but I do agree that at this juncture our science is still highly dependent on inductive reasoning.  This will remain true until we know a great deal more but in the meantime, I believe it is critically important that we each consider the degree to which our thinking is dependent on definitions and axioms.  

  19. On 7/30/2020 at 10:35 AM, joigus said:

    I think you're living the "deductive only" delusion. Either that, or completely missing the essential connection between induction and deduction. Plus, may I say, everything most people are telling you here. There's a common understanding in science and rational thinking that apparently you're not privy to: All thinking starts with induction/observation (that comes first) Then: --> inference of patterns --> proposing definitions and laws --> deduction of both seen and previously unforeseen consequences --> Testing --> Refinement of induction --> confirmation/rejection of theory --> formulation of new theory or refinement of previous one.

    Something like that. It's long, it's arduous; it takes time, effort, money, and many brains working together. That is the process. You need to get over the axiomatic dream, or the illusion that induction and deduction occur in completely separate levels that don't talk to each other. That's not how it works.

    And the absolutely essential piece that closes the circle is experiment.

    As to connecting experiment, religion, and common sense as different motifs for "belief"... I think you've really lost your bearings there.

    Evidence and belief are not the same thing. It is true that the evidence is always affected by the theory as to its format; the language, if you will, in which the answer is presented. But the process by which we acquire evidence, and the one by which we acquire belief; plus the degree of certainty of both, the objectivity the achieve... It could hardly be more different.

    I don't like inductive reasoning but that's NOT the point.  I don't like it for myself because I don't believe in taxonomies.   I wouldn't mind it in others except almost invariably they lose sight of the definitions, axioms, and premises upon which the results depend.  

    But this still isn't my point neither is the fact that many other including the Nacenes believe the Tree of Life is the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.  My point is merely that "good Philosophy" must be logical and not contradict known fact.  It MUST serve man and his needs.   It must hold people up as the sole good and all that works against people and individuals as EVIL.    Any other philosophy is harmful, unimportant, incorrect or some combination of these.  

    My own philosophy is deductive and presumes the fewest possible axioms and avoids taxonomy and induction.  

    On 7/30/2020 at 1:27 PM, swansont said:

    Are you going to answer my question about what you mean by experiment (and pure experiment)? Or can we expect the tap-dance to continue?

    I am excluding "look and See Science" and science by consensus.  I am excluding all expert opinion and poorly designed experiment.   I am excluding experiment that can be interpreted in ways that don't conform to theory.   

    A great deal of what we call "science" simply is not.   

    Explaining observation is not "science"; interpretation of experiment is.  

    On 7/30/2020 at 1:27 PM, swansont said:

    You are moving the goalposts. We were discussing testing whether an axiom was true, not whether they are the simplest ones.

    We can define the world as flat if we don't mind the math.   

    Reductionistic science works but it might not be the ONLY science.   

  20. 21 hours ago, swansont said:

    None, of this clarifies what you mean by "experiment" (or worse, "pure experiment" — what is a "pure experiment"?) and why observations don't count under that category.

    The ability to use things seen in nature, the lab, or in the bathtub do not confer understanding.   Of course if observation does not conform to theory the cause must be reconciled but when observation does conform to theory it does not mean that theory is correct.   If I put bird food out and observe what birds come to feed it is hardly an experiment at all and hardly can say much about what types of birds and animals live here or how they interact.   Like all words the referent for "experiment" is a continuum from good solid relevance to hardly experiment at all.   Experiment design is one of the hardest parts of science and interpretation of experiment is necessarily dependent on the design and axioms.   

    22 hours ago, swansont said:

    If I observe cloud-chamber tracks and identify particles, is that an experiment? 

    People and animals have been employing and building counterweights for countless millions of years yet we still don't understand the cause of the gravity that allows them to work.

    22 hours ago, swansont said:

    And to extend this: every new observation/experiment is a test of the validity of the axioms.

    Yes and no.  

