I like ignoranceKeithBC wrote:Those who understand science have an obligation to teach the public and to oppose ignorance.


Dave

I like ignoranceKeithBC wrote:Those who understand science have an obligation to teach the public and to oppose ignorance.
I know why I'm heresleepyowl wrote:Excuse me. pardon me, Pagan chaplain coming through, I would hope that religion & science will not bicker about the fundamental meaning of life as neither side has the answer just as much as we don't know why we are here,
I'm biting my tongue on the "everyone believes different things and that's just cool" discussiongregorach wrote:Sorry, radical epistemic relativism gets right on my nerves.
I'm trying!KeithBC wrote:Those who understand science have an obligation to teach the public and to oppose ignorance.
This is the point I was making, but I'm not sure I'm as sanguine about it as you. I do think it's a bad thing, I guess I was just pleading for a little more sympathy and understanding, rather than harsh judgement. That makes me sound like a really wet, liberal lefty, which is probably about right!The Riff-Raff Element wrote:Hence, the practice of science does have aspects associated with religions, including this: only an elite few have the means to establish the "truth" empirically and everyone else must take it on faith. This is not a bad or a good thing; it just is.
Little point in getting upset about something that cannot be changed, or in denying something that is evident because we don't like the implications (bending the facts to fit the theory, as it were), though we all manage that in one sphere or another.Zech wrote:This is the point I was making, but I'm not sure I'm as sanguine about it as you. I do think it's a bad thing, I guess I was just pleading for a little more sympathy and understanding, rather than harsh judgement. That makes me sound like a really wet, liberal lefty, which is probably about right!The Riff-Raff Element wrote:Hence, the practice of science does have aspects associated with religions, including this: only an elite few have the means to establish the "truth" empirically and everyone else must take it on faith. This is not a bad or a good thing; it just is.
oldjerry wrote:Yeah,nice poem.....so all that stuff on the internet is the truth?????
Actually, particle physics in particular is probably the most cautious and carefully grounded field of science there is. While many sciences will accept 95% confidence as being pretty damn solid evidence of something, particle physicists generally don't even regard a result as interesting until it hits 99.995%. Those Higgs boson results everybody got a bit excited about a while back were (in combination) a 4 sigma deviation from what would be expected if it wasn't the Higgs. Show me any other field that looks at a 4 sigma result and thinks "Oh, that's quite interesting - but not really convincing. We really need another couple of hundred petabytes of data to be sure it's not just a statistical anomaly." The cosmologists perhaps aren't quite as careful, but compared to all the social sciences, or medicine, they're still on incredibly firm ground.The Riff-Raff Element wrote:Sometimes, of course, we get a little bit carried away with the shear elegance of an hypothesis and start to treat it a bit too much like a fact and use it to build more hypothesis which is very naughty. This seems to happen quite a lot in the more difficult-to-explore regions of the scientific spectrum like particle physics and cosmology, but I speak only as an outsider looking in rather than as a participant.
Of course, the key difference is that in the case of religion, absolutely nobody has any means to establish the "truth", or even whether the entire field of enquiry has any basis at all. The ordinary man in the street may not be able to independently establish the distances to the stars, but he can at least see that they exist.The Riff-Raff Element wrote:Hence, the practice of science does have aspects associated with religions, including this: only an elite few have the means to establish the "truth" empirically and everyone else must take it on faith. This is not a bad or a good thing; it just is.
Then why is anyone even engaging on a scientific basis when they could be engaging more profitably on a philosophical one?gregorach wrote: Of course, the key difference is that in the case of religion, absolutely nobody has any means to establish the "truth", or even whether the entire field of enquiry has any basis at all. The ordinary man in the street may not be able to independently establish the distances to the stars, but he can at least see that they exist.
Go on then. Prove it in your kitchen!demi wrote: E=mc2
I take your point about the five-sigma level of confidence, but nonetheless particle physics did build a lot on the Standard Model before proof of many elements of it were forthcoming. I can't say I blame the physicists because it is a quite beautiful thing, though, like I say, my understanding is that of chemist, so I'm easily impressed.gregorach wrote:
Of course, the key difference is that in the case of religion, absolutely nobody has any means to establish the "truth", or even whether the entire field of enquiry has any basis at all. The ordinary man in the street may not be able to independently establish the distances to the stars, but he can at least see that they exist.
I know this wasn't addressed to me, but I don't understand your point - would you mind elaborating?Susie wrote:Then why is anyone even engaging on a scientific basis when they could be engaging more profitably on a philosophical one?gregorach wrote: Of course, the key difference is that in the case of religion, absolutely nobody has any means to establish the "truth", or even whether the entire field of enquiry has any basis at all. The ordinary man in the street may not be able to independently establish the distances to the stars, but he can at least see that they exist.