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Old 10-29-2005, 11:19 AM   #371
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Originally Posted by Buridan
NOGO: There is no such thing as THE Scientific method. The methods one uses will to some degree vary from science to science. However, the game is still to form hypotheses and check them against data.

Astronomy is a science, even if it so far has been proven rather difficult to create stars in laboratories :Cheeky:
I agree that astronomy is a science but it does not use the scientific method. Or rather much of the knowledge which is astronomy was not obtained using the scientific method.

The scientific method demands that one verifies one's hypotheses through experiments.
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Old 10-29-2005, 11:38 AM   #372
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Originally Posted by Lafcadio
You already spent a lot of your time googling to face this discussion, so this attitude is hypocritical. It's amusing how much effort you invest in picking and distorting the facts to match your agenda. However, as reading this reply from yours it seems your tone went more civil I am willing to have this chat with you
The hypocrisy is all yours I'm afraid. I kept sustaining the points I've made in reply to your post, but you refuse to accept any evidence. What can I do more? You have preconceived ideas not only about Bruno, but also about Kepler.

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You claim that he formulated a specific area calculation method (Archimede's) for circles, then changed the shapes into ellipses and preserved the same area calculation method based on the assumption of circles?? But needless of this rhetoric you already accused him of using the same method of Archimede. If you ever opened that book whose cover you pictured you'd know your claim is false.
I was confusing it, it was probably late.

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As for what Kepler did, he realized the orbit is not necessarily a circle before he formulated the Second Law. He disagreed with many astronomers of this time (even before becoming Brahe's assistant) in not taking the models as granted, but in using mathematics to model the existing observations.
Using mathematics to impose metaphysical ideas upon the observations. See the solids.

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Nope, because I already refuted them (and waiting for your counter-arguments, but reading your reply it seems I'll be still waiting). So it can't be a straw man as you haven't proven anything regarding your earlier claims.
The only pill I should take is the pill of patience.
Your way of refuting means stubbornly ignoring the evidence. I already showed how Kepler was Greek in his thinking. I already showed that he held a lot of things he could not prove. I already showed that he relied on Tycho Brahe's observations to formulate the Laws(not on his, as you sustained - and you tried to imply I was saying he never observed anything). I already showed that his path to the Laws was a mixture of mysticism and scientific ideas. I have shown that he held a lot of things that you accused Bruno of, but still you keep your Double Standard.

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Straw man. Quote me talking on Kepler as a "perfect scientist".
This is how you pictured him, exaggerating in order to contrast him with Bruno: the rational and mature scientist who 'held little opinions he could not prove'.

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Googled on one and you found the other? Natural philosophy doesn't start with Francis Bacon. Nor exactly with Roger Bacon, but that guy is symbolic enough for the origins of natural philosophy in Western thought. Talking of "renaissantist taxonomies"
Yeah, I googled Roger and I got Francis. The motor must be broken. Isn't it amazing how much I discovered these days googling, not to mention I have to study Medicine all day? But you should know Francis better, he shaped your understanding of the scientific method prior to our last encounter. No one said that natural philosophy started with him, but he was the first to talk systematically about the scientific method.

The debate is centered around the Scientific Revolution. Those natural philosophers are the ones closest to fit the term 'scientist'. You needed a wider term that would fit whatever you want.

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They are expressed as distinct ideas.
Not quite: the expression of God's creation is via geometry. This was Kepler's opinion all the time.

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Which sometimes was called magnetism. Also a distinct idea of these three laws. This "guilt by association" argument seems the only argument based on evidence (to diminish Kepler's scientific attitude by emphasizing his mystical thoughts). Pity it's fallacious and short-sighted.
What is not distinct from the three Laws? With this argument you can dismiss whatever Kepler said or thought, and reduce him to his laws. I am not trying to diminish his empirical or scientific approach, just to judge him in the totality of his thinking. We were talking about Kepler vs. Bruno, right? But, this is important in showing Kepler's interpretation of his findings and of Nature in general. He was caught up in teleological interpretations and metaphysical ones, together with his accent on taking observations into account.

