Challenge accepted :PI cannot think of anyone who has put forth a scientific hypothesis that mermaids don't exist. — noAxioms
Rather, B is an instruction to scientists to exclude mermaids from consideration in their foreseeable scientific endeavours. Moreover, since B cannot be inferred on the basis of finite evidence, B ISN'T an inference, rather, B represents our pragmatically determined science-policy concerning the course of our future investigations on the basis of our finite experience of the past. — sime
It is precisely for this reason that I don't believe in any universal laws of nature in the sense of them describing nature "in itself". Rather, any purported "universal laws of nature" are merely social imperatives that describe how scientists out to frame falsifiable hypotheses that in being falsifiable are necessarily finite and non-universal. — sime
The outcomes fail to reject the null hypothesis ("mermaids are mythical") and in so doing begin to accumulate a sense of probability weight from quite a few samples taken that fail to demonstrate mermaids are not mythical.
How can we describe the confidence after a string of those test outcomes, and how that confidence-probability estimate changes with additional test results? — AngleWyrm
I cannot think of anyone who has put forth a scientific hypothesis that mermaids don't exist. You have a link to such a proposal? — noAxioms
I have a hunch that comes from hypothesis testing and the practice of rejecting a null hypothesis. That isn't to say the process is wrong, merely that it's poorly expressed to students who then take it as a challenge to present that which cannot be argued against. — AngleWyrm
Let's say we have an opaque bag of marbles. All are the same shape and size. There are of two possible shades - white and black. We reach in without looking and pull out a marble. It's white. We put the marble back in the bag and shake it up. Then we choose another marble. It's white too.
How many marbles do we have to pull out before we can say there are no black marbles in the bag. What if there are three marbles in the bag? What if there are a billion? What if we don't know how many marbles are in the bag? — T Clark
There's been rather a lot of what passes for science these days doing the job of just that -- passing as science. — AngleWyrm
Like what? — darthbarracuda
As another example, roll two dice and look for a sum of thirteen. We know beforehand that result isn't possible, but can we demonstrate through a series of trials how the unlikeliness of the outcome increases over the series of tests? — AngleWyrm
That being said, there is no one single definition of science, and the only method that can be applied to all sciences is "whatever works". Anything goes. And if this includes pie in the sky speculation then so be it. Why do people care so much about being wrong? — darthbarracuda
As another example, roll two dice and look for a sum of thirteen. We know beforehand that result isn't possible, but can we demonstrate through a series of trials how the unlikeliness of the outcome increases over the series of tests? — AngleWyrm
...roll two dice and look for a sum of thirteen. We know beforehand that result isn't possible, but can we demonstrate through a series of trials how the unlikeliness of the outcome increases over the series of tests? — AngleWyrm
Now I'm lost. The probability of rolling two dice with a maximum number of pips on any face of six and getting a total greater than 12 is 0, no matter how many times you roll the dice. — T Clark
It is this shift from a starting position of "let's see what happens" to "I'm reasonably certain of the outcome of this test," that represents a variable we can call confidence. We see it happen, we make those judgements, so we should be able to measure it. — AngleWyrm
The last sentence indicates that the marbles are being placed back in the bag after each pull; the technical name for that is sampling with replacement, which is identical to rolling a die or spinning a roulette wheel. The alternative is sampling without replacement which is what happens when drawing cards from a deck, lottery balls, and names from a hat.I know there are 1,000 marbles in the bag. In reality there are 999 white marbles and one black one, but I don't know that. I start pulling out marbles. I pull out 1,000, all white. — T Clark
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