teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:Not witness quantum events that would contradict what we see as wave-phenomena (which would seem reasonable)
I am not sure what you mean.
OK
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 ambrimstoneSalad wrote:Rather, a physicist would be able to inform the design of an apparatus or experiment to tell us about the here and now.
OK, but that is a softer part of physics, right?
No, there aren't really soft and hard parts of physics in that sense; it would use well established laws of physics. There's stuff on the fringes of research, but something like this would not be. This isn't like quantum stuff.
It's more soft sciences that have harder parts in them because some people are using good methodology and studying things that can be studied like that, not so much hard sciences having soft bits.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 amI mean, this is to physics what forensic linguistics (trying to determine somebody's native language from grammar mistakes he makes) is to linguistics, is not it?
No.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 ambrimstoneSalad wrote:To determine if the prisoners are some kind of hologram or robot vs. real human beings would be within the purview of physics.
Well, the most scientific hypothesis would be that prisoners are a hologram and will disappear once you come closer to them. That one is the easiest to falsify: if you come closer to them and they don't disappear, then you have falsified that hypothesis. At least that's how I understand the Karl Popper's philosophy of science. Karl Popper said that the most scientific hypotheses are not one which are most probable, but ones which are the easiest to falsify.
That has to do with the hardness. Any technology that the government is using to simulate prisoners would be equally falsifiable because it's all within our understanding of physics.
Unless you think the aliens are helping the government fake prisons with technology so advanced it's far beyond our understanding of physics -- THAT would be an unscientific hypothesis.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:You've actually gotten worse
Well, that should be impossible, right? If you feel like you know less than you knew before, that is because you only now know enough to realize how much you do not know.
No, your mental illness and delusions are intensifying. That's not uncommon for untreated psychiatric conditions, they are likely to worsen.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:Are you denying the existence of underwear now?
No, I just said I don't see the difference between claiming Proto-Indo-European did not exist and that underwear does not exist: both are soft science claims that almost no social scientist agrees with.
No, the existence of underwear is a hard science claim because it's falsifiable by hard science.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 amOK, maybe a better analogy is denying Grimm's Law or denying that English is a spoken language, since there are indeed some social scientists (no linguists, as far as I know) on the fringe who deny Proto-Indo-European.
There's a difference between descriptive and predictive claims, so no.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 ambrimstoneSalad wrote:even if some field of social sciences did have more credibility on the existence of prisons
I am not sure what you mean. Do you mean to say social sciences have nothing to say about the existence of prisons?
Re-read what I wrote.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 amWell, obviously, sociology and linguistics are both fields without a clearly defined methodology and almost never using the scientific method, and rarely using mathematics.
Whether that is the way it should be is an interesting question.
If that's how it should be, then they aren't just soft sciences, they are not sciences at all.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
I have used some statistics in arguing for my alternative interpretation of the
names of places in Croatia. However, I cannot deny it is possible that my work is to historical linguistics what
Fomenko's work is to history. Fomenko tried to apply statistics to history without properly understanding either, and, of course, got everything wrong.
Which is why you need competent peer review, which is why you need a field in which those practices are the norm (not a rare outlier). You will not find the help you need within a soft science field. You need to start in hard sciences, then you can return to linguistics to reform the field if you want to.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:A biologist wouldn't really be expected to have any increased knowledge of astrophysics or vice versa, since they're more distant.
Well, sociology and linguistics are arguably more related than, say, linguistics and economics.
You have comprehended NOTHING of what I explained to you.
Only hard sciences are related in knowledge by hard science methodology. SOFT sciences with NO METHODOLOGY are not related in knowledge by virtue of their lack of methodology -- they're related in ignorance, which is not something that's helpful.
A from of knowledge is related to and provides insight into another that shares much of that knowledge, a form of ignorance does not provide insight into another form of ignorance.
Is that sinking in *at all*?
Because you have studied linguistics DOES NOT give you any special insight into sociology, and does not make you an expert in whether prisons exist or not -- to the contrary, the fact that you think that makes you the opposite of an expert on anything to do with reality. You possess negative competence when it comes to any real world question, and beyond that you have some kind of paranoid conspiratorial psychological pathology that ensures you can only arrive at conspiratorial answers to questions. You need professional psychological help, and you need to have actual education in the hard sciences because soft sciences only feed into your pathology -- you need to be grounded and soft sciences will do the opposite.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:The point about flat earth and prison denialism, though, is the belief that must be supported by conspiracy theories.
And why is actually massive conspiracies being impossible a valid argument against Flat-Earthism? Massive conspiracies being impossible is a soft-science claim, Flat-Earthism is a (wrong) hard science claim. You do not use a soft science to contradict a hard science.
Flat-Earthism is not a scientific claim, it's an unfalsifiable ad hoc notion which has no models or testable hypotheses because its proponents only shift the goal posts to avoid reality. See what you said about Karl Popper. They're treating what should be a hard science as the softest of soft sciences.
If a flat-Earther came up with an actual falsifiable hard science hypothesis, it could still be dismissed by soft science because it's not just a question of hardness but also evidence. The hypothesis would have to accrue actual hard science evidence in its favor to graduate into a theory to be immune to soft science criticism.
You have to look at the credibility as Hardness & soundness of methodology * Evidence.
Physics has a harness of 100% with sound methodology, so even a small amount of evidence with good methodology counts for quite a bit. On the opposite end, a soft part of a soft science may have a hardness of 0% with no methodology, so no amount of "evidence" would ever overwhelm a non-zero amount of evidence in physics.
The comparatively soft science claim in psychology and sociology of the impossibility of conspiracy theories isn't without methodology; it relies on mathematical models and pretty well established human behavior. Perhaps it's 10% hard, but even an iota of evidence for that overwhelms 0 evidence for even a testable flat-earth model, and there's comparatively a mountain of evidence against global conspiracies being possible.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:If that's not the case in Croatia specifically, then it's entirely plausible that the people behind these policies are just stupid and following the example of other countries where it is the case.
And that does not go against the principle of rationality?
I have explained that your assumptions about rationality are wrong, particularly when it comes to politicians.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 ambrimstoneSalad wrote:but they also have compulsory voting
And aren't most social scientists against compulsory voting?
I don't think there's any strong consensus for or against it. Most arguments are ideological in nature, regarding rights or duties -- people playing at philosophy when they should be looking at the politics and consequences.
There are limited studies on it, but I don't think anybody contests that it increases voter turnout, and it seems to benefit progressive policies.
The problem is that conservatives don't like benefitting progressive policies so they make a lot of noise about freedom, which is pretty highly effective rhetoric.
The best form of compulsory voting would likely be to send everybody a ballot and require that they be returned, providing a randomized list of candidates (to prevent the effect of people just selecting the first on the list), AND providing the option to abstain with a check box that says something like "Voting is easy and most people do their civic duty to vote for the future of our country and people, but I am unwilling to do something so easy to help our country or its people by participating or I'm going to let other people make all of the decisions for me because I have no opinions of my own."
In other things, giving people an option to opt out that makes them look/feel bad tends to increase participation vs. no option to opt out.
Really optimizing voter participation would require study into ballot design.
teo123 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 07, 2020 7:15 am
brimstoneSalad wrote:You could help thousands of families or more with very small changes.
For example?
Reducing bail slightly, increasing visitation, shortening sentences, providing more vocational training in prisons, increasing use of house arrest and probation instead of prisons, loosening probation restrictions, etc.
There a dozens of components to the system, and the smallest changes to any of those makes an enormous difference.