A scientific theory must be falsifiable or it becomes a matter of "anything goes" and although we'd have confirmation of a theory it would be impossible to know if we're wrong. — TheMadFool
I don't feel is quite correct. First, it must be shown that between two people, A, and B, both must share the memory of A, even though B was never in the situation in which A formed that memory.The only way a theory of reincarnation based on memories can be proven wrong is if the absence of past life memories is inconsistent with reincarnation but that isn't the case. — TheMadFool
If something is not falsifiable, it is impossible to have confirmation of it as a theory. — Philosophim
Ergo, reincarnation theories predicated on memories of past lives are unfalsifiable — TheMadFool
Science deals in what can be applied to reality. If you cannot find a way to apply it to reality, it has no chance of being an identifiable thing in reality with clear rules and definitions of what it is. Do you understand what I'm trying to say? — Philosophim
The leg is a leg before the lamb dies; and it remains a leg after the lamb dies. Ergo, it survives death.A leg of a lamb, most definitely, doesn't survive death - it decays or, if consumed, is digested, a process that destroys the leg. — TheMadFool
Please read up on the scientific method. — TheMadFool
The leg is a leg before the lamb dies; and it remains a leg after the lamb dies. Ergo, it survives death.
SO it seems you have more in mind when you talk about surviving death. So what is it? There's more to the definition of soul; there's something about essence, or spirit, or life, that differentiates it form a leg of lamb. — Banno
if you could show that the claims were false, or that the child was coached, or that the evidence was planted, then you falsify the claims — Wayfarer
If something is not falsifiable, it is impossible to have confirmation of it as a theory. — Philosophim
Putrefecation
Digestion — TheMadFool
Purification is occasionally seen as the natural process of the body returning to the Earth, and henc eof the soul returning to the cosmos.
Digestion - I suppose no one reads Stranger in a Strange Land anymore, but ritual cnibalism s not uncommon, even amongst Christians.
SO, where are we in regard to finding a coherent notion of Soul? — Banno
I don't think showing Stevenson faked his data serves to falsify the theory of reincarnation; all that we can do with it is show his study is unreliable — TheMadFool
Putrefaction is occasionally seen as the natural process of the body returning to the Earth, and henc eof the soul returning to the cosmos. — Banno
... — TheMadFool
No, you didn't.I gave you the generally accepted meaning of "soul" .... — TheMadFool
You entirely left out the "spiritual or immaterial" part. — Banno
He didn't present a theory of reincarnation; he investigated children who claimed to remember previous lives. — Wayfarer
What I know about the scientific method is that a hypothesis is formulated and based on it certain predictions are made. If and when these predictions are observed, the hypothesis is confirmed. In case the predictions are not observed, the hypothesis is refuted. — TheMadFool
A scientific theory must be falsifiable or it becomes a matter of "anything goes" and although we'd have confirmation of a theory it would be impossible to know if we're wrong. — TheMadFool
1. Formulate Hypothesis H
2. If H (is true) then predictions X, Y, Z
3. If predictions X, Y, Z are observed then H is confirmed — TheMadFool
Your above statement matches to what a non-falsifiable statement is. It is not about a failure to observe what we want that makes it falsifiable. It is if we have a clear statement of what would make it false, and cannot meet that standard in our observation.Falsifiability of H is possible only if the failure to observe predictions X, Y, Z implies that H is false — TheMadFool
So when you mean there is a claim to reincarnation, as in a hypothesis, what were the falsifiables of that claim? — Philosophim
In Sri Lanka, a toddler one day overheard her mother mentioning the name of an obscure town (“Kataragama”) that the girl had never been to. The girl informed the mother that she drowned there when her “dumb” (mentally challenged) brother pushed her in the river, that she had a bald father named “Herath” who sold flowers in a market near the Buddhist stupa, that she lived in a house that had a glass window in the roof (a skylight), dogs in the backyard that were tied up and fed meat, that the house was next door to a big Hindu temple, outside of which people smashed coconuts on the ground.
