But to claim that knowledge ends at the boundaries of a scientific experiment would only be meaningful if we all lived every moment of every day in a laboratory. — Pantagruel
all of these life lessons are different, and yet they all reveal different aspects of a fundamental set of truths. — Pantagruel
Is that wisdom? Not really. If you live long enough and have an average memory, you see things over and over again. — T Clark
One thing I see more and more as I get older is that everything has happened before — T Clark
The middle-aged mind preserves many of its youthful skills and even develops some new strengths. — Banno
I agree with the sentiment, but I don’t know if even the firmest propagandists of ‘scientism’ would put it that way. It’s more the way that the ‘scientific worldview’ filters through to what everyone thinks is the case. That the universe is mechanical, that life arises by chance, that humans are no different to animals, that reasoning is no different to computation. It shows up in these kinds of underlying sentiments. — Wayfarer
Evolution is JUST A THEORY — Unknown
as people age past middle-age and into deepening maturity, the kinds of things they learn grow beyond the quantifiable knowledge that defines us as working members of society, words, names of things, facts, figures, conventions of politeness, technical skills, and become instead a deeper form of understanding, lessons learned from situations that may unfold over months or years, or may still be unfolding. And because every individual has a unique set of experiences (because that is part of what it means to be an individual) all of these life lessons are different, and yet they all reveal different aspects of a fundamental set of truths. So it becomes a challenge of vocabulary and semantics to translate between the meanings of different perspectives of deeper wisdom. — Pantagruel
More people than just scientists have claimed for millennia "there is no god" so that's not an example of science overstepping its boundaries.When scientists claim there is no god. — emancipate
Scientists study 'the reality of nature' and explain this with precise approximations called "theories" which they test with controlled experiments that compel them to revise their findings. Scientific understanding is deliberately fallible, approximate, defeasible and thereby self-corrective; the results are public, repeatable, measurable and reliable. No doubt it's the shallowest form of understanding there is except for all of the others our species has conjured-up in the last several millennia.When scientists claim they are understanding the nature of reality.
Well, whatever "reality" is, it is also inescapably physical, and any non-physical "understanding" implies an explanation of how the physical is manifest and its function in some greater non-physical scheme of things. Since there are as many "non-physical realities" as there are 'mythologies pantheons religions theologies mysticisms & woo-of-the-gaps pseudo-theories' and yet only one physical (aspect of?) reality which allows for reliable repeatable public results, science opportunistically digs wells in the physical where it's far more likely to find water than in the endless desert of non-physicality. Perhaps the physical is "merely" the tip of the iceberg of reality (à la Gnosticism); that speculative possibility, however, is not denied by scientists and science, in fact, endeavors to discover the limits of the physical, that is, the lapses in physical laws – "the cracks" which are, as a poet sang, "how the light gets in."It would only be right to make assertions like this if reality was merely physical.
Perhaps the physical is "merely" the tip of the iceberg of reality (à la Gnosticism); — 180 Proof
Even when wrong, speculative science (e.g. cosmic steady-state theory) has the distinct advantage of plausibility & fecundity over speculative non/pseudo-science (e.g. synchronicity) which is, as Wolfgang Pauli quipped, not even wrong — 180 Proof
Galilean Relativity, Newtonian Gravity, Maxwell's Demon, Schödinger's Cat, The Copenhagen Interpretation — 180 Proof
So we might as well try to learn all of the lessons that life teaches us. And wherever one experiences the greatest aversion is usually where one has the most to learn. Because there is no need for what is understood to cause an emotional response. — Pantagruel
Non sequitur.And as Kuhn points out, these are not all part of the same paradigm. — Wayfarer
Not at all, my friend. Rather it's the role – adaptivity – of 'evidence-based knowledge-claims' as compared to 'evidence-free belief-claims' in normative judgment.It's the role of science in normative judgement.
My issue, to put it in my own words if you don't mind, is I am committed, with Kantian severity, to demarcating the Scientific & Philosophical discursive practices (re: Spinoza's 2nd & 3rd kinds of knowledge) from pseudo-scientific & pseudo-philosophical fantasies (re: Spinoza's 1st kind of knowledge).Your issue is, I hope you don't mind me saying, you're still completely wedged in the Science V Religion dichotomy.
And as Kuhn points out, these are not all part of the same paradigm.
— Wayfarer
Non sequitur. — 180 Proof
People see the same evidence, but there’s enormous differences in interpretation, in what they say the evidence means. And that is not a matter of science, obviously - otherwise there could be no such divergences of view. — Wayfarer
How on earth are you interpreting 'science' such that practicing it cannot include more than one interpretation of the raw data? — Isaac
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