freediver wrote on Nov 22
nd, 2010 at 8:12pm:
muso wrote on Nov 22
nd, 2010 at 7:48am:
freediver wrote on Nov 20
th, 2010 at 10:31pm:
So that would be most scientists? And my high school science teacher?
Well I completed two Science degrees without any mention of it either at University or at High School (maybe I had the dentist that day
).
I'd say that's probably because it's not rigorous.
Was your High School Science teacher Catholic?
What does it have to do with religion?
You do not have to understand you role in the scientific community in order to contribute to it, but sometimes it helps.
Perhaps you would like to offer an alternative philosophy of science, or explain your reason for rejecting the currently accepted one? Maybe you just don't understand it.
Why would you even bother? What's the point?
Put it this way - Could philosophers have come up with Quantum physics, where subatomic particles don't follow the laws of logic in our highly limited view of the macroscopic universe?
The major advances in science have been from outside the box.
As far as not understanding it - what I do understand is that there are various conflicting assertions, none of which in any way reflect what usually goes on in scientific research. Even if they did, scientific practices are dynamic. They don't fit into any neat box. In research you do what you have to do. You work with whatever information or clues are available to you.
Nothing is as cut and dried as 'falsifiable' or 'unfalsifiable'. You have to take risks. You have to stick your neck out. To take a culinary analogy, you have to eat the whole enchilada, even if you don't know what's in it.
Philosophy of science is just a weapon used by certain groups with an agenda, to attempt to limit its scope.
We don't go there - it's not scientific. (Here be monsters). Science must not encroach on that which belongs to God. The question is not so much "is it falsifiable?", but "does it work?"
It's a bit like computer code. If it works, don't mess with it. Don't try to fix what isn't broken. OK, it could have a latent problem in the code, but we'll just run beta's until we get it all sorted out.