Thump bahman with this...
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... SjDNeMaRoX
IC!
What makes the pronouncements of a dictionary "accurate"?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmActually, I very much do. And I accept that even the pronouncements of specialist dictionaries are not guaranteed to be inerrant, even if they are possibly (though not always) more accurate than those found in dictionaries aimed at the general public.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pm ...you clearly don't appreciate that even the most specialised definitions are decided in the same flawed way you condemn popular dictionaries for.
Could you show me your reasoning that led you to that suggestion?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmYour theory is that if we "need" something, then it's bound to exist?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pmWell, if "we do need more specialized definitions for ALL ideologies", that would be consistent with there being dictionaries of such definitions.![]()
I'm not one to criticise typos, but it's Goodstein and Goodstein. A philosophy forum doesn't require Harvard referencing, but at least get the names right and provide a link.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 17, 2024 7:05 pmGoldstein and Goldstein summarize it quite nicely:Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pmSo what does that {the scientific method} method involve?
So in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmI could expand that. In the ideal, the scientific method is pattern of procedure, beginning with an intuition that leads to a hypothesis...Goodstein x2 wrote: "Bacon's scientific methodology can be summarized as follows: 1. The scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations; 2. these observations lead infallibly to correct generalizations or axioms; and 3. the test of a correct axiom is that it leads to new discoveries."
The exact same 'thing', which makes the uncovering, and thus knowing, of the actual and irrefutable Truth of 'things' possible, as well.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pmWhat makes the pronouncements of a dictionary "accurate"?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmActually, I very much do. And I accept that even the pronouncements of specialist dictionaries are not guaranteed to be inerrant, even if they are possibly (though not always) more accurate than those found in dictionaries aimed at the general public.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pm ...you clearly don't appreciate that even the most specialised definitions are decided in the same flawed way you condemn popular dictionaries for.
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pmCould you show me your reasoning that led you to that suggestion?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmYour theory is that if we "need" something, then it's bound to exist?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pmWell, if "we do need more specialized definitions for ALL ideologies", that would be consistent with there being dictionaries of such definitions.![]()
I'm not one to criticise typos, but it's Goodstein and Goodstein. A philosophy forum doesn't require Harvard referencing, but at least get the names right and provide a link.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 17, 2024 7:05 pmGoldstein and Goldstein summarize it quite nicely:Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pmSo what does that {the scientific method} method involve?So in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmI could expand that. In the ideal, the scientific method is pattern of procedure, beginning with an intuition that leads to a hypothesis...Goodstein x2 wrote: "Bacon's scientific methodology can be summarized as follows: 1. The scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations; 2. these observations lead infallibly to correct generalizations or axioms; and 3. the test of a correct axiom is that it leads to new discoveries."
Still irrelevant. There is literally an infinite number of wrong opinions about what 2+2 is...and all but one is wrong. So what's the point?
As above, the number of possible wrong answers is utterly irrelevant to the question of the existence of a right answer.Yes, but how could they justify their belief given the fact that there are more than 4000 religions?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm But you missed the meaning of what I said. Many religious explanations of morals -- even those that I would say are factually untrue -- can make a rational account of their view: meaning that IF what they believed were true, then certain moral axioms would rationally follow.
But we do have evidence. However, you missed the point again.Without a piece of evidence,Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm Subjectivism lacks this potential entirely. It cannot be made rational, even on its own terms; and that puts it behind all these various "religions" that can do that.
I don't think that there is such a thing as strong evidence.[/quote]Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmThat's certainly untrue. I have abundant evidence for Him. And I'll be happy to supply to you anything I can that you will accept as evidence.You are also subjectivist given the fact that you only believe in God and don't have any evidence for Him.
Let's say that's so. It changes nothing about the question of the existence of a right answer. All it tells us is there are wrong ones.Spiritual beings are very powerful and they can cheat us blind.
"...that would convince me," you ask? I couldn't possibly speak for you. Let me ask you, instead: what evidence would you allow to convince you?So tell me what kind of evidence you have that could convince me.
