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#540 | |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
3×5×719 Posts |
Quote:
Presumably you would take the statement "the universe is flat" as a leap of faith. Even if every single measurement of ever increasing accuracy ever made shows that the curvature is zero within error bounds, it remains possible that the curvature may be non-zero. The same could be said of the law of conservation of mass-energy, of electric charge, of angular momentum, global entropy increase, ... |
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#541 | |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
2×67×73 Posts |
Absolutely.
Quote:
That, IMO, is one of the most important touch-stones of the Scientific Method. That doesn't mean we shouldn't act based on the most likely truth; simply that we should always be willing to admit that we might be wrong. That's what makes us the strongest -- we're always asking questions; even and especially of ourselves. |
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#542 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
Quote:
I, for one, would certainly take all of those statements and laws as a leap of faith. The difference between religion and science is not, to my mind, about the use or absence of "faith" when presenting results, but instead has to do with the manner of achieving the results and the ability to modify those results when presented with new evidence. Basically I suppose I'm saying the same thing as chalsall here (just read his last reply on previewing my post). |
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#543 | |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
2·67·73 Posts |
Have you considered that the most interesting things tend to be found in the noise?
At the edges? Quote:
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#544 | |
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May 2004
New York City
5×7×112 Posts |
Quote:
knowledge, we must identify the roots of the two methods. Elevating faith, the only means religion provides for acquiring understanding of the universe and its workings, to the level of reason, science's province, smears the two concepts (faith and reason) into one amalgam, whose only result can be the destruction of reason. They are NOT compatible or interchangable ideas. While I agree with your point about the "manner" of achieving knowledge, I can not accept the attribution of the phrase "leap of faith" to scientific concepts. Nor agnosticism, as in it's all an approximation, we can't really know. Science and math can provide certainties, and where there's still doubt, one still has some proven certainties within it. Last fiddled with by davar55 on 2013-08-08 at 13:51 |
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#545 | |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
978210 Posts |
Quote:
Outside of mathematics, nothing can be proven. Science can only disprove things -- it cannot prove them. This is why I (and not to speak for Brian-E here, but I suspect we're on the same wave-length) use the term "leap of faith". We believe that Science is the better and more honest methodology since it's always testing itself; but we admit we cannot say we're absolutely sure. IMO, one should always bring both Occam's razor, AND GΓΆdel's incompleteness theorems et al, to bear. Einstein, for example, would have been well advised to have done so. |
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#546 |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
3×5×719 Posts |
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#547 |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
2×67×73 Posts |
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#548 |
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May 2004
New York City
5·7·112 Posts |
Aren't rhetorical questions supposed to be answered by other
rhetorical questions? And isn't that especially true when asked for the purpose of educating? |
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#549 | |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
2×67×73 Posts |
Quote:
Edit: Sorry... I sometimes try to be funnier than I really am.... Last fiddled with by chalsall on 2013-08-08 at 17:52 Reason: s/Yes./Yes, usually. But sometimes the rules have to be broken to make progress./ |
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#550 |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
3·5·719 Posts |
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