I believe there is a thin layer between giving slack to a certain degree and being clear that one users behavior won't change. In other words: One should not write 16 reports before the staff understands the issue, when 8 is also sufficient.I hate to bring this discussion here (outside of the banning thread) but I believe it took "long" because I think the moderation team is adamant about people feeling free to express themselves, no matter how the general public may perceive their thoughts or opinions.
On a cloudy runny sunday i may decide to believe in a flat earth given how it never stops raining then and i need to have some kind of reason for it.So wait, no one here believes the earth is flat... right?
I believe there is a thin layer between giving slack to a certain degree and being clear that one users behavior won't change. In other words: One should not write 16 reports before the staff understands the issue, when 8 is also sufficient.
Intent is what sets you and me apart from one another. When a users intent is not on being productive but being purposefully obtuse, then i feel that should be remedied.
I kind of remember there's another one of those dudes still on the forum, but who cares, really.
Whoever it is, I'm sure they'll go full on stupid at some point and get the ban-kebab.
An authority argument is not a good argument, but what on earth is wrong with scientism?That's an appeal to authority mixed with scientism. It's a terrible argument.
An authority argument is not a good argument, but what on earth is wrong with scientism?
But scientism is belief in science (i.e. scientific method), rather than belief in scientists?Because scientists are just a fallible as anybody else and you can't blindly trust them. Trust the scientific method instead.
But scientism is belief in science (i.e. scientific method), rather than belief in scientists?
If the belief is saying anything about nature or its workings, then it is a scientific question though. If it is a moral belief, then of course, the scientific input is limited (one could at best discuss why that specific moral rule might have developed).Yes, you are technically correct. But it's not hard to see that if you have an excessive belief in science, you can conflate it with science as an institution and not as a method. There are other definitions of scientism though, and the one that comes to mind is trying to apply science in domains that are outside its range, such as ethics. In this case, trying to apply science to belief is scientism.
If the belief is saying anything about nature or its workings, then it is a scientific question though. If it is a moral belief, then of course, the scientific input is limited (one could at best discuss why that specific moral rule might have developed).
You may want to read about a priori knowledge, specifically Immanuel Kant.Yes but in order to be able to question something using the scientific method it has to be put in a testable form, using the language that has been already established by science and as such that process is incredibly limited and cannot serve as a complete epistemological means.
In that sense, science has to be thought of as a tool and nothing more than a tool, that has to be carefully and precisely applied. One should also remember that scientists are formed as scientists. It's a profession just like any other and so it's common to find that scientists have lots of deficiencies in many other areas. They tend to develop a worldview in which everything is a problem to be made into a model and understood, and that approach will inevitably fail in many cases.
So, in my view, that's the problem with what at least I call scientism. It makes prevalent a view of the world which is fundamentally incomplete.
You could also make an analogous critique on reason. I very much like the way Ortega y Gasset put it in his little book "The Problem of our Time", somewhere around 1920. He tells you the story of the discovery of reason starting from Plato and how humanity would dedicate itself to understand reason itself and then reach its limits. So reason is seen like a Island. Huge island but limited nonetheless. And belief is what will set you free from those limitations.
A careful analysis will make self evident the idea that without belief it is impossible to even act on the world. You have to believe that things are as they are. There's a sense of identity. You believe in your own self and in what your eyes see. So much so that it just becomes a truism. And in those dynamics lays science and not the other way around.
I see my response is getting too lengthy but I just find this whole thing fascinating.
You may want to read about a priori knowledge, specifically Immanuel Kant.
For sure, that's why I recommended Kant because I think it's right up your alley. I'd also recommend Wittgenstein. It's unhelpful to think of science as the lens through which we view all of reality. That's a very... inhuman way to proceed through life. So it's a good panacea to read wise people who remind us about the strict borders of our "reason".I've not read Kant yet but I hope to do so in the future when time allows. Reading a bit about what you mention, I'd say it's a good example of things not taught to scientists, which make it hard to acknowledge science's scope. I'll say also that for precisely defined problems I'm very rigorous. At the other end of the spectrum I tend to get too mystical, I confess. It's a fun life though.
For sure, that's why I recommended Kant because I think it's right up your alley. I'd also recommend Wittgenstein. It's unhelpful to think of science as the lens through which we view all of reality. That's a very... inhuman way to proceed through life. So it's a good panacea to read wise people who remind us about the strict borders of our "reason".
The only thing holding you back is not trying. Really, most of this stuff is way more readable than you'd think. You just have to take it slow. Sometimes I have to think out loud -- "so when he's saying {term] conflicts with [other term], what he's really trying to point out..." -- puzzling it out verbally.Thanks for the recommendations. I did watch some lectures on Wittgenstein but find reading the original works very daunting. Guess I'll give it a try later!