Yes, I know. And you, yourself pointed out that so long as that is so, we're going to be speaking past one another, without any chance of understanding or arriving at a proper conclusion. And you were right: we're not capable of it, so long as you have that definition.I don't agree with your definition of subjective.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm But the original problem persists: we are not agreed on the defintion of "subjective." On a proper definition, I'm not at all a "subjectivist." But on yours, which I find both inconsistent and implausible, you might wrongly suppose I was merely campaigining for some sort of "subjectivity."
Big topic, but let's keep it as simple as we can, for present purposes: a dictionary is "accurate" when it captures the most relevant facts about the thing it is defining with the greatest precision. In so doing, it should disambiguate the maximum number of simliar cases, of course, and eliminate all similar but not same items. It should provide the key details that distinguish the defined from everything else, particularly things likely to be confused with the defined.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pmWhat makes the pronouncements of a dictionary "accurate"?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pmActually, I very much do. And I accept that even the pronouncements of specialist dictionaries are not guaranteed to be inerrant, even if they are possibly (though not always) more accurate than those found in dictionaries aimed at the general public.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pm ...you clearly don't appreciate that even the most specialised definitions are decided in the same flawed way you condemn popular dictionaries for.
You're correct. My mistake. I apologize. But you found the site, so that's good. In any case, I was not using them as special authorities, but justas a short, quick starting point, and followed up their quick definition with an expansion of my own that was better, as you can see.I'm not one to criticise typos, but it's Goodstein and Goodstein.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 17, 2024 7:05 pmGoldstein and Goldstein summarize it quite nicely:Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 1:29 pmSo what does that {the scientific method} method involve?
The problem, as Postmodernist critics have ably shown, is that scientific neutrality is an ideal that nobody can meet. And in science, as Polanyi has pointed out, we have to begin with an intution -- the scientist observes a phenomenon, and then he hypothesizes, and so on...So in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"
The point is, you think, and sometimes even believe, you have and/or know the right answers, and know the truth, just like others do here. And, obviously, yours alone cannot be actually True and Right "immanuel can".Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amStill irrelevant. There is literally an infinite number of wrong opinions about what 2+2 is...and all but one is wrong. So what's the point?
But you claiming that you have and/or know the 'right one' here is continually being countered and refuted by your own expressed musings.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amAs above, the number of possible wrong answers is utterly irrelevant to the question of the existence of a right answer.Yes, but how could they justify their belief given the fact that there are more than 4000 religions?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm But you missed the meaning of what I said. Many religious explanations of morals -- even those that I would say are factually untrue -- can make a rational account of their view: meaning that IF what they believed were true, then certain moral axioms would rationally follow.
Like the Truly irrational belief that God is male gendered is not just Wrong but also just had to be 'bound to be Wrong' anyway.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amBut we do have evidence. However, you missed the point again.Without a piece of evidence,Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm Subjectivism lacks this potential entirely. It cannot be made rational, even on its own terms; and that puts it behind all these various "religions" that can do that.
A belief that is not rational on its own terms is bound to be wrong,
Just exactly like the belief that God is a 'he' could never ever even be a possibility of being Right.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 am regardless of whether or not it has evidence, or whether or not there are other opinions. That's becuase it isn't even possibly right. At least the other answers are possibly right, because rational.
On what do you base that conclusion?[/quote]Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amI don't think that there is such a thing as strong evidence.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmThat's certainly untrue. I have abundant evidence for Him. And I'll be happy to supply to you anything I can that you will accept as evidence.You are also subjectivist given the fact that you only believe in God and don't have any evidence for Him.
you could not be more Right and Correct here "immanuel can".Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amLet's say that's so. It changes nothing about the question of the existence of a right answer. All it tells us is there are wrong ones.Spiritual beings are very powerful and they can cheat us blind.