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I dare you to prove I am not thinking. While it's so much easier for me to prove you don't have the necessary knowledge of the history and literature to think correctly on this issue. I already did in some accounts, depends on my patience and how much you stick around to show that most of the data you displayed here are googled-gathered and matched to your agenda. Thinking without knowledge cannot create meaningful results. So improve your knowledge to actually have something to say here.
We will see. As for your attacks and unsustained 'google argument' you should better deal with the arguments. You had no idea about Kepler's position about Astrology, or how important was Tycho's legacy. You knew some quote taking out of context and on that one you are basing your whole defense. For example.

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You guess wrong. The 12th grade understanding was dedicated to you (you haven't proven so far to handle any non-google knowledge, I am still waiting for that signal - those Kuhn quotes indicate at least a book in your bookcase , but I won't invest so much trust in you at once) as it was an answer to you. However you can't deny it pictures the things fair enough.
Lafcadio, you should drop the hypocrisy once and for all: may I remind you that when we debated in the 'To John Powell, strong atheist: Why does God not exist?' in the EoG forum, you came up with some baconian understanding of the scientific method based on induction? Do I need to remind you that I was the one that introduced you to the model you keep presenting?

It is called the Hypothetico - Deductive model of the scientific method, a name you never used. You have no idea about how a prediction is formed within it. You keep making an oversimplificated and naive presentation of it.

Lafcadio: What?? Kepler observed data. Analysed empirical data. Formulated a theory. And predicted astronomical events. This is science.

What theory did he formulate? Ptolemy also predicted astronomical events. Thales too.

You might want to review that thread. So far student Lafcadio you get a C-. Although I am glad that you managed to change your views on the scientific method after our encounter.

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No, Buridan told you - John of Salisbury. If you mean who made that quote famous to the average joe in the modern world, I don't care - I know it from studying western medieval thought, and as long as it was my paraphrase on this metaphor, I think that's all that matters.
Yeah, right, you are in the same position maestro. John of Salisbury is not the same with Bernard de Chartre. Some study you did.

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I'm talking on a more approximate level than you regarding names and years, because I'm talking from memory, while you're talking from google. But addressing your whining: if you're interested in certain parts of history, knowing some names and years is a must. If you're not interested, what the hell are you doing on this topic, anyway?
I wasn't talking about approximation, I was talking about understanding. If you are interested in debating some philosophy of science, it takes more than
memory and names.

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If you think that book of Einstein is over the books mentioned in this topic you obviously haven't read any. That book contains (almost) no physics, no maths, just various considerations regarding different issues (science, life) in a very informal and friendly way.
<edit>Did you even read it? Or did you just browse it in the bookstore? :banghead:

Over the book mentioned? It's a collection of essays, genius. (almost) no physics? Just go and look for 'Cum vad eu lumea?/Teoria relativitatii pe intelesul tuturor', Humanistas 2000, editia a IIa. Then come back.

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Post hoc. You haven't proven anything. You fallaciously connected theories like that of the 5 solids with his three laws, though it's obvious one is not derived from the other. That they were two alternative theories it slipped from you.
You did not get it: he did not arrive at his three laws out of thin air. You keep isolating those laws from the rest of his thinking.

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If you could tell me what're exactly the scientific grounds of Einstein distrusting quantum mechanics you would make such a great point here.
First, Einstein did not distrust quantum mechanics, he had difficulties accepting Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. He got the Nobel in 1921 for his discoveries supporting Quantum Mechanics, not for Relativity.

You have to understand that his skepticism was justified: we have mountains of evidence, and macro- theories, like Relativity that are contrary to this acceptance. And to this day we are still looking for reconciliation. His skepticism was not irrational as you suggest.

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Arguments from Book's Front Cover must be the latest breaking news in fallacies world. Have you at least noticed that there's no "only" in your counter-evidences?
You were WRONG. Get it? The fact that you are so refractary is just confirming what I said: emotionalism. And it was not only the cover: there was also a quote from 1619. I am not going to bother anymore.

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I'm sure all biologists know to prove to the tiniest details all the physics otherwise how could be they so mystical and absurd to take it as granted. Not to say about those stupid theorists who do not double-check the data gathered in decades of experiments. In fact, any scientist knows to prove the entire science he relies on, not to say that he also experimented it all.

Yeah, mathematics in science, that's such a preposterous thing. They should've used poetry.

The hypotheses should be some self-evident things, otherwise obviously they couldn't be scientific because too much luck it's involved. I mean, how could one assume exactly that and not something else?

