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RE: Question About the Scientific Method
April 4, 2014 at 4:02 pm
(This post was last modified: April 4, 2014 at 4:02 pm by ThePinsir.)
(April 4, 2014 at 10:47 am)Rampant.A.I. Wrote: With telescopes. What you're attempting to do is open a god of the gaps argument by pointing out whatever is not currently falsifiable (testable). This is a misunderstanding of what science does.
Certainly those theories supported by direct empirical experience and testability hold more weight, so to speak, but you're arguing that regardless of how good their extrapolation, the Greeks had no way of knowing the earth was round without observing it from space.
I'm not arguing that "god did it" or anything. Check my my avatar: it says "atheist" lol. I'm just inquiring into the nature of science, and whether or not we had seen it. Even if the answer would've been "no", I certainly wouldn't argue "god" lol.
About the Greek example: I'm not trying to argue that point; I'm just trying to make sure I understand the nature of "scientific truth". Maybe I'm getting into epistemology here...
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Question About the Scientific Method
April 4, 2014 at 4:39 pm
Sorry, I think I'm annoyed by the rash of repeat threads with repeat questions that are really making assertions, and replied the same way.
I think you're right, it is getting into the area of epistemology, in a way, but epistemology itself has been hijacked by people like A. Plantinga, who are deliberately throwing regress out as preventative of knowledge without an ultimate authority.
Science is built on a foundation of Justifiably True Beliefs that are demonstrated true so often they qualify as a body of knowledge or facts to rest other JtBs on.
It's a scaffolding framework over regress, and it isn't perfect or based on any ultimate authority, but it still maintains, and parts of the structure can be repaired, updated or modified without the whole structure coming down.
We don't have observable evidence for some areas of science, especially theoretical physics, because of the span of time and size of events involved, but we can extrapolate data from the existing JtB framework and test them by computer modeling, with mathematics, and eventually in the case of planets forming with future observation.