I don't really see that we're disagreeing. I didn't suggest that the scientific method had no options or flexibility, nor do I suppose you're saying it's just some undisciplined thing with no rules at all. I think we're merely discussing the essentials.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Tue Feb 06, 2024 2:59 pm ...my view rather than yours:From the wikipedia page you cited and might one day read:Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Feb 01, 2024 3:47 pmNo it isn't. It is a sprawling jumble of different practices, loosely held together by observation, measurement and experiment.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 31, 2024 3:11 pmBut science is rather a special thing, with its own methodology.
"Though the scientific method is often presented as a fixed sequence of steps, these actions are better considered as general principles. Not all steps take place in every scientific inquiry (nor to the same degree), and they are not always done in the same order."
Presumption? I would rather have thought it was a service to science to point out that one's method was not simply a choice among many, but could rather be adopted more generally, with such great results as Baconian method was. It certainly was a key spark to the Industrial and Technological Revolutions, of which we are today the inheritors and beneficiaries....as far as I know, Ibn al-Haytham not explicitly stating that his method should define science; that level of presumption does seem to originate with Francis Bacon.
But perhaps that's the difference. Bacon recognized science as a methodology, but Al Haytham did not. That would account for the similarities in their methods, but also in the lack of any systematic methodology from Al Haytham that could inform the larger scientific community.
His theory's spelled out in Science and the Modern World (1925). I apologize that it's a rather demanding text. To make it as simple as I can, for general understanding, I would offer this short quotation:I have never heard of Whitehead's Hypothesis; nor could I find any reference to it. Do you have one?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Feb 05, 2024 7:48 pmI'd also be interested in what his metaphysical assumptions were. With Bacon, they were certainly Theistic. Al-Haytham seems to have been a regular Muslim, so also a monotheist, one would have to presume, no? And unless he was a very atypical Muslim, that would represent a different variation, but would not undermine Whitehead's Hypothesis.
When we compare this tone of thought in Europe with the attitude of other civilisations when left to themselves, there seems but one source for its origin. It must come from the medieval insistence on the rationality of God, conceived as with the personal energy of Jehovah and with the rationality of a Greek philosopher. Every detail was supervised and ordered: the search into nature could only result in the vindication of the faith in rationality. Remember that I am not talking of the explicit beliefs of a few individuals. What I mean is the impress on the European mind arising from the unquestioned faith of centuries. By this I mean the instinctive tone of thought and not a mere creed of words.
In Asia, the conceptions of God were of a being who was either too arbitrary or too impersonal for such ideas to have much effect on instinctive habits of mind. Any definite occurrence might be due to the fiat of an irrational despot, or might issue from some impersonal, inscrutable origin of things. There was not the same confidence as in the intelligible rationality of a personal being. I am not arguing that the European trust in the scrutability of nature was logically justified even by its own theology. My only point is to understand how it arose. My explanation is that the faith in the possibility of science, generated antecedently to the development of modern scientific theory, is an unconscious derivative from medieval theology.
The rest, you can certainly find here. Chapter 1 pretty much covers it. https://www.gutenberg.org/files/68611/6 ... 8611-h.htm
Well, see the above, and decide what you think of his argument.Whitehead or not, science does not rest on the assumption of stability and laws and certainly not a god.
It does for Theism more generally. And Islam being evidently a false form of Theism, one has only one option left, one would think.It doesn't do much for your contention that science would not exist but for Christianity.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Feb 05, 2024 7:48 pmIf we decided to start the history of scientific methody with Al-Haytham, Whitehead would still seem to be on good ground, in that regard.