Quote:Why not assume or assert that the scientific method is wrong or incomplete? It seems that millions of scientits are comfortable with calling it a theory and science.
I'm not sure what you are getting at here.
Quote:If/when/have we encountered a scientific truth and it proves unfalsifiable it will no longer be scientific?
I think you are misinterpretting the term falsifiable. It doesn't mean wrong, it means testable. It means that if it were wrong, there would be a repeatable experiment that would show that it is wrong. A theory can be true and still satisfy this criteria.
Quote:Is it not equally arrogant to assume that Popper's formula for Scientific method is perfect final and a Truth?
Popper's 'formula' is not a theory about the natural world. It is a philosophy. It is a methodology. Also, I'm not sure if my view coincides exactly with Popper's.
Quote:Also previously we agreed that part of the problem is that the time frames involved are enormous. So just because we are currently not clever enough to come up with tests able to falsify Evolution seems hardly a reason to allocate it to an area of knowledge other than science especially considering that all of its related fields of study are scientific.
Pick any time period you want. If an experiment over that time period failed to demonstrate evolution, it would not disprove the theory. It is a more fundamental issue than the time period alone. Even if you could wait 1 million years to do your experiment, failure would not falsifiy the theory. The real problem is that the theory doesn't actually predict a specific outcome of an experiment, it is only capable of explaining whatever outcome happens to arise. This is inherently unscientific.
Quote:But that is why I said (confusingly I admit) that favouring a definition of science (Popper's) over a description of the physical world (Darwin's) seems a bit arbituary.
It becomes clearer when you try to come up with alternative definitions of science. To invent one that incorporates evolution would also incorporate all sorts of obviously non-scientific theories. Also, you can adequately describe the physical world via the theory of natural selection.
Quote:Do you have a suggestion for an appropriate field of knowledge for Evolution if not Science?
Yes. I call it natural history. As do most practicing nacademic evolutionists.
Quote:I realize that you are saying it should not be taught in schools as science but you do agree that it should still be taught in schools. Don't you?
It should be taught somewhere. Either in schools or in universities would be fine. We didn't cover it until the last semester of grade 12 I think, so most students missed out on it anyway. Also, it wouldn't bother me if they taught it in science so long as they pointed out that it either wasn't scientific or that it was fundamentally different from every other scientific theory taught in high school. Of course, that would require the teaching of the scientific method as well. I think we did that in grade 10. There is no need to get hung up on the division of knowledge into maths, science, history etc in school. In fact it would be a good time to reinforce the scientific method, as the distinction between evolution and natural selection is a great demonstration of where you draw the line. It is only a problem if they fail to make this distinction, as it mislead people regarding the nature of both science and evolution.
Quote:Personally, while I admire Popper enormously, his statements about science should come under scrutiny in the same way that Evolution becomes stronger and stronger as more evidence supports it as a concept.
Evidence in favour of the theory of evolution is not evidence that it is scientific. You keep confusing scientific with being true.
Quote:Apart from that, evolutionary theory predicts that there should be close correspondance between the DNA shared within species if they are evolved from a common ancestor.
Circular reasoning. DNA actually contradicted a lot of the previous asusmptions about relationships. Thus they are based on DNA alone. This is not even a prediction. As with most examples from evolution, it is a prediction made after the observation. You observe that according to DNA evidence, two species are closely related, then you use that DNA as evidence that they are closely related.
Quote:If there were no traces of such a correspondance, then we could falsify evolutionary theory.
Sure. Non-scientific theories can also be falsified, but just not via a repeatable experiment.
Quote:Another example would be if somebody witnessed the creation of an existing species of snake out of thin air, or if somebody proved that ducks had actually come to Earth on spaceships.
Again, not a repeatable experiment. Accepting that sort of evidence would allow creationism into science.
Quote:To be quite honest, I think that the idea that evolutionary theory is not falsifiable is a somewhat querulous point brought up by creationists.
Yet when you try to contradict this claim, you end up sounding just like a creationist, saying that ducks arriving in spaceships (scientology, anyone?), magical appearances of serpents (apple, anyone?), circular arguments based on correspondence (astrology anyone?) are somehow in the realm of science.