I see forgot to mention things about dealing with evidence, testing and prediction. Well, in time, when you'll find about them I hope you will mention them.
From all these, indeed, I have no idea about what Philosophy of Science while you know them all!
I AM NOT SAYING THAT THE LAWS ARE UNSCIENTIFIC, I SAID THAT THERE WAS NO METHOD.

All I want to do is emphasize that the process that finally drove Kepler to his laws was not totally scientific, and was mixed with mysticism and irrationality. What you want is a fully matured scientific thinking in 1600. Well, keep dreaming. What I want to prove is that Kepler was guilty of a lot of things that you blamed Bruno of. That is the point. Kepler was of course, not a philosopher. But Bruno has his merits too. And he is the one that got sacrificed in this Scientific Revolution. Partially because he suported the idea that got the whole thing moving, partially for his advanced ideas that contradicted the christian dogma.

Ok, a more detaliated analysis of Kepler's achievement:

1. The first question: is the Sun in the center of the World or the Earth?

Kepler decides that the Copernican model is true. Not based on evidence (the evidence finally came when his Laws were confirmed), but on irrational mystical motives. Neoplatonician and Pythagorean.

2. Data: collecting observations. Tycho Brahe. Very precise, using excellent vision and instruments for ~25 years. On a nightly basis, helped by assitants.

3. Second question: the exact orbit of Mars.

Where is the hypothesis? Copernicanism was the theory he already held. Was the hypothesis : Planets move on elliptical orbits with the Sun in one focus? No. He did not formulate this hypothesis in order to verify it then with Brahe's observations.

The next step is of true scientific importance: the choice to trust more Tycho's observations than the theory. If he did this because of an emphasis on empiricism, on evidence or because of his pythagorean motivation of finding the mind of God in the geometry of nature, is debatable. Maybe it was both.

After this, the whole problem is mathematical: it is about finding the trajectory of some objects or points after you calculate their relative positions. Here probably the hardest task was to overcome the dogma of keeping only the perfect shape, the circle, and accomodating the model to the data.

The problem of discovering the orbit relies on the other crucial aspect too: that the Earth is not fixed, it is moving, and the Sun is in the center. Without these preliminary ideas, the orbits are impossible to be determined correctly.

The discovery was a process of trial and error. No method involved. If you would have the task of discovering some orbits on another planet you could not use Kepler's method because there is none.

4. Kepler discovers the correct orbit of Mars. Ok. Is this a hypothesis? No. It is a mathematical derivation from the data. It cannot be use to predict the orbits of the other planets because it is a particular descriptive relation. You cannot make a deductive prediction from knowing the orbit of Mars concerning any other planet. Nothing prevents Mars o. from being elliptical, and the other orbits circular.

5. He had to determine the other orbits individually and see if the relation was verified. Same thing for all the other Laws.

6. These Laws are phenomenally descriptive. They are not physical general laws that tell us how the world works.

7. They don't predict novel facts. Of course they predict the same relation for the planets. But they are not general laws. Unlike Newton's laws for bodies.

8. They have no explanatory power. They are not part of a theory. They don't tell us anything about why the planets move that way. Newton was going to answer that. And Kepler's interpretation is still mystical and teleological. It is not scientific. He still tries to find a divine metaphysical reason for these particular form.

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You forgot an emphasis. That means to deal with the evidence. Random is a relative world. One can say the attempts to create the model of the atom were random, that doesn't rule them out as scientific. Forming a hypothesis always contains a degree of randomness. No randomness, it means they were already known - no hypothesis.

Now don't make Kuhn a god in others' biographies. Kepler worshipping the sun? Be serious.
While about the apparent sphere of science, apparent is a good word.
1. He derived the laws from observation by finding mathematical relations. He did not propose explanatory hypotheses.

2. Kuhn meant the emphasis and the privileged place the sun had in Kepler's neoplatonical universe.

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So, you found Kuhn. We're talking about science and scientific method for few pages already, and only now you discovered Kuhn and keep him mentioned here
No, I looked what Kuhn said about Kepler. (it's not too much).

