You're honestly doing my work for me in this post.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
So, what would my "importance" be? Do you think that, for instance, Donald Trump is more likely to be right about some scientific issue just because he is considered more important by some people?
I'm aware that there's a bit of a language barrier here, but come on teo, you've shown yourself to be more competent at English than...
this.
This is probably the most inane, daft, and asinine response I've ever seen to one of my arguments, and you honestly should be ashamed of yourself. I am legitimately stunned by the level of stupidity in this comment.
It's pretty obvious by the context that we are
not referring to importance in the power or political sense, rather, importance in the ability and knowledge sense. In other words, I am referring to your importance in relation to scientific ability within the community.
Do some basic deductive reasoning man. If you can't do that, then pick up an English Dictionary and find the relevant definitions.
Let's look at a synonym of humility; modesty.
The Dictionary wrote:the quality or state of being unassuming or moderate in the estimation of one's abilities.
Can you see what I'm trying to get at now?
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
Look into the research about the incubation period in psychology. Basically, both the experimental data and the anecdotal evidence from the scientists who discovered something important point to the fact that, beyond a certain degree, actively searching for a solution to some problem psychologically prevents us from finding it. And the anecdotal evidence is that many, if not most of the, scientists who solved some unsolved problem in science weren't the scientists who were actively looking for the solution to it.
This barely proves your point. You have to find examples of
major discoveries that were accidental (since you pointed those out specifically), not cite anecdotes of scientists with obscure discoveries, since you're creating a false equivalence and a faulty generalization.
Have there been things that were accidentally discovered? Definitely (Penicillin is the most obvious example). But the majority of major scientific discoveries? I'm not sure about that. And don't cite the whole 'Relativity came to Einstein in a dream,' because that's a blatant myth. I'm not denying what you're saying necessarily, but it is overall pretty far fetched.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
I am saying that if you claim you've discovered something new, there is a high risk that you are wrong.
If it's wrong, then you didn't really discover anything new, did you?
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am If you are wrong, you will lose a lot of time and possibly some reputation (the value of which is hard to determine). If you are right (or at least more scientifically right than the currently accepted hypotheses are), you will also lose a lot of time, but you will gain a lot of reputation. If you think you are possibly close to discovering (and, of course, proving) something new, but you shut up about it, you save yourself a significant amount of time (hopefully spent well), but you lose a chance to improve the current scientific knowledge and gain yourself reputation.
I don't understand what your point is.
You
should still make an attempt to discover something new, even if you don't end up finding anything, since it's possible that someone else will come along, look at your progress, build upon it, and actually do find the answer. Looking at it as a waste of time is a poor attitude, and a self fulfilling prophecy.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
Well, it shouldn't have been surprising to you.
Why not?
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
Well, it kind of feels the same, doesn't it?
No, it doesn't.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amAlso, that's obviously not how logic works. Statements are logically consistent or not regardless of who makes them. Using the knowledge about who makes the claim to determine whether it is true is always logically fallacious. Logic must not be based on empiricism. Appealing to authority can be at best classified as a form of inductive reasoning, and inductive reasoning is itself not logically correct. And before you start with that "The science itself is based on inductive reasoning.", it's not. The science is based on falsifiability, not on inductive reasoning.
So you haven't learned anything from this experience?
You're putting words into my mouth, and completely forgetting about humility and modesty.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
The real knowledge is one that's independent of the experience.
What does that even mean? Whose experience?
Are you saying that true knowledge can't be experienced? Science is about observing things, which is a way of experiencing things. If you mean it in that sense, then yeah, you're wrong.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amCan it be known that the American government is better than the Croatian government in a way that's independent of the experience? No? Then, it can't really be known.
Clarify what you mean.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
How is that irrelevant nonsense? The truth is, the Mendelian genetics wasn't accepted by most of the biologists until the early 20th century. And, some biologists didn't accept it even until as late as the middle of the 20th century. And Stalin and Mao were misled by that.
It's completely irrelevant to the original point you were making. Have you forgotten what that was already?
I said there haven't been any scientific theories disproven in the past 100 or so years, you brought up Lysenkoism and how most biologists accepted it, I explained how it was not actually accepted by biologists who were forced to accept it at gunpoint, and how it was never considered a scientific theory by the community abroad. You did not address my point or my arguments at all. Go do that now.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amYou are trying to deny that because it doesn't fit your ridiculous idea that you can never end up being wrong because you are trying to figure out what is the mainstream science.
Don't patronize me, you're the one who's pathetic.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
Finally that you admit that!
It's as if that was your goal this entire time. I've said that I support government censorship of pseudoscience in the past. I don't think I said so on this forum, but in real life and on Discord, I've made it vocal. What, do you think this is my darkest secret?
