freediver wrote on Apr 19
th, 2007 at 2:30pm:
No I do not think whether god exists or not is a scientific question.
Then why suggest we bring God into science?
Beats me? You asked the question, You tell me?
Quote:I believe that god is a convenient way to describe many of the things that are now described in other ways
Just like evolution. Convenience is not an excuse for laziness in science.
Tell me, what questions does evolution ask that are answered through different means? Credible scientific examples? Not some bullsh!t you just made up here on this website, go out and find some examples.
Quote:and that it is very likely that a belief in god came out of the same desire to seek understanding in nature that drives science
That could perhaps come under scientific investigation, although it is a bit difficult to employ the scientific method in psychology.
Who said anything about psychology? Still, that hasn't stopped anyone from trying, and if they try, it is science, it may be poor science but it is science.
Quote:I don't think many people accept that view any more, certainly not many people I know, and certainly not many scientists.
Then why use the term at all? If it includes human products, everything is natural.
A very simplistic way to look at it, you dismiss the potential for subtlety.
Words can carry different meanings in certain contexts, in the context of science, yes everything is natural and it is used as a term to distinguish between that which is able to be studied scientifically, and that which can not (eg faith). In the context of your day to day conversations, yes nature often defines human from everything else (although I refuse to accept this, so much stupidity comes from this arrogant perception of man), but this is far too clumsy a definition for science, and this is not the context of our conversation.
Quote:The thing is that science can arise from so much more than what you limit yourself to in your article.
What I describe in my article is not what science arises from, it is what restricts science to answering those questions whose answers have produced 'modern technology.'
And what of the science that has not produced modern technology? You miss all of the historical achievements of science, as I pointed out with the ancient greeks, but much was even discovered and studied before those times. Tell me, do you think then that when science that has been left to the history books it is no longer science?
Quote:science is any method that is applied in an objective way
The method I described is the only way to keep science objective.
It is one way, but too narrow to encompass everything we understand as science.
Quote:attempting to limit the influence of human perceptions
All science is completely dependent on human perceptions.
True, but you take my meaning out of context, I should have said preconceptions, emotions etc, but I chose to use one word, an error of communication if you missed my point, essentially all I meant was to be objective.
Quote:Science must remain broad and ambiguous enough to allow for new fields to easily be accepted
Whether a field is accepted does not depend on whether it is scientific.
So we are accepting non scientific fields into science now?
Quote:and an openness to constant changes in understanding, to be 'self correcting' as you say
The method I described is the only method that ensures science is self correcting
It is not the only way, it is one way, a good way, but not the only way.
The truth is freediver, while I sit and study scientific subjects and ponder on your tight little definition I can only notice how much of my science texts do not fit what you call science. I went through a chapter of a thermodynamics text today and read it, mentally selecting and removing passages of text that do not fit your definition of science, and without these passages many topics no longer made much sense? Is thermodynamics not science? Indeed, what is empirical about the thought experiment? All thought experiments are exercises in intuition concerning nothing but content that is made up and in the mind, purely maths as sense defined it, are thought experiments not science? While one studies science they can be engaged in science and yet not conduct one experiment or postulate one theory, a student may not do one single thing you define as science, yet they are still engaged in science. If I attempt a scientific problem as outlined in my text, using maths taught to me in that text, I am not conducting empirical study, nor am I making meaningful predictions, nor proposing theories. I am however engaged in science.
The problem with the way you define science is that it does not encompass things that everyone regards as scientific already, like evolution, which means you are applying a false definition to the word. And that is all there is to it.