teo123 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 27, 2019 10:33 am
Yes, but at the time that theory was first proposed, that couldn't have been done, and it was not known if it would ever be possible.
We already covered this with geocentrism. When it was first proposed, and without any empirical evidence, it would have been reasonable to doubt the *model*.
Again, I also talked about string theory as a model that fails to make any testable predictions. Totally reasonable to doubt it. String theory is arguably not good science (depending on what you expect from it), but it's not a very hard science right now. String theory, in that sense, is much more like the modeling done in linguistics.
I mentioned earlier how broad scientific categories are not homogeneous with respect to the amount of evidence and testability.
If you circle a broad category, there are inevitably going to be parts of "linguistics" which are harder than parts of "physics" (like string theory, which a lot of physicists are a little embarrassed about how much attention it gets). You'll always be able to cherry pick exceptions because these are broad categories with a lot of people working in the field; people who have different mindsets and standards for scientific rigor.
You can see some fields like psychology which have dramatic differences internally, with some researchers who are very rigorous, and other speculators who just make up ad hoc hypotheses and rake in research funding with exaggerated claims and even (sometimes) outright fraud.
We can, however, look at typical examples, and particularly matters of established consensus, to get a sense of how rigorous the field is as a whole.
We can also look at, as I've explained, how viable experimental falsification is for the field. Like I explained, psychology is harder due to all of the variables that are nearly impossible to control for: but convincing robots might change that.
Linguistics, likewise, might be revolutionized once we can really simulate the human brain on computers and see how language works in a way we have never been able to before.
Being a soft science isn't being doomed to *always* be a soft science, and it doesn't mean everything in the field is equally soft... just that most of it is, and it's going to take some work to get beyond that.
teo123 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 27, 2019 10:33 amThe parallels between the Big Bang Theory and the Laryngeal Theory are striking. Both of them make very specific and precise predictions, both of those predictions were not testable at the time and it was unclear if they would ever be testable, and both of them were confirmed accidentally half a century or a century later. If you accept that the Big Bang Theory is a valid scientific theory, then you should also accept that the Laryngeal Theory is a valid scientific theory, even though you don't need to accept that my interpretation of the Croatian toponyms is one.
The Laryngeal Theory may be one of the hardest parts of linguistics. Cosmology is a softer side of physics.
Howev
er, the Big Bang theory has not merely been confirmed by accidental observation. Microwave background radiation has also been measured much better since then.
Elemental abundance in old star systems (and the relative ages of star systems etc.) also confirms the Big Bang.
Beyond that, the Big Bang theory also stands alone as a plausible explanation. The Steady State theory has not been able to explain expansion (which the the reason the Big Bang theory came about).
Nothing about accidental confirmation happening is an issue; it is when you can ONLY confirm things by dumb luck that you have a problem.
There's no reason the microwave background radiation could not ultimately have been tested. But when it comes to linguistics, confirming evidence could be lost in time.
Hard science benefits from happenstance sometimes, but it is not at the
mercy of happenstance.
Sometimes it takes a billion dollar machine that hasn't yet been built, but there's no worry that the needed information has simply been lost.
teo123 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 27, 2019 10:33 amIf I understood you correctly, you implied that the reason English language can be learned and studied scientifically is because it's a living language, right?
No.
teo123 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 27, 2019 10:33 amWell, guess what, it's also possible to learn a language that's been dead for millennia, and have a conversation in it. I know that, because I've done that myself:
Those languages survived in scripture which people continually read, and for which scholars have long learned and used these languages academically.
teo123 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 27, 2019 10:33 amIf your epistemological philosophy can't deal with the fact that it's possible to learn Latin even though no method can generate new data about it,
You can learn Klingon and make up new data about it, as long as everybody speaking it agrees.
Language becomes true by consensus of its speakers, which make it very different from external truths.
teo123 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 27, 2019 10:33 amI've calculated, using the data from Wiktionary, that the p-value of the pattern that the Indo-European languages tend to have the same phoneme at the beginning of the words meaning "two", "ten", "tooth" and "house" was around 1%. I was a bit surprised by that, I expected it to be much lower, but that's what the math points to. I again included the calculation of the p-value of that k-r-pattern in the Croatian hydronyms I've noticed, it's around 1/10'000. So, by that logic, it's more unreasonable to reject my theory than to reject mainstream linguistics, right?
I have not read your paper, but if you've done more rigorous work, then yes it could be more unreasonable to reject your theory.
However, as I am not invested in linguistics and have not taken the time to study and evaluate your work, for me it is more reasonable to believe mainstream as the default.
However, if you keep it up, you may revolutionize linguistics and turn it into a harder science. I will have to wait for your peers to recognize that and for it to become the new consensus, though.