Conversely, what 'evidence' would 'you, "immanuel can", allow' to convince you that God does not exist or is not a 'Him'?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 am"...that would convince me," you ask? I couldn't possibly speak for you. Let me ask you, instead: what evidence would you allow to convince you?So tell me what kind of evidence you have that could convince me.
So, as I have been saying and pointing out, continually throughout this forum, whilst human beings remained 'the way' that they are, and were, showing 'us' here, then 'they' could not evolve out and/or up to the next stage, or level, from which 'we' are already at.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amYes, I know. And you, yourself pointed out that so long as that is so, we're going to be speaking past one another, without any chance of understanding or arriving at a proper conclusion. And you were right: we're not capable of it, so long as you have that definition.I don't agree with your definition of subjective.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm But the original problem persists: we are not agreed on the defintion of "subjective." On a proper definition, I'm not at all a "subjectivist." But on yours, which I find both inconsistent and implausible, you might wrongly suppose I was merely campaigining for some sort of "subjectivity."
But you very clearly do not seem to appreciate that a dictionaries definitions or even the most specialized definitions can be decided in the exact same flawed way as you are do, thus showing and revealing, here "immanuel can".Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 amBig topic, but let's keep it as simple as we can, for present purposes: a dictionary is "accurate" when it captures the most relevant facts about the thing it is defining with the greatest precision.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pmWhat makes the pronouncements of a dictionary "accurate"?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2024 3:33 pm Actually, I very much do. And I accept that even the pronouncements of specialist dictionaries are not guaranteed to be inerrant, even if they are possibly (though not always) more accurate than those found in dictionaries aimed at the general public.
Once, and if, you ever get to comprehend, understand, and know how the actual irrefutable Truth is found and obtained, then you will also see and recognize the actual 'flaw', which you are continually presenting for 'us' here.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am In so doing, it should disambiguate the maximum number of simliar cases, of course, and eliminate all similar but not same items. It should provide the key details that distinguish the defined from everything else, particularly things likely to be confused with the defined.
Not so simple, is it? But that's not bad.
Well, obviously, no adult in the days when this was being written, and especially so you "immanuel can", was 'meeting' 'unprejudiced observations'. However, it is extremely very simple and very easy, indeed, to start with a set of 'unprejudiced observations'.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 amYou're correct. My mistake. I apologize. But you found the site, so that's good. In any case, I was not using them as special authorities, but justas a short, quick starting point, and followed up their quick definition with an expansion of my own that was better, as you can see.I'm not one to criticise typos, but it's Goodstein and Goodstein.The problem, as Postmodernist critics have ably shown, is that scientific neutrality is an ideal that nobody can meet.So in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"
This kind of belief or thinking is another reason why 'the world' was so messed up, and ill, back in the 'olden days' when this was being written.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am And in science, as Polanyi has pointed out, we have to begin with an intution -- the scientist observes a phenomenon, and then he hypothesizes, and so on...
Again, once more 'we' can see here the Truly twisted and distorted thinking, which some people really had, back then.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am But wait.Polanyi points out the overlooked step: how does the scientist know what is "interesting," or what is "worthy of hypothesizing about"? That doesn't come from the scientific process itself, and isn't even included in its steps...but it's inevitably there.
Any 'hypothesis' can all to simply, easily, and/or quickly further 'prejudiced observations'. So, as I have been continually saying and pointing out here, it is always better to look at, and thus, see things from never a theory, hypothesis, guess, presumption, nor belief. That is; if one really wants to uncover, or find, understand, and know, the actual Truth of things.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am Before the hypothesis, some scientist has to say to himself, "Hey, I feel that that event deserves scientific attention and investigation." But the method doesn't tell him what to choose.
In other words, 'that one's' own pre-existing 'prejudices', which is the very reason why you human beings, in the days when this was being written, were, still, searching and looking for 'the answers', which have been HERE all along, 'blatantly staring you in the face', as some would say.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am So what does he use? It's himself, his "personal knowledge," his intution that something is interesting, or anomalous, or worthy of inquiry.