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Stop repeating this post hoc and do actually prove it. I already argued that in Mysteria Kepler discussed both models. Can you prove that Kepler chose heliocentrism for his mystical beliefs and not for the mathematical elegance (which is an equivalent of the principle of parsimony)? That Kepler did not choose heliocentrism because it had less problems in explaining certain facts - why Mercur and Venus are never observed at a too large distance from the Sun, for instance? This goes also for you and also for Kuhn. Are these too be ignored and consider Kepler's mystical formation as a single cause for his preferrence? I don't think so.
Keep searching. The idea is that the geometrical harmony which he inserted motivated by Pythagorean ideas was the one. He was really happy that he found that Copernicanism is true, so he sent the Mysterium to Brahe and Galileo.

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How come? Kepler said that heliocentrism and geocentrism are (almost?) equivalent from mathematical pov. Don't you think he could arrive to heliocentrism through his mathematical attempts in a similar fashion he arrived to elliptical orbits? It's finally a matter of time, hard work and luck. Of course, this is a huge speculative "what if". But you can't say "had he kept -> the end".
I already argued above.

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Indeed. But amazingly this assumption we have even today in science (with another - or without, depends on pov - justification). That universe is ruled by mathematic non-contradictory laws. Do we have proof? No. Did Kepler have proof? No. He chose his god as a proof. Now to consider all Kepler's work tributary to neoplatonism because he thought that mathematics can explain the Universe it seems a bit too much. This was an assumption, a premise (an important one, of course). It was not the evidence of his work.
Correct. But I am not trying to reduce him to his neoplatonism. Just to emphasise this part too. Why is it ok for Kepler, but not for Bruno?

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IIRC p->q can be rendered in causal logic. But on topic, between the formation of his ideas, between the publishing of his books, there's a time passing there. Ideas on paper are implications, in reality they are caused events, as they succeed in different moments of time (and in our case, we can say even life).
I was indeed superfluous in my accusation.
Ok.

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I was not trying to make from magnetism his idea, or that it was his first idea he had about solar system's dynamics, just to point you out that even you try to diminish his role by emphasizing his non-scientific ideas, beyond that, he was still open to, and perhaps he was even looking for naturalistic explanations.
You can take a good laugh at him giving life to Sun, but when you'll read his other alternatives you'll realize that he was looking for a drive for his model. That's why Newton said he owed so much to Kepler.
Let's say explanations. Yes, you can see a change in his wording as he
advances, and sometimes it is amazing how can he hold such ideas simultaneously. Eh, you need to be careful how you interpret that search for a force. His mystical view of the sun went well with the facts. It evolved with time though. So, how come isn't this supporting the importance of his metaphysical beliefs in his choice of the model? You seem to be confirming that. If you read La Cena, you will see that Bruno too is offering explanations for Copernicanism: some metaphysical, some geometrical, or based on observations and optics [with mistakes of course] or thought experiments. Use the same standard for both then and i'll subscribe.

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Oh no. I even accepted several times already that I have absolutely no problems with his mystical ideas. Just that they don't make his approach less naturalistic, less scientific.
There were a lot of things to be known in his time, for some you could take a naturalistic approach, for some you couldn't. Kepler correctly identified the Moon as source of tides, but I don't emphasize on that because I don't think he had a scientific justification for it, it had a similar weight with his ideas about solar system's drive.
But this is the key point: these mystical ideas proved to be supporting correct points. They meant a change in perspective, just like Copernicanism. Galileo had nada, but still supported the model. Let's say it was more parsimonious. But then, Bruno's views on Cosmology are in the same category. They were very profound and I can't help thinking if a scientist would have investigated them were we would be today. Just like Copernicanism.

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Straw man. You previously talked about the 5 solids as being the reason of his laws, which is wrong and you abandoned it.
Now this is a straw man.

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Now you focus on his mathematical-ruled universe as a proof that his theory is neopythagoreic. On that reasoning, our entire science is neopythagoreic
He could've believed in IPU for all that matters, his work shows scientific approach. He's one of those guys that created the "scientific revolution". The history was written, Kepler was analysed.
I do not focus now. I gave you a quote about his geometry implanted around. His works show scientific approach. I agree. But I am making a criticism to make you see that Bruno's views were not so 'crazy' or useless.

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Now please tell me how can you calculate the position using 3 points, in movement, for Earth's orbit.
I don't understand what are you asking. Please rephrase/clarify.

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Also, what is the method for finding coincidences?
I don't understand what are you asking. Please rephrase/clarify.
How can you calculate your position or Earth's using a system using only 2 fixed point?

