No, it's right. But you can prove it wrong, if I'm wrong. Who is the father of the scientific method, if not Bacon? Just answer that.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Feb 01, 2024 9:26 pm Your idea that there was no scientific method before Francis Bacon is simply false,
The the problem is that you're not differentiating between people who (without having any consistent episteme) made technological or inventive advances, from the practitioners of a coherent and consistent scientific theory. And I am. That's why we're not agreeing. For you, "science" just means the equivalent of "inventing something" or "discovering something" -- and, of course, people have invented or discovered all kinds of things. But "science" as it came to be understood during the Enlightenment, required the discipline of the scientific method. Today, we don't call "science" things that are premised on traditions, myths, cultural preferences, superstitions, occultism, pure theory, and so forth. Today, we require the application of the particular methodology outlined in the link I sent, before we bestow the honourific "science" upon a particular area of investigation.
So you have one definition of "science," a sort of casual one, and I'm defining "science" as that which is genuinely subject to scientific method. And that's why we're missing one another. But we're actually not in disagreement that elements of that method (such as observation or experimentation) were possible before there was any such thing as a the systematic discipline we know now as "science." That's why people are sometimes "scientific" to various degrees, but not truly "scientific."
The so-called disciplines of phrenology or alchemy, for example, were once called "science." We now know they were nothing of the kind. But they did share some elements with real science, in that they purported to deal with the material realities in a knowledge-revealing and patterned way; but today, we recognize these, along with, say Aristotelian cosmology, not as "science" but as "pseudo-science."
In the same way, Aristotle had lots of ideas about "medicine" and "cosmology." But they were mostly terrible ideas, and they shackled real medicine and cosmology for thousands of years. The problem was that Aristotle, smart as he may have been, and as helpful in some philosophical ways as he may have been, was also merely pre-scientific, and largely wrong: his methodology was undisciplined, and so it was just as unscientific as it was any kind of "science."
It's Alfred North Whitehead's assertion, as it happens; I only agree with it. But it's actually true. And if you think it's not, then explain why all the billions of people in non-Christian lands never developed the scientific method. I'll be happy to hear your account of how you think it came about....your assertion that it took Christianity to come up with one is demonstrably untrue.