Of course it has. Astrology is nonsense. — Xtrix
If you go by academia, the Western mind is (extreme) materialism manifest and doesn't tolerate the preternatural, reflexively dumping such ideas in the trash can. — Agent Smith
The history of Science is a history of ideas that challenged orthodoxy. — yebiga
Would you say that this fact is problematic? — spirit-salamander
How people say they will react is usually quite different from how they would react. Generally speaking if someone’s worldview (axis mundi/weltanshauung) is X it will remain X even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. The reason being the human mind can only become so stressed. — I like sushi
There must be a very good reason why ideas like astrology didn't make the cut so to speak - academics reject them outright as rubbish. — Agent Smith
Paul Feyerabend once played the devil's advocate and defended astrology, and he saw that the arguments against the very ancient tradition of astrology were exceedingly weak. — spirit-salamander
Many scientists took their view for granted and made fun of other views — spirit-salamander
the arguments against the very ancient tradition of astrology were exceedingly weak. — spirit-salamander
Science is convincing because the magic works. Astrology is unconvincing because the magic does not work. — unenlightened
the magic does not work. — unenlightened
Science is convincing because the magic works. — unenlightened
There's nothing wrong with having some fun. — Olivier5
Astrology is unconvincing because the magic does not work. — unenlightened
Sure, but still there is an ideal of the scientist. A standard to which all scientists want and should adhere. Love of truth and objectivity, sobriety, modesty, contempt for money and fame, apoliticalness, being factually nuanced and fair, patience, more head-driven than emotion-driven, frankness and honesty, and much more are part of the ideal. Also very important is fearlessness. — spirit-salamander
Would you say then that something cannot be valid concerning the ontological interpretations of Newton's formulas? Because the principle of the sufficient ground must still be accepted? — spirit-salamander
Maybe it's not magic: — spirit-salamander
So my thesis is that we know very little about the interactions between the sun and the many layers of the earth's atmosphere. — spirit-salamander
That other factors are mainly responsible for climate change I can't show to your satisfaction yet, unfortunately, — spirit-salamander
Skeptical about the fact that humans alone really control the climate and can change it through CO2 emissions or reduction. It is probably hubris to believe that we are changing the climate, — spirit-salamander
However, to the people who disagree that global warming is a threat, that climate change isn't real, I would like to have a polite and interesting discussion about why you feel the way you do.
That is a claim you can test or not, it is not an argument. — unenlightened
I hate to be picky, but there is no demonstration of anything there — unenlightened
There's nothing wrong with having some fun. — Olivier5
I had rather imagined mean bullying, tasteless scorn wrapped in jokes. — spirit-salamander
And your thesis is wrong. — Xtrix
I have no interest in taking time to read articles you Google (which don’t seem to support your position at all). — Xtrix
I have no interest in taking time to read articles you Google (which don’t seem to support your position at all). — Xtrix
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.