    Just because we don't notice an anomalous property or find a way to explain the unexpected; just because we can justify all observation with theory don't mean that the axioms are necessarily the simplest ones to use to understand experiment.   Since axioms can't be proven or disproven the task isn't to justify them but rather to select the set which explain experiment in the simplest terms.  

    23 hours ago, Eise said:

    Two trees are explicitly mentioned: the tree of life, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil. 

    There are red pills and blue pills just as there are red and blue pills.   It's also possible to have a single red and blue pill that some might see as red and others as blue.  Any pill, every single individual pill, has many names.   Why do you suppose a tree would be known by a single name?   

     

    People get hung up on ideas that come from language and the models they engender.   "Philosophy" is no different at all.  Just as "experiment" lies on a continuum so too does "philosophy.  We each take many beliefs as being axiomatic and then generate an entire "philosophy" around it.  We each see what we expect and believe until in time we become those beliefs, never realizing that every individual has a unique perspective that he believes is justified by experiment, religion, or common sense.  

  21. 16 hours ago, studiot said:

    Astronomy is the Science of the Measurement (nothing else) of the Heavens.

    Your definition makes a bee's waggle dance "astronomy".  

    I have no problem at all with this but still would point out that it is more measurement than experiment.  

    16 hours ago, swansont said:

    That’s a very narrow view of “experiment”

    A lot of the disagreement is really semantical.  Obviously, there are "expermental" qualities to things other than pure experiment.  I would go so far as to say there can be such qualities to almost all thought and action (including observation of course).  But it is necessary still to tie theory to reality through experiment.  It is also necessary to periodically revisit axioms and metaphysics.

    5 hours ago, Eise said:

    I interpreted a text, not what somebody once might really have meant, said or written down. 

    The only thing that matters is what he meant.   He did not specifically say how many trees there were or even that one tree didn't have two names.  

    16 hours ago, Strange said:

    This isn't the idiotic "if you can't do the experiment in a lab it isn't science" is it?

    No!

    One thing all nonsense and poppycock have shared in the last century is that it had no tie to experiment.   I am not claiming ANYTHING not tied to experiment is nonsense but that real science actually works and is tied to experiment.  

    5 hours ago, Eise said:

    But that also means axioms have no fixed place in science and philosophy.

    Everything must begin with what is accepted as true.   Everything follows from this.  

  22. 5 hours ago, Strange said:

    The same (rather grandiose) statement can be made about botany, physics or medicine. 

    "Physics" is the result of axioms, methodology, and experiment.  While interpretations can still be wrong physics is always tied to reality by experiment.   

    This simply isn't true for all branches of study and it's not as true for astronomy.  

    5 hours ago, Strange said:

    Why do you think this means it is not science? It uses objective evidence, data, mathematical models, testable predictions, etc. It is a perfect example of a science.

     

    6 hours ago, cladking said:

    "Astronomy" may  be the mother of science but is not strictly science herself.

    Most of astronomy has far more to do with observation and the explanation of observation derived from experiments on earth rather than doing experiments with stars.   

    It's not a matter of astronomy being "wrong" so much as it's a matter of a near void of experiment conducted by astronomers.   

    5 hours ago, Strange said:

    OK. Not true but true. Got it.

    If you lose sight of axioms it's easy to lose sight of the meaning of experiment.   It's impossible to know the limitations of your knowledge.   

    5 hours ago, Strange said:

    Or maybe Cladking will tell us that astrology is a science 😯

    It won't be today... I believe astrology is a confusion of a science.  

    5 hours ago, dimreepr said:

    That's just broken my irony meter, unless I'm mistaken, you've just accused scientists of being square.

    No.   I'm merely saying that models and beliefs are just as dependent on axioms and definitions whether you believe that 2 + 2 = 4 or you believe a Creator made this so.  

    Nobody escapes fundamental beliefs and most individuals vote the same "party" and attend the same church as their parents.   

     

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.