In other words, doing 'this' here will just lead to more, very Wrongly worded, 'discovery' of what will be purported to be 'evidence' for what is already 'prejudiced' towards.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am And that part of the process requires him to use things that are not neutral, such has his own areas of interest, his own curiosity, his own knowledge of previous science, and even whatever his own body is disposed toward at a given moment.
Of course you adult human beings, in the days when this was being written, have these things. This is very clearly evident throughout not just your writings in this forum but in lots of areas of your thinking and doing as well. But, just as obvious, is the fact that you did not have to have them, have to maintain them, nor even keep them.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am This means that there's no science in which the entity by which the scientific method is being used is not a human being. And human beings do have biases, predispositions, particular interests, and so on.
This is absolutely False and Wrong. And, proved True by the greatest "scientists" and "philosophers', which is just the younger of you human beings.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am So if we demand that all science must "start with unprejudiced (i.e. un-pre-judging, not involving the inclinations of a particular individual) observation," then no "science" would ever be done.
Probably, one day.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am Consider this, if you will: if Newton had not been the particular man sitting under the apple tree (to quote the legend of dubious origin), would gravity have been discovered?
Absolutely every thing in the Universe is created by the coming-together of at least two other things, including all new ideas or views, and the so-calledImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am If it had been a different scientist, would something different have been deduced, or nothing at all, if it had only been Fred the shoemaker sitting under that tree? But it must be obvious, must it not, that it would have been the fortuitious coming together of apple and Newton, at just the moment Newton was in the mood to hypothesize, that made the Newtonian discovery possible?
But there was no actual 'science' being done, obviously. One, obviously, does not have to be doing 'science' or studying something to just come to a realization, or to just become aware, of some thing, which was obviously already existing way before the Wrongly called 'discovery' of 'it'.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am So that wasn't something "unprejudiced" by the fact of Newton's particular personhood and interests?
Why the question mark here?
you do not appear to be fully following and comprehending what was actually being said and claimed here previously.
This is obviously False and Wrong as well.
But only if 'he' so chooses to.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am And no matter how neutral he tries to make himself, it's he that he brings to the equation.
And where your confusion lays here "immanuel can" shines very brightly and can be very clearly seen and recognized.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am And that's what I find insufficient about that short definition.
Well, Polanyi is just one link in a chain of thought that goes back through Hume's "Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions" all the way to Protagoras claiming that "Man is the measure of all things." Ibn al-Haytham recognised that images are formed in the brain and are thus subject to interpretation. He has a much better claim to be the father of the scientific method than Francis Bacon whose legacy, as I have pointed out, is more his influence on the founders of the Royal Society than his method.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 amThe problem, as Postmodernist critics have ably shown, is that scientific neutrality is an ideal that nobody can meet. And in science, as Polanyi has pointed out, we have to begin with an intution -- the scientist observes a phenomenon, and then he hypothesizes, and so on...Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pmSo in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"
But wait.Polanyi points out the overlooked step: how does the scientist know what is "interesting," or what is "worthy of hypothesizing about"?
How do human beings, you for instance, manage to escape their "biases, predispositions, particular interests, and so on" when they are doing religion?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 amSo what does he use? It's himself, his "personal knowledge," his intution that something is interesting, or anomalous, or worthy of inquiry. And that part of the process requires him to use things that are not neutral, such has his own areas of interest, his own curiosity, his own knowledge of previous science, and even whatever his own body is disposed toward at a given moment.
This means that there's no science in which the entity by which the scientific method is being used is not a human being. And human beings do have biases, predispositions, particular interests, and so on. So if we demand that all science must "start with unprejudiced (i.e. un-pre-judging, not involving the inclinations of a particular individual) observation," then no "science" would ever be done.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 am...a dictionary is "accurate" when it captures the most relevant facts about the thing it is defining with the greatest precision.
Which clip do you want me to watch? There are many.iambiguous wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:01 pmThump bahman with this...
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... SjDNeMaRoX
IC!