The only thing holding you back is not trying. Really, most of this stuff is way more readable than you'd think. You just have to take it slow. Sometimes I have to think out loud -- "so when he's saying {term] conflicts with [other term], what he's really trying to point out..." -- puzzling it out verbally.
Reading philosophy is easy. Being patient enough to understand it is hard, because patience is generally hard.
Don't worry, there is still O OnThePathToWisdom to discourse with.I really, really don't know if engaging them, ignoring them or banning them is better. I mean, with Angular Whatever, he showed clear signs of being an outright troll. For me there's no doubt that this dude was just out having fun and so on. But with people really believing this shit? There's a study done on antivaxxers showing that engaging them and giving them real actual data and facts just cements their beliefs.
Personally, I think switching off any form of social media would be beneficial to humanity at large. Let fringe beliefs die out at some weird bar somewhere.
''Oniiiiiii-chan! Does wearing this outfit make me look as flat as a planet????''
Science is the only way we can get actual knowledge. But that does not mean that science necessarily allows at each point of time, a yes or no answer to any given question. Because scientific methods may yet to be developed or crucial information be found or progress in other areas necessary to verify theses. But then we just do not know yet, end of story.Yes but in order to be able to question something using the scientific method it has to be put in a testable form, using the language that has been already established by science and as such that process is incredibly limited and cannot serve as a complete epistemological means.
Well, it requires one distinction: Science is the only path to knowledge, but many things in life are not specifically based on knowledge, especially moral decisions and other inter-human relationship issues.One should also remember that scientists are formed as scientists. It's a profession just like any other and so it's common to find that scientists have lots of deficiencies in many other areas. They tend to develop a worldview in which everything is a problem to be made into a model and understood, and that approach will inevitably fail in many cases.
It is incomplete, but how is it problematic to have an incomplete view of the world, if no means exist to receive a reliable full view?So, in my view, that's the problem with what at least I call scientism. It makes prevalent a view of the world which is fundamentally incomplete.
I do not think reason is such a limited island. It is of course dependant on information, but given an infinite amount of time (and resources) I am pretty certain that almost everything could be solved by a combination of research and reason. And those things that cannot (usually because they are in the past and information is lost) just will always be holes in the knowledge. It is neither necessary nor desirable to fill this with unfounded belief.So reason is seen like a Island. Huge island but limited nonetheless. And belief is what will set you free from those limitations.
I would not agree on all of this. I believe that eyes are a sensor to this world, but I also know that eyes, together with what the brain does with the sensor information are not a completely reliable source of information. Belief in the own self is circular, because the own self is just defined by a certain experience. Basically, there is nothing to believe, because you take a phenomenon and ascribe a name to it. What nature that phenomenon takes is not that important here, but then again, we do know where the self is situated (the person's brain), so there's that.A careful analysis will make self evident the idea that without belief it is impossible to even act on the world. You have to believe that things are as they are. There's a sense of identity. You believe in your own self and in what your eyes see. So much so that it just becomes a truism. And in those dynamics lays science and not the other way around.
Pathological contrarians. Flat Earthers are generally all the same, just like Angular; Everything that's a well known scientific fact and a well established event in history is "a lie", it's all a conspiracy. One to undermine themselves and their beliefs (generally religious) and only them, with their greater intelligence can cut through the fakes and deliver the truth.I do not understand what a new tendency is to assert that the Earth is flat? Now everyone talk about it everywhere.
Science is the only way we can get actual knowledge. But that does not mean that science necessarily allows at each point of time, a yes or no answer to any given question. Because scientific methods may yet to be developed or crucial information be found or progress in other areas necessary to verify theses. But then we just do not know yet, end of story.
Well, it requires one distinction: Science is the only path to knowledge, but many things in life are not specifically based on knowledge, especially moral decisions and other inter-human relationship issues.
It is incomplete, but how is it problematic to have an incomplete view of the world, if no means exist to receive a reliable full view?
I do not think reason is such a limited island. It is of course dependant on information, but given an infinite amount of time (and resources) I am pretty certain that almost everything could be solved by a combination of research and reason. And those things that cannot (usually because they are in the past and information is lost) just will always be holes in the knowledge. It is neither necessary nor desirable to fill this with unfounded belief.
I would not agree on all of this. I believe that eyes are a sensor to this world, but I also know that eyes, together with what the brain does with the sensor information are not a completely reliable source of information. Belief in the own self is circular, because the own self is just defined by a certain experience. Basically, there is nothing to believe, because you take a phenomenon and ascribe a name to it. What nature that phenomenon takes is not that important here, but then again, we do know where the self is situated (the person's brain), so there's that.
