Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics: Science or philosophy? Our health and welfare depends on far more than good predictions. But, all the same, the number of practitioners, or the status of a discipline, doesn't specify what philosophy is. The same holds for science. This is why I mentioned philosophy -- philosophy is still philosophy even if it's not the most popular practice in the world. — Moliere
Of course it does, but that's neither the claim nor the issue. The fact is philosophy can't do dentistry. So it matters if we have science or not. And that costs money and requires the institutions I have mentioned.
Insofar that you grant my first premise -- that science is what scientists do -- then I'd say you are in error when you state that science has nothing to do with an interest in nature. My position follows easily enough from this. At that point it's just a matter of reading the history of science -- which surely precedes the enlightenment.
It's noteworthy to say that an interest in nature is not the defining feature of science. Pagans also have an interest in nature, but pagan rites are religious and not scientific.
Even so it is not predictive power alone that makes science what it is. — Moliere
We're repeating ourselves. Guys in garages can't do science (unless there exists institutions of science), for the reasons I noted - without archives of knowledge, standards, peer review, publication and funding to keep all this afloat, there is no science, just hobbyist engaged in trial and error on desultory matters that happen to interest them.
I'm not so sure. It sounds to me that you would just call the cancer-curing oracle science, if it happened to make good predictions.
And, I don't share your rosy view of science. It's fun and interesting, but I'm not about to give it three cheers. — Moliere
Nope, the premise is there is no methodological naturalism at work. It's an oracle who gets supernatural information from God or Cthulu or the ectoplasmic continuum or whatever, outside of any possible verification or any input from methodological naturalism.
Now, would you go to that guy if he was better at predicting what would cure cancer, if you had cancer? You'd be a fool not to. Saying that is science is just self-serving definition.
Nor is this too far fetched. Like I say Big Data mining may result in us discerning correlations without causation that result in better predictions than methodological naturalism. If so, we'd be fools not to use Big Data even is we don't understand why.
If Big Data determined that doing heart surgery on the same day the Japanese yen varied in value more than 1% resulted in less lethality, and we found that correlation over and over again, we'd be fools not to schedule heart surgery on those days, even if there is no causal explanation. We probably assume a causal nexus but if Big Data kept providing such powerful predictive outcomes, we probably ultimately wouldn't care and the whole notion of causality would dwindle.
I doubt that will happen since I'm a modern man who lives in this dispensation of the Enlightenment. But it wouldn't utterly floor me if it did happen.