In the paradigm cases that have been brought up - radio waves, wind, and germs - there is a clear correlation in theory and observation between cause and effect. — Wayfarer
The cause of the associated phenomena is understood clearly and can be explained directly. — Wayfarer
But the statement that 'some unknown form of matter causes the discrepancy that is observed in the motion of galaxies' clearly is a metaphysical statement, because it posits the existence of some form of matter that can't even be detected by current physics, hence is beyond or above, 'meta', current physics. — Wayfarer
‘Abductive reasoning (also called abduction,[1] abductive inference,[1] or retroduction[2]) is a form of logical inference which starts with an observation or set of observations and then seeks to find the simplest and most likely explanation for the observations. This process, unlike deductive reasoning, yields a plausible conclusion but does not positively verify it.’
I believe the germ theory of disease has been verified. You don’t? — Wayfarer
If ‘dark matter’ is real, it means that either our notion of what constitutes ‘matter’ is radically insufficient’, or alternatively, that our understanding of current physics is. How is this *not* a metaphysical issue? — Wayfarer
All working physicists informally appeal to "directness" whenever they make an inference, even though Physics possess no theory of directness. For otherwise a physicist could not claim to learn anything from an experiment, nor for that matter could he find the sentences of physics intelligible. — sime
It looks like the trial against Stone is rigged. The jury foreman is an anti-Trump democratic candidate and Russia truther. — NOS4A2
I don't know a lot of physics, I studied it formally up to high school level, and I've read quite a few books on physics, but that was never stated as part of physics. It might have been stated because of 'philosophical reflections on the nature of physics' but it's not something taught in physics per se. — Wayfarer
Direct observation = observing directly. — Wayfarer
Observing that movement of masses of air causes trees to bend, that germs cause disease, that radio waves can be detected with the appropriate instruments. Abductive inference = reasoning from effect to cause i.e. 'because this happened, then the cause must be X'. But in this case, 'X' stands for something that not only hasn't been observed, but may possibly never be observable in principle. — Wayfarer
You're confusing two kinds of explanation here. Of course one can question the nature of observation itself - that is the task of philosophical analysis. — Wayfarer
But when it comes to dark matter, it's proposing a natural explanation which consists of some kind of 'matter' the likes of which is completely unknown, to explain observational anomalies in cosmology. — Wayfarer
The key point, and where you entered the argument, is that nothing corresponding to dark matter has been directly observed, despite large and elaborate experimental apparatus having been set up for that purpose. — Wayfarer
We might agree or disagree on what it means, but the absence of direct observation is not a matter of opinion. — Wayfarer
Dark matter is used to explain why the motion of galaxies varies from what is predicted. But it's possible there's something wrong with the prediction — Wayfarer
I wasn't aware that it had been criticised a lot. I'm aware of one or two points of dispute, but I always thought it was quite well regarded. Who are the main critics you're thinking of? — Isaac
Jared Diamond "Guns, Germs and Steel", I think pretty much answers your question. It's well referenced and there's lots of research avenues to go off if you disagree with his conclusions. — Isaac
Science doesn’t know what ‘dark energy’ (or dark matter) are, so how can they say they’re physical, when they’re not even described by current physics? — Wayfarer
The entire infinite space with infinite matter, the whole system is a closed system. — god must be atheist
Why do civilizations stagnate? — Jacob-B
Technologically, China was ahead of Europe until the 16th century and in some ways was well-positioned to forge ahead. Yet id did not happen. The ever warring and fragmented countries of Europe stole the march and the unified mighty Han empire. What was the reason for such historical evolution? Has it to do with inward-looking nature Confucian world outlook? — Jacob-B
For instance, why were there a Chinese Marco Polo Chinese travellers to Europe before the time that the Europeans pushed open the gates of China? And why didn't the Chinese embark on exploration similar to that of the European navigators? — Jacob-B
And the most intriguing question: Had European imperialism not impacted on China would China had progressed technologically in the same way as Europe did? The same question could be asked about say the Aztecs or Incas. Would they ever progress beyond the level they were when ‘discovered’ by the European power? — Jacob-B
No because that suggests that Trump wasn't voted into office. — Hanover
I'd argue on the other hand that if the Democrats wish to win, they need to move back to the center, instead of continuing to drift left because that shift is reactionary to Trump and not the result of a sudden desire by middle America to emulate European liberalism. — Hanover
This is it? This is the level of debate? — Brett
If Kant views ethics as a logical problem,
and if machines are made to solve logical problems,
then should machines be able to solve ethical problems as logical problems? — logos
The Goal is to write a book using these available Actions: write based off true life, write based off Lord Of The Rings, or write based off Nordic folklore. Using the categorical_imperative function, what would the return be on each action and why? — logos
By the way, the notion that non-theist is the same as "atheist" is so self-serving and gratuitous to the atheistic perspective...I cringe at having to dispute it. I am, most assuredly, a non-theist. BUT I AM NOT AN ATHEIST. — Frank Apisa
Positioning on the question is broad...running from "There is a God" to "There are no gods." There are nuances and subtleties that come into play. — Frank Apisa
Yeah, ETIs probably went "dark and silent" many many millennia ago just like Earth is due to transitioning from broadcast radio to fiber optic transmission barely a century after Bell, Edison & Marconi. (Assuming they started with EM broadcasting and then improved their IT like we are doing now.)