Stevenson was able to confirm that there was, indeed, a flower vendor in Kataragama who ran a stall near the Buddhist stupa whose two-year-old daughter had drowned in the river while the girl played with her mentally challenged brother. The man lived in a house where the neighbors threw meat to dogs tied up in their backyard, and it was adjacent to the main temple where devotees practiced a religious ritual of smashing coconuts on the ground.
The little girl did get a few items wrong, however. For instance, the dead girl’s dad wasn’t bald (but her grandfather and uncle were) and his name wasn’t “Herath”—that was the name, rather, of the dead girl’s cousin. Otherwise, 27 of the 30 idiosyncratic, verifiable statements she made panned out. The two families never met, nor did they have any friends, coworkers, or other acquaintances in common, so if you take it all at face value, the details couldn’t have been acquired in any obvious way.
In any case, Stevenson went doggedly on with his research, ultimately assembling quite a few thousand such cases. But in this matter, no matter what evidence, a lot of people will simply refuse to accept that such a thing as past life memories could occur, and that there must be another explanation — Wayfarer
Were there falsifiables in his research? That is truly all that matters if we are going to claim he had hypothesis. — Philosophim
Science is not about confirming your biases. It is finding that even after you try to disprove your bases by coming up with alternative explanations and tests, that only one thing remains "true". I think that is what some people misunderstand about science. You are trying to disprove your hypothesis to get to a conclusion, not prove your hypothesis. — Philosophim
If you meet the definitions of science, you are doing science. — Philosophim
He would record the interviews, then try and validate what the children said by investigating their stories. How is that not 'empirical'? — Wayfarer
Such duplicity! Not less than a few days ago, in a post to me, you were discarding the whole of neuroscience because it's results could not be exactly replicated under precise laboratory conditions with control groups and proper statistical analysis. — Isaac
What I was arguing about then was that you couldn't understand the faculty of reason by analysing neurological data. — Wayfarer
By the way, do you have any knowledge of or views on Hacker and Bennett's book, Philosophical Foundation of Neuroscience? It seems to me that it suggests the kinds of criticisms that I was making in that other, entirely unrelated thread. — Wayfarer
I'm aware of the fact that you presented other reasons why you think neuroscience cannot speak about the faculty of reason (which I also disagreed with), but that doesn't detract from the fact that you tried to discredit their results using the replication crisis. That, in itself, is duplicitous if you then ask people to take conclusions seriously from an even less rigorous source. — Isaac
It's a completely different issue. 'The nature of reason' is a philosophical question par excellence. I dispute that it will ever be subject to empirical analysis, for the Kantian reason that without reason there can be no empirical method. The faculty of reason is not something you're ever going to see in data, because it is of its nature abstract, and because you can only ever find it by using it. — Wayfarer
We associate certain areas of the brain with certain types of mental activity because they consistently correlate - the subject reports some type of activity, or is placed in some recognised situation and the same area consistently registers. — Isaac
The drawing of such implications from fMRI studies, especially psychological or ethical implications, is precisely where many major issues of replicability have been found in the ‘replication crisis’. — Wayfarer
The review I linked to draws on a large study of fmri data and raises fundamental questions about its accuracy and replicability in many respects. — Wayfarer
That's not how a hypothesis works. Here is the definition of falsifiability. — Philosophim
1. An alien spaceship crashed in Roswell New Mexico.
2. A giant white gorilla lives in the Himalayan mountains.
3. Loch Ness contains a giant reptile.
In each case, if the statement happens to be wrong, all you will ever find is an absence of evidence --- No spaceship parts. No gorilla tracks in the Himalayas. Nothing but small fish in the Loch. — Philosophim
It is not about a failure to observe what we want that makes it falsifiable. It is if we have a clear statement of what would make it false, and cannot meet that standard in our observation. — Philosophim
Well, are you saying the natural deduction rules contraposition and modus tollens are wrong? :chin: — TheMadFool
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