It ever seems to me that the more closely you look at something - anything - the less it is, or appears to be, what you first thought it was. But there is or can be a distinct functioning - description, understanding - associated with how and at what level you're looking. And changing how you look doesn't change that. Perhaps it is made up of atoms, and thus is mostly profoundly empty space, but it's still a chair, and you still sit in it.My point is that we mostly make up knowledge, then build it up, rather than discovering it. — bogdan9310
My point is that we mostly make up knowledge, — bogdan9310
Sorry, I wasn't clear. Not that you didn't make sense, but at a first cut, it's useful to ask what we're about, where we're going, and why? You wish to put science to the question and make it answer - or test it with your own answer? You can do that. And what I read in your OP I think holds much truth. But I wonder if you know what truth you've encountered? For example, science makes up knowledge and then builds on it (slightly different from yours; do you accept the difference?). But it still counts as knowledge. Why do you suppose that is?So, what part didn't make sense to be more precise? — bogdan9310
Computers are built, right? Science works in the same way, knowledge keeps building up, and you build a structure. And it will make sense to you, and it will work, because that's how structures work. Unless it's a poor one. I'm not saying all science is bad, just that people treat it more like a religion. The problem is the way it's applied. — bogdan9310
I'm not saying all science is bad, just that people treat it more like a religion. — bogdan9310
My point is that we mostly make up knowledge... — bogdan9310
What if you start from the wrong idea? You would be just building a structure, and it will make sense to you because that how structures function. How would you know if you are wrong? — bogdan9310
What is science? — bogdan9310
But what questions does science answer? — bogdan9310
Science only analyzes existing concepts, and there is no scientific research before a concept is created. — bogdan9310
Does science rely on philosophy to exist? — bogdan9310
Science is nothing more than the gradual progress and discoveries based on previous work, and we can describe the source of our current understanding of science as the product of a collective mind of scientists working together, but in different timelines. Albert Einstein did not come up with relativity from scratch, the concept of time was already there. Isaac Newton based his absolute space and time theory on top of Johannes Kepler’s work, and so on.
My point is that we mostly make up knowledge, then build it up, rather than discovering it. — bogdan9310
What if you start from the wrong idea? You would be just building a structure, and it will make sense to you because that how structures function. How would you know if you are wrong? — bogdan9310
Science is generally good, but people treat it as a religion nowadays — bogdan9310
But science isn't "just built up." Science proceeds by tearing down what's proven wrong, to rebuild what's right. It's a method of doubt, as opposed - I suspect, to your method of faith — karl stone
An example is the idea, the presupposition, that every event has a cause (which apparently was Kant's presupposition, and was not held by Newton or by modern science). — tim wood
I don't want to take down science, and I am an atheist. Just pointing out some of its obvious flaws. People treat science like a religion nowadays, and use it in arguments to back them up, even if they don't know why. — bogdan9310
The scientifically correct position on the God hypothesis is agnosticism, not atheism. — karl stone
It ever seems to me that the more closely you look at something - anything - the less it is, or appears to be, what you first thought it was. — tim wood
but that is circular reasoning resoning. It is true that science is useful but if you going to say it's the more useful without a comparison it creates a feed back loop. — hachit
yes more useful is subjective base on the goal. — hachit
We have to remember it was not science that gave us gunpowder and the printing press that was alchemy. It was also not modern science that gave us modern medicine that was christianity — hachit
If the goal of science is to find the truth, how can it without excepting all the parts. — hachit
Secondly we don't know if magic is good or not because as science became more popular it led to more discoverys wich made it more popular leading to more research in it wich made it more discoverys. It then became a run away sinario. It became popular because of the cristians than people cut its ties to christianity. Again it is not using all the parts. — hachit
If we are taking about empirical science then I think the scientifically correct position on God is atheism. God is not part of any scientific theory of the universe, so it doesn't exist. — Echarmion
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