Gauge symmetry is, in many ways, an odd foundation on which to build our best theories of physics. It is not a property of Nature, but rather a property of how we choose to describe Nature. Gauge symmetry is, at heart, a redundancy in our description of the world. Yet it is a redundancy that has enormous utility, and brings a subtlety and richness to those theories that enjoy it.
I know a guy who loves guns who adamantly argues that the government is responsible for the Las Vegas shooting. He's always scared that the government is trying to come and take his guns so they must have pulled this stunt to push everyone into voting to pass new legislation.I do not understand what a new tendency is to assert that the Earth is flat? Now everyone talk about it everywhere.
(Idealised*) dice rolls are already solved. A solution does not necessarily mean that you can say in advance what the result is, but that you can accurately describe the result. If it is a random event, identifying it as such and describing the random variable is solving the issue." I am pretty certain that almost everything could be solved by a combination of research and reason"
This is false. The simplest counter example is the throw of a dice. You cannot predict it, period. Not because you lack information but because the problem itself admits no real solution.
I will have to watch your videos later. But all that you describe here, is either not a question of knowledge, because it is merely a matter of pespective, or it is open to scientific exploration. The differences in perception and the role of the observer are open to be analysed by science. Whether our perception of reality accurately describes some higher meaning of reality (whatever that is supposed to mean) is a semantical issue, because in the end, what we perceive as reality is what we call reality and that is what is to be analysed scientifically.The sense that life as a whole is understandable from a scientific point of view is a product, in my opinion, of confirmation bias. The category of problems which can be completely solved is very small in comparison to the world itself. When you get farther from that category you progressively lose precision until you reach a point where you are effectively unable to make predictions. What we try to do as humans is to find those islands which enjoy regularity and thus are describable with laws.
Nevermind the fact that reality itself as we describe it is a hallucination:
This is confirmed from a neurological POV and also from a physical POV. Physical phenomena as we perceive them are dependent on us as observers. One remarkable example is the passage of time. The passage of time hinges on the distinction of two states with different levels of entropy, and the measurement of entropy depends on our inability to completely describe a system. This is not conjecture but stablished science.
The Eastern philosophers also had much to say about life and as far as I know they have the best understanding. So there's this concept (in Hindu philosophy) called Maya: Illusion, play, act. That's what life is. And everyone has a role to play. It's funny that Shakespeare said something along those lines and I thought it was a clever metaphor, but when you get down to it, it turns out as very real. So when you see a bunch of people Larping or something like that, recall that you are doing the same thing and for some reason, which I would like you to consider, you think that what you're doing is normal. That the belief that you have a past and a future is normal. And all sorts of things. Those experiences cannot be explained by science. They can be described to be sure and maybe explained away as "evolutionary adaptations". That's a nice way of taking away the wonder of life.
I agree, the language used to describe reality is a limiting factor and this is why I said, that additional scientific methods may have to be developed over the millenia that will follow.If one wanted to go deeper into this business then one would arrive at the conclusions of Wittgenstein. We are limited by our language. This is one of those self-evident things that one has to say from time to time. Every model of the world that you could have hinges on the language in which it is formulated. And that language at its core is undefined. So for instance when Newton famously formulated his theory of gravity he had to employ a variable for time. He did not know what was time and he left it undefined, just implying that it was a universal quantity which determined the flow of motions in the Universe.
The rational thing to do here, is not to take a definite stance on these additional variables, until it is explored properly. There are different possibilities for them, but one, from my mathematical point of view, is, that the actual object may be accurately described by a function that can be extended to a larger domain, where the larger domain offers a more elegant way of formulating the formula and the necessary restrictions then allow to precisely capture the required function. It could also be that the function on the larger domain actually describes reality and the restrictions chosen are acutally only there because we project reality in a certain way. Many other different possibilites are there, but neither goes contrary to the claim that the scientific method in general can be used to determine and describe all objective aspects of reality.So still one could say that the problem is the theory has spurious information and is therefore meaningless but yet in this way it is so clearly described...? And it goes for Electromagnetism, Gravity, you name it. What's going on? One wild supposition is that actually the constraints that kill the spurious information are actually a feature of the observers. This would put a clear limitation to our appreciation of the world.
Anyways I don't pretend to settle this debate. I just want to point out that your points made are very naive.
The rational thing to do here, is not to take a definite stance on these additional variables, until it is explored properly. There are different possibilities for them, but one, from my mathematical point of view, is, that the actual object may be accurately described by a function that can be extended to a larger domain, where the larger domain offers a more elegant way of formulating the formula and the necessary restrictions then allow to precisely capture the required function. It could also be that the function on the larger domain actually describes reality and the restrictions chosen are acutally only there because we project reality in a certain way. Many other different possibilites are there, but neither goes contrary to the claim that the scientific method in general can be used to determine and describe all objective aspects of reality.