![]()
It is very relevant. I want to know why you chose your religion over the other 4000. So what is your evidence?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:14 amStill irrelevant. There is literally an infinite number of wrong opinions about what 2+2 is...and all but one is wrong. So what's the point?
Why do you think that other religions are wrong?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmAs above, the number of possible wrong answers is utterly irrelevant to the question of the existence of a right answer.Yes, but how could they justify their belief given the fact that there are more than 4000 religions?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm But you missed the meaning of what I said. Many religious explanations of morals -- even those that I would say are factually untrue -- can make a rational account of their view: meaning that IF what they believed were true, then certain moral axioms would rationally follow.
Rational!? So we are back to where we were. You are talking about reason as the main pillar of objectivity. So what is your reason for your religion to be right and others to be wrong?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmBut we do have evidence. However, you missed the point again.Without a piece of evidence,Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm Subjectivism lacks this potential entirely. It cannot be made rational, even on its own terms; and that puts it behind all these various "religions" that can do that.
A belief that is not rational on its own terms is bound to be wrong, regardless of whether or not it has evidence, or whether or not there are other opinions. That's becuase it isn't even possibly right. At least the other answers are possibly right, because rational.
I already mentioned that Spiritual beings are very powerful and they can cheat us.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmOn what do you base that conclusion?I don't think that there is such a thing as strong evidence.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm That's certainly untrue. I have abundant evidence for Him. And I'll be happy to supply to you anything I can that you will accept as evidence.
So either give me evidence or a reason for what your religion is the right one?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmLet's say that's so. It changes nothing about the question of the existence of a right answer. All it tells us is there are wrong ones.Spiritual beings are very powerful and they can cheat us blind.
Let's say that the evidence that convinces you. I know you studied a few other religions. I am wondering on what basis you dropped other religions and picked up your current religion.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm"...that would convince me," you ask? I couldn't possibly speak for you. Let me ask you, instead: what evidence would you allow to convince you?So tell me what kind of evidence you have that could convince me.
For you objective is right and subjective is wrong. Why bother and use other words instead of right and wrong?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pmYes, I know. And you, yourself pointed out that so long as that is so, we're going to be speaking past one another, without any chance of understanding or arriving at a proper conclusion. And you were right: we're not capable of it, so long as you have that definition.I don't agree with your definition of subjective.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 20, 2024 5:53 pm But the original problem persists: we are not agreed on the defintion of "subjective." On a proper definition, I'm not at all a "subjectivist." But on yours, which I find both inconsistent and implausible, you might wrongly suppose I was merely campaigining for some sort of "subjectivity."
Curious the employment of opinion and argument of the Postmodernists to support (one supposes ultimately) an ur-religious position.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:35 amThe problem, as Postmodernist critics have ably shown, is that scientific neutrality is an ideal that nobody can meet. And in science, as Polanyi has pointed out, we have to begin with an intuition -- the scientist observes a phenomenon, and then he hypothesizes, and so on...Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 11:06 pm So in your view, Bacon was wrong to assert that the "scientist must start with a set of unprejudiced observations"
What is *interesting*, or what was interesting, to those who began the realization-processes that resulted in science as we understand it (Thales, Anaximander, etc.) is that they, like us, were men situated in their world. So naturally what interested them was, and could only be, the things of their world. What distinguished those particular men was that they set their will to avoid being taken in by outrageous theories or speculations and to focus on tangibles relevant to their immediate world.But wait. Polanyi points out the overlooked step: how does the scientist know what is "interesting," or what is "worthy of hypothesizing about"? That doesn't come from the scientific process itself, and isn't even included in its steps...but it's inevitably there. Before the hypothesis, some scientist has to say to himself, "Hey, I feel that that event deserves scientific attention and investigation." But the method doesn't tell him what to choose.