Anyway, I address this very point in my wall-of-text post #(V) copy & pasted below. — 180 Proof
The problem with these arguments is that presume a "good" to begin with. — IvoryBlackBishop
. ONLY atheists seem to think that there is no room for the distance between opinions on "There is a God" to "There are no gods." — Frank Apisa
Your classification is confusing. Besides, I'm not interested because you include beliefs. Beliefs are subjective. I'm interested in propositions. What do you call a person who neither claims nor denies that God exists? I don't see it on your list. But it's a very relevant concept since it was coined by Th. Huxley.
My classification is simpler:
They claim that God exists = theists
Non-theists:
Deny that God exists =atheists
Neither deny nor affirm= agnostics — David Mo
God, you’re so predictable, every one of you. — Brett
I can’t remember when my doubts began or what started them. I do remember beginning to see a lot of reports appearing with very loose language, claims that began with words like “Its possible”, or figures “suggest”. — Brett
I also began reading about scientists who were excommunicated because they disputed uncertainties surrounding climate sensitivity to increased greenhouse gas concentrations, or had accused the IPCC process of gross politicization and scientists of succumbing to “group-think” and “herd instinct”, or who claimed that climate models and popular surface temperature data sets overstated the changes in the real atmosphere and that actual changes were not alarming. — Brett
Then I saw large amounts of money entering the picture, generalisations made about percentages, averages, of heating over long periods and historical figures on temperatures being altered. So many of the predictions made never happened and the horror stories that began to appear became standard forecasts, even though they were based on a worst-case scenario and unlikely to happen. — Brett
No, my only point was the Dems were waffling, more concerned with messaging and optics than justice. The fact they use focus groups to see which worked better is evidence of this. In other words, the accused Trump of crimes and then changed their minds upon realizing it wouldn’t work. It’s all a show; it’s all Democrat dinner-theater. — NOS4A2
If I wanted to steal a bunch of items but didn't would you try to convict me for theft? — NOS4A2
That would be assuming corrupt intent without evidence. That's a dangerous and unjust game to play, especially when there is no such announcement nor any investigation. — NOS4A2
I was defending Trump’s efforts to get Mexico to pay for it. — NOS4A2
I’m just saying that Mexico is paying for American border security. You can thank Trump for that. — NOS4A2
To you “people” means all Trump’s opponents. Play that game all you want. — NOS4A2
Mexico is paying for it. — NOS4A2
I said “people who would rather not think about politics”. You said “all Trump supporters”. Not even close. — NOS4A2
Sure it does. The actions by the Mexican governments are directly contributing to lower illegal immigration over the border, saving American’s money at great expense to the Mexican government. — NOS4A2
Hopefully you do too. Arguing that building a wall doesn’t work because there are a lot of illegals overstaying visas is absurd because a wall is not intended to stop or hinder the flow of illegals overstaying visas. — NOS4A2
Those two arguments are not even analogous. — NOS4A2
Mexico is doing quite a bit along the border. They recently sent 15,000 troops there to slow northern migration at great expense. Sure they aren’t handing over cash for a wall, but they are now doing their part where they weren’t before. It’s working. So it turns out to be a great policy. — NOS4A2
The wall is to hinder the ones who hop the border, not the ones who overstay their visas. — NOS4A2
That’s the problem, I think, is Trump’s expressions strikes fear into people who would rather not think about politics, but would much rather be lulled by glittering generalities and euphemism. People are thinking about politics now, some for the first time in their lives. — NOS4A2
Not just the Nordic welfare system, but welfare states in general. I’m thinking also Canada, Japan, Australia, the UK. — NOS4A2
hat would then entail that some kind of socialism should dominate in an open democracy, whether under that name or not, since the thing that most people want is the easement of their material suffering, — Pfhorrest
Is there any correlation between welfare states and monarchies? The universal support for such policies could be explained by a sense of unity brought about by monarchies. — NOS4A2
I love how only my statements receive your criticism while everyone else's are pushed aside and covered for. — NOS4A2
You waste your great writing in the service of tyranny and injustice — NOS4A2
Why? P, P -> Q | Q is just right because it follow from some rules. But these rules can change overnight, can they? — Pippen
So MP could be true today but false tomorrow. Imagine - overnight - our world becomes weird in the way that it becomes impossible to construct any implication P -> Q (~P v Q). I know it's hard to imagine, but I can just write it down and say: so be it from henceforward. — Pippen
I'm wondering then, if other sentient species experience similar emotions and have the capacity to empathise, show compassion, possess theory of mind etc... why do so many people place our species on a pedestal? — Bella Lack
And if you don't like that neither then tell me, is consciousness a type of feeling at all, and if not, then what in the world is it? — Zelebg