Scott Mayers wrote:(1) Confirmation IS a 'verification' of a hypothesis.
Well, what I said was:
Earlier I wrote:Theories are not 'confirmed'; the predictions are either verified, or they are not and any complementary mathematical treatment either works or it doesn't.
It is the predictive power of an hypothesis which is confirmed, not the model on which it might be based.
Scott Mayers wrote:(2) While assuming one can posit an explanation of angels, as they can do so by simply saying, "God" for anything, my point is NOT to the shortcut explanations that merely assert something simpler. I disagree to the obscurity of parsimony as a sufficiently sound behavior for this very reason. If one asserts succinctness as a virtue, the ultimate "Occum's Razor" IS precisely, "God".
Yes and no. It is quite true that some simple folk are prepared to accept god as a cause for everything. For all I know it is, but in that case the question simply changes from 'How does the world work?' to 'How does god do it?'
Scott Mayers wrote:Relativity as presently interpreted conflicts with present interpretations of Quantum Mechanics.
This is frequently stated and jumped on by people who wish to argue that phycisists are talking nonsense. The fact is that both are extremely good at predicting behaviour.
Scott Mayers wrote:Yet we keep both thinking that as long as they don't interfere in practice, this is fine. However, this lacks a logical basis when we treat the explanations at present sufficient WITHOUT the burden of requiring a further experiment to go along with an alternate explanation where such an explanation does not go against any present observations.
The point about physics is that is a series of tools that allow us to manipulate our environment. The explanation for why they work is only the subject of physics if it makes predictions that allow us to do that better. If an explanation " does not go against present observations", then it is metaphysics; it makes no difference.
Scott Mayers wrote:It is the extended requirement that is NOT a logical truth but a 'political' one often intended to preserve the integrity of institutions.
You are straying into conspiracy theory here.
Scott Mayers wrote:Einstein, for instance, is a relative 'hero' and is indistinguishable from being a relative "prophet" that religions grant to their past heroes similarly.
Religions tend to argue that their prophets are infallible. No physicist will claim the same for Einstein.
Scott Mayers wrote:As such, institutes prefer that the Scientific method include a conservative 'clause' that places a higher burden of expectation upon others to require proposing novel explanations that could be better.
The conservative 'clause' is simply making use of tools that demonstrably work. Theoretical physics, in part, is the continuing efforts to generate better models
Scott Mayers wrote:It is THIS reason why Aristotle's interpretations were preserved regarding things like gravity, forces, or the Earth-centered theories, not because many people actually couldn't interpret a more rational justification by their contemporary evidence.
Not true. I've already mentioned that Archimedes and Hipparchus used the geocentric model because it was better developed and made better predictions. In addition, Aristotle's model included an explanation for why earth falls and fire rises and for why the heavenly bodies appear to circle the Earth. We now know it is wrong, but in its time, it was fit for purpose.
Scott Mayers wrote:They, like modern science (by most) requires we prove some novel theory in a arrogantly authoritarian system, even where such 'theories' ARE actually better and can be argued with such closure.
So what is your theory, and why is it better?
Scott Mayers wrote:To me, our present institution with the prerequisite of requiring an experiment even to evolve or dislodge a theory is a severe anti-intellectual means.
You are entirely free to develop whatever metaphysical model pleases you, but if you want physicists to start using it, you need to develop a related mathematical treatment that is more accurate, or simpler, than the maths you intend to replace.
Scott Meyers wrote:In the past, when Aristarchus asserted a solar-centered universe, they DID have ALL the evidence required in its day sufficient to 'prove' this.
What they had were points of light in the sky that did pretty much what the geocentric model said they would.
Scott Mayers wrote:It took Galileo to 'prove' it to idiots who can't actually interpret logic that things have uniform acceleration through his experiments that ACTUALLY incidentally support (confirm) it when it was used to specifically determine the force of gravity on Earth. ...OR, which is more likely, the politics had a similar 'clause' to preserve the institutes then present (the Catholic Church) who couldn't risk allowing a logically improved explanation to persist when it threatened their present hero's credibility backed by their institution.
Aristotle's model is logically valid; it just happens to be wrong. It wasn't logic that proved this, it was the enhanced observations made possible by the telescope. But yes, the behaviour of the catholic church was shabby. Ironically, Hans Lippershey's design of the telescope was stolen by a catholic priest who was on the patent board. He took it to the Vatican who promptly handed it to the foremost scientist of the time. He discovered the Galilean moons of Jupiter and the waxing and waning of Venus, proving that the Earth is not the centre of god's creation. He also discovered the mountains on the moon, proving that everything in 'heaven' is not perfect. In gratitude, Galileo was placed under house arrest for the rest of his life and Hans Lippershey was refused a patent on the grounds that everyone now knew what a telescope was.