Is flatly false. However, one must recognize that a man's decisions about what to hypothesize about does depend, let's say, on what he hopes to get out of the process of hypothesization. He may at one time have been satisfied with wild speculations with *no base in reality*, and perhaps the speculations brought him something, or satisfied him. But then -- obviously -- something changed. What?That doesn't come from the scientific process itself
What is the alternative? These are not the best questions insofar as they cast doubt on man as instrument. If someone told you to go examine a tree and provide a description of it, would you not use your eyes? When we see something are we *intuiting* it? Similarly, you'd have no choice but your *interest, your *curiosity*, your *previous knowledge base*.So what does he use? It's himself, his "personal knowledge," his intution that something is interesting, or anomalous, or worthy of inquiry. And that part of the process requires him to use things that are not neutral, such has his own areas of interest, his own curiosity, his own knowledge of previous science, and even whatever his own body is disposed toward at a given moment.
Once you have ventured out in the direction established by initial false-premises (badly grounded hypotheses) it just gets more and more convoluted! You will not be able to escape the convolutions until you make a *manly decision* to admit the fault.This means that there's no science in which the entity by which the scientific method is being used is not a human being. And human beings do have biases, predispositions, particular interests, and so on. So if we demand that all science must "start with unprejudiced (i.e. un-pre-judging, not involving the inclinations of a particular individual) observation," then no "science" would ever be done.
All I can do is tell you a story from my own experience. I stuggled with a *strange intuition* for the longest time. Indeed I went a little crazy over it. I could not sleep. My wife got upset and I had to sleep outside with the chickens up in a tree. But I stuck by my *intuition*. Finally, after wandering in the forest for an entire month I resolved to retreat into a cave under a local waterfall with my astrolabe. I went to work on the intuition and, lo and behold! it bore a wondrous fruit. I came out one morning and said to my wife as tears welled in my eyes:Consider this, if you will: if Newton had not been the particular man sitting under the apple tree (to quote the legend of dubious origin), would gravity have been discovered? If it had been a different scientist, would something different have been deduced, or nothing at all, if it had only been Fred the shoemaker sitting under that tree? But it must be obvious, must it not, that it would have been the fortuitious coming together of apple and Newton, at just the moment Newton was in the mood to hypothesize, that made the Newtonian discovery possible? So that wasn't something "unprejudiced" by the fact of Newton's particular personhood and interests? In fact, it was dependent on that?
It must! It must!"It must be obvious, must it not ...."
You devilish rhetor! So, there really was a Garden of Eden after all!So a totally neutral, impersonal science is a myth. A scientist is a human being. And no matter how neutral he tries to make himself, it's he that he brings to the equation. And that's what I find insufficient about that short definition.
Good luck proving that, Gus. While we can measure gravity and build rockets to overcome it, we still don't know what causes it. I don't happen to think God is pushing everything together, but were he, it wouldn't make any difference to our calculations unless the old boy decided to mess with our heads.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 1:57 pm...though it may be true that the realization that gravity is a real force in our world arose first from *intuition*, the intuition that it is (let's say) God's mysterious hand the lowers the apple down to the ground is a false-intuition.
But I know, Will.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 2:18 pmGood luck proving that, Gus. While we can measure gravity and build rockets to overcome it, we still don't know what causes it. I don't happen to think God is pushing everything together, but were he, it wouldn't make any difference to our calculations unless the old boy decided to mess with our heads.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 1:57 pm...though it may be true that the realization that gravity is a real force in our world arose first from *intuition*, the intuition that it is (let's say) God's mysterious hand the lowers the apple down to the ground is a false-intuition.
Have you ever dropped something, a ball for instance? It’s a bit of a daft question, because who hasn’t?
Well, something's messed with your head.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 2:23 pmBut I know, Will.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2024 2:18 pmI don't happen to think God is pushing everything together, but were he, it wouldn't make any difference to our calculations unless the old boy decided to mess with our heads.
And if you'd only resolve to become less of a cheapskate and sign up for The 10-Week Email Course you might know, too.
[You see I have been able to get God to stop the Apple in mid-fall and raise it up again.]
God, Will. God!