Why has this topic become popular? Do many people believe that the earth is flat?
It was mostly one guy debating (who did believe in flat earth)Why has this topic become popular? Do many people believe that the earth is flat?
One should also remember that scientists are formed as scientists. It's a profession just like any other and so it's common to find that scientists have lots of deficiencies in many other areas. They tend to develop a worldview in which everything is a problem to be made into a model and understood, and that approach will inevitably fail in many cases.
Metaphysics is a dark ocean without shores or lighthouse, strewn with many a philosophic wreck.
Scientism is a pseudo-notion, nothing more than the expression of an irrational fear that science will inevitably supplant metaphysical inquiry. This is failing to acknowledge the fact that science can never become ideology or faith as the scientific method prevents any kind dogmatic truth.
Ultimately, science will be able to explain all the phenomena in the world insofar as they pertain to how we perceive it. Much like Laplace's demon our world is inherently explainable, because we cannot perceive the world other than being fully deterministic. When it comes to the Noumenon, i.e. the things that go beyond our limited capacity of human understanding, we will never be able to know anything.
This is what Kant ultimately intended to convey when he made the distinction between the Phenomenon (the reality as perceived by the apriori structures of your understanding) and the Noumenon (the reality that exists independently from us humans). Science is very aware of that distinction, which is the reason why scientists never make metaphysical statements in the name of science. It is also the reason why anything goes when it comes to metaphysics, or as Kant would say:
In any case, since science is a purely rational and empirical approach, it can never degenerate into ideology, otherwise it simply stops being science and becomes pseudo-science. Or as Aristotle would say, science is an intellectual virtue and not a moral virtue, as such it does not allow excess. In other words, there can never be too much reason, too much education, too much knowledge, too much truth or, in essence, too much science.
Science itself by definition is not dogmatic. Scientists however as people are just as fallible as anyone else.
Sure, I agree with that statement. But that is, as you mention, not a science problem, but a people problem, hence why I merely took issue with the notion of "scientism", because it falsely attributes a human fault to the domain of science. It's a notion that's often thrown around by religious people in order to attack science and make it look like a religion, when in fact the epistemological approach of science is fundamentally different from religion.
I maintain that Truth is a pathless land, and you cannot approach it by any path whatsoever, by any religion, by any sect. ... The moment you follow someone you cease to follow Truth.
I believe this falls in to the Speed Trap Towns bucket. If a town makes its revenue by being overzealous on speeding tickets then they are likely to abuse the position they hold over everyone who is held accountable to the doctrine that empowers the police.But scientism is belief in science (i.e. scientific method), rather than belief in scientists?
. This is failing to acknowledge the fact that science can never become ideology or faith as the scientific method prevents any kind dogmatic truth.
The scientific community itself can become dogmatic. That is why some sayScience itself by definition is not dogmatic. Scientists however as people are just as fallible as anyone else. That's why they're held accountable by the scientific community.
The German physicist Max Planck said that science advances one funeral at a time. Or more precisely: "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it." -bloomberg.com
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-funeral-at-a-time-the-latest-nobel-proves-it
The scientific community itself can become dogmatic. That is why some say
Scientists will cling to their preconceived notions, and dismiss anomalies or exceptions, and ridicule controversial alternative theories.
A new generation of scientists with an open mind will try and find the truth of controversial theories.
That is why things like determinism are still controversial to some.
Of course that has nothing to say about flat earth, as flat earth would basically demand either brainwashing of scientists or replacement with NPCs within some sort of simulation, a simulation generating evidence of sphericity left and right. As too many fields and too much evidence supports the spherical nature of the earth.
As far as I understand the term, and I could be mistaken, it refers to a the application of science outside its well defined domain. The implication is that since it is being applied carelessly, it stops being science and is now pseudo-science. So in that way it might be a disingenuous term, in the same category as toxic masculinity.
Accusations of scientism are an all-purpose, wild-card smear... When someone puts forward a scientific theory that [religious critics] really don't like, they just try to discredit it as 'scientism'. But when it comes to facts, and explanations of facts, science is the only game in town".
Many people will justify their opinions using science and reason as shields thereby becoming, quite ironically, dogmatic, and betraying the "spirit" of science which is free inquiry and rigorous work.
Scientists will cling to their preconceived notions, and dismiss anomalies or exceptions, and ridicule controversial alternative theories.
A new generation of scientists with an open mind will try and find the truth of controversial theories.
Which is only proof in the pudding that the scientific method works as intended and does not tend towards dogmatism.