Surely you know that DNA replication is something that has been explained at the level of individual molecules. What does "enable" mean in the context of molecules obeying the laws of physics? — Frederick KOH
Actually it has been done.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_bond — Frederick KOH
Perhaps I chose the wrong words. What I mean is that we can, from sunyata, realize that to do good we shouldn't have an ulterior motive e.g. attaining nirvana or salvation etc. Simply be good. — TheMadFool
It is when you realize that there's nothing you become truly free. What follows then is a choice you make on your own terms, devoid of external influences - to be good for no reason whatever. This is beautiful. — TheMadFool
These are prevalent caricatures of his work, but they are wrong. — StreetlightX
What about Gorgias? — andrewk
Further, the argument is aimed at persuading not the interlocutor, but the audience of the debate. Hence I am not constrained to use techniques that the interlocutor accepts as valid. All that matters is that the audience sees them as valid. — andrewk
Under such premises it is futile to argue against anyone's detailed ideas. — jkop
The indeterminate nature of so many questions is real enough, but it doesn't mean the answer is "somewhere in the middle" (though, of course, that's where it might be). — Bitter Crank
No. — Bitter Crank
So, what I know about string theory could be written on the back of a postage stamp in none-too-small lettering. Any thoughts I have about string theory are fourth hand and not worth your time. — Bitter Crank
If the French Resistance shot 10 Nazi officials one day in occupied Paris, neither the Nazis nor the Resistance should call it murder (though the Germans might want to tell the story that way). — Bitter Crank
A murder spree is a murder spree and war is war. — Bitter Crank
I do not have a position on Newtonian Mechanics vs. Quantum Mechanics. Sorry. — Bitter Crank
Challenge accepted. I propose as reference his Reductionism Redux collected in Facing Up: Science and Its Cultural Adversaries — Frederick KOH
You forgot the gratuitous name dropping. — Frederick KOH
I was referring specifically to the Bouveresse v Rorty debate — Frederick KOH
My eyes glaze over when I see claims like this, these critiques, when unpacked and compared with the exact words actually said by the target, usually show themselves to be talking about something else from what philosophically mature scientists mean. — Frederick KOH
Actually I brought up Bouveresse v Rorty earlier in the thread - also in the volume. This debate is more "classical" in terms what you would expect in a realist v postmodernist fight. — Frederick KOH
There are no "two sides" to a murder spree. — Bitter Crank
On the other hand, the truth of string theory in physics is not somewhere in the middle. The theory either works or it doesn't. — Bitter Crank
But I am dissapointed Steven Weinberg is not on your list.
I suggest you fight him instead of shadow boxing. He is good on reductionism. You want a real fight, fight him. — Frederick KOH
You seem to need a caricature for banal arguments to be effective against. — Frederick KOH
In the generation that included Bohr and Heisenberg and many more. You are contradicting reality. — Frederick KOH
When something is banal , its the banal and not the a fortiori that people notice. — Frederick KOH
And I was responding to your claim that... — Frederick KOH
Put in such general terms, it is true to the point of banality. — Frederick KOH
So, some scientists do this and others do that. Those who do this tend to be older that those who do that. Got it. — Frederick KOH
I think where postmodernism fails is that it takes this limitation to be a warrant for a kind of indiscriminate relativism, that as there are no absolutes, in the traditional sense, and as science is a matter of falliballistic hypotheses, then all manner of truths are 'in the eye of the beholder', so to speak. — Wayfarer
What was this broad agreement (if there was one) like in 1000AD (or 1000CE if you like)?
Significance indeed. — Frederick KOH
The last time things became degenerative, physicists rushed to the new paradigm. — Frederick KOH
I am very sure ornithologists agree with chemists and physicists about what birds are made out of. — Frederick KOH
As long as we don't call all of it (the interpretation) "philosophy", which was my original point. — Frederick KOH
Why limit your assertion to formalisms and quantum theory?
Why would your assertion not apply as well to plain prose in a less mathematical endeavor?
In fact why would it not apply to doing washing machine settings based on what the manual says? — Frederick KOH
The difference is that you cannot "take out the formal and empirical parts of your enquiry" except in abstracto. And it is the in concreto that really matters. — John
So the issue here, appears to be that since there are such objects, black holes, whose mass is contained within the Schwartzchild radius, doesn't this indicate that GR is inadequate for understanding some aspects of the universe? — Metaphysician Undercover
That doesn't indicate that there is anything inherent within GR which would make you expect to find a black hole, it indicates that certain types of stars when understood under GR make you expect to find a black hole. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how this could be true. What is it inherent within GR which would make you expect to see a black hole? — Metaphysician Undercover