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amSo, why do you think a government is able to accurately determine what is science and what is pseudoscience? Wouldn't they just arbitrarily censor people instead? You realize that Darwinism was considered to be pseudoscience both under Stalinism and under Nazism?
ANOTHER false equivalency. The regimes of Stalin and Hitler had different government systems than we do, you know.
I wouldn't rely on the government to decide what is pseudoscience, I'd rely on the scientific consensus to influence the government decisions accordingly. Of course, you wouldn't understand that even after it is explained to you, but, here it goes.
Government, I agree, is often incompetent. We need science to be involved in political and social affairs so we can have objective measures to do the most amount of good. Unfortunately, even in America, with the Republican party being filled with Creationists that keep managing to get voted in, scientific research and involvement in politics and social issues is extremely limited. Even our current administration (other than Trump, I'm like 99% sure he's an atheist, but he'd never say thay out loud, despite his big mouth) denies scientific fact like climate change and even evolution, and believe in the Genesis account and the Flood Fable (which is believed to be truth in your textbooks). Science in politics and social issues leads to increased scientific education and literacy, which would mean we could lessen the need censor pseudoscience that has made its way into mainstream thought.
How many children have died from anti-vaxxers? How many people will die due to climate change (and nuclear energy) denial? How many people will be discriminated against for their race or sexuality? If government shuts these people up, these ideas will eventually die out.
Read this thread:
viewtopic.php?f=17&t=3760&p=37200
Either increase scientific literacy or censor pseudoscience. Either one is fine with me (especially combined), but the latter is probably more effective at getting rid of pseudoscience overall.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
OK, let's say that the source you cite is more reliable than my textbook is about whether Darwin was aware of the Mendel's work.
Let's be honest, it probably is.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amSo what? You can discount Darwin as not being aware of his work, you cannot discount the countless scientists from his time who rejected the Mendel's work because it supposedly didn't follow the then-accepted scientific methods.
I'm not sure as to the validity of this, but so what? What point are you trying to prove? I already said how you were citing irrelevant nonsense earlier.
Plus, it doesn't really matter what people 150 years ago thought about Mendelian Genetics. Now that more advances have been made in Biology, which in and of itself has grown as a discipline, along with improved methods and resources (Mendel was not operating with modern techniques or equipment), it's easier to distinguish real biology from bullshit biology, and now, Mendel is celebrated as the father of Genetics and one of the greatest Biologists of all time.
Someone like Galileo was persecuted by the church (which at the time was pretty much the state) and some people such as Michael Servetus was burnt at the stake by John Calvin, along with his scientific works that would have revolutionized anatomy. These are examples of actual science being censored, no doubt retarding progress. Of course, this was in a time of religious domination without a speration of church and state and where excessive punishments were prevelant.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 am
And what would it take you to believe somebody you know has discovered something new? Nothing would convince you, as far as I see.
You're projecting. No buddy, that's
you. You're the one who thinks that most people haven't actually discovered something new when they say they have.
What would convince me is evidence. I'm not sure if I can say the same thing about you.
I don't know much about the science itself, and I, as a layman, know that I know nothing about science. I suggest you gain some
humility and do the same. It's our responsibility as members of the laity to defer to people who know more than us.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amIf somebody claims they have discovered something new about physics, they are wrong because most of the physicists (the vast of which, of course, don't work on anything related to the field, and haven't even heard of their theory) don't agree with them.
No, that's not remotely how it works. It isn't automatically labeled correct or incorrect by fellow scientists, it is either labeled as correct or incorrect when rigorously peer reviewed. Could it be wrong when considered true and vice versa? Absolutely. But with modern methodology, this is very, very unlikely to happen, especially in the hard sciences.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amIf somebody claims to have discovered something new in an understudied field such as the Croatian toponyms (where the chance of actually discovering something new is by orders of magnitude greater), they is wrong because they is making a statement about something not many people have studied, even if a significant proportion of the people who have studied it agrees with them.
I never said that they were automatically wrong. Stop strawmanning.
I am saying that the science might not be very reliable for the reasons I outlined.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amSounds like a perfect double standard to me.
I'm not sure if you know what that is.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 5:10 amWhat do you even mean by "soft science"? Speakers of languages unconsciously follow many laws that are, for all practical purposes, without exceptions. See the
table which I used to explain why I think most of the proposed Latin etymologies of the Croatian toponyms are to be rejected, just to get a general idea.
You really should go back in this thread and read the debate I had with Z about this.
You're amusing me Mr. teo, but I don't have time for nonsense debates like this with you. I honestly thought you learned a thing or two after the flat earth debacle, but in terms of character, you're pretty much the same.
Put up or shut up.
@brimstoneSalad Am I getting into a debate like the one you did with teo a few years ago? Should I quit while I'm ahead?