thedoc wrote:Since you coined the term "unconventional science" you define it, no-one else used that term till you invented it. IC did not come up with the term.
That's true: but I did say "conventional sciences."
But don't worry. I had something specific in mind when I wrote that. I was thinking of those the verificationists tend to revere, such as physics, chemistry and, though they have somewhat less confidence in it, biology. Below those are the
aspiring "sciences," such as psychology, anthropology, sociology, political 'science,' linguistics, history, cultural studies, and so on down...all disciplines whose pedigree is regarded as less purely "scientific" than the Big Three.
Good cartoon for this: https://xkcd.com/435/
Now, where cosmology fits on that scale is an open question. Sometimes it's about physics, sometimes about theories of history, and sometimes about hopeful guesses based on quasi-mathematical but non-empirical models. It is sometimes a kind of science, but sometimes a kind of fervent, ideology-driven speculation. In the case of cosmology, it takes some thoughtful discernment to separate the wheat from the chaff: not all that gets said under that umbrella is equally "scientific."
Even more importantly, we do not have any reason to suppose (or obviously, any "scientific proof") that the conventional sciences
exhaust the world of The Real...and good reasons to suppose that perhaps they do not. After all, sciences are not things that pre-exist human beings, or even, in their present incarnation, pre-exist the last century; they are fairly recent, invented categories into which we slot certain kinds of facts that we glean by limiting ourselves to certain kinds of methods. They aren't "out there" waiting to be discovered, like the Moon: the conventional categories are a sort of "grammar" we use to keep our knowledge neat for our own purposes. But biology bleeds into physics and chemistry, science itself owes a great deal to psychology, among other things. The borders are permeable; and none of the sciences contains, on its own, a complete and satisfying description of the world as we know it...which is why we have a bunch of them, and not one.