As for the second
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Is his model not explanatory? Wasn't his model most accurate, best predictive models up to modern times? Oh, it didn't explain gravity? It didn't explain the star formation, and the size of the universe? He didn't intend to, he had no idea what gravity is, how large is the universe (that was practically impossible to observe).
His model does not explain anything: it is simply descriptive.

And his model was not that good: Newton had to ignore the mutual attraction of the planets in order to obtain the same orbits.

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He did that too. But he did many others and you're still ignorant on them.
No shit. You are the one reducing him to the Laws.

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Not quite, but he had a naturalistic approach.
What is naturalistic for you?

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... and ignorance shows its ugly head. Dude, if you don't know history just refrain to talk about it. This is no parody, but lack of knowledge. You have a problem with monks? You can't accept that much of modern science was developed by religious persons? Spare me of such anti-religious bias!
Ho! You need to spare me of your christian crusade of vindicating the Church for its bull shit.

I knew you were going to ignore the philosophical problems of science by using naturalistic philosophy, and strech the term so anything would fit in it.

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Straw man. I was not talking (nor you replying to, in case you haven't realized until now) about various views on astrology he had, but about a certain one - how the astrology (he practices) is the foolish daughter of the mathematical astronomy, and the necessity of him practicing it to earn his life. You claimed that the astrology I quoted is the astrology practices by sharlatans/idiots and you were shown wrong when the quote was revealed in its complete form. End of story.
End of your assertions. You are still under the spell of your quote. He keeps criticising that Astrology, and talking about the 'good' stuff in Astrology. Why would someone wrote a book about the more certain foundations of a foolish thing? Think goddamit.

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Nonsense. You admitted yourself that he was aware and took this idea from Gilbert.
Well Gilber was no 'saint'. Those explanations were the rule then.

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Why don't you go back and see how I tried to keep my discussion with spin free from ad hominems and how I refused repeatedly to answer him just to avoid the long chains of ad hominems from both sides. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate how spin writes, and I read many of his posts on regular basis, but you'll see that often he challanges also the persons he debates, especially when they disagree with him. Sometimes is funny, sometimes is annoying.
While about me, you could see that at least on this thread I had some civil exchange of replies with some of the participants (and even some with spin) though we disagreed. So your prejudice is just shown false.
And even it had been true that's not an excuse for casting the first stone. You did it, now you face the consequences. You want it otherwise, change your approach. You can already notice that my tone sweetened once yours did, so perhaps this is a way for you to follow. The choice is yours.
Well, as far as I remember the only thing was an allusion to the circus. Your reply was about me being stupid, schizophrenic, (do you even know what that is? It has nothing to do with Multiple personality disorder), dyslexic, just like you did with spin and the freedom of speech. Well, we can surely improve this situation.

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You don't get it. Nor you know what this fallacy is about. Even creationist sites have references (you think they don't quote Darwin?) and PhDs.
Yes, and they fall under the fallacy. It's not the case there. Just look for one of the books cited.

Just read about it. Use your original site. It explaines it pretty well.

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Your deeper problem is that you don't know history, nor logic.
What if future evidence will not support your point? What then? The line of reasoning is as you don't know with certainty if future evidence will support you, there's absolutely no logic necessity for your claims to be true. Hope is not an argument.
Please don't. Calm down. What you argue here only confirms what I said.

Bobinius:
To rely on the premise that 'Future evidence will support my conclusion' is to presuppose already that your claim is correct (the point you are trying to prove). The premise is just as unsupported as the conclusion.

Before accusing someone that they don't know Logic, you should remember you are on foreign territory.

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Above you created a straw man, a fallacy of composition and several others. You reduced a case of uncertainty to a case of certainty by choosing only one possibility.
You don't know what that means. Just fabulating.

Do you what is a deductive inference?

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No, it was just a rhetoric to point at your straw man. Everyone means more than your office mates. When you'll get out of your room, you'll realize that.
:wave: There is no universal agreement.

Think about Kepler: he was the only one believing that the orbits were elliptical. If everyone thought they were circular, wasn't he making an argument from pigheadedness?
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Old 10-29-2005, 02:16 PM   #373
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Originally Posted by Bobinius
How can you calculate your position or Earth's using a system using only 2 fixed point?
I wasn't too clear here.

I mean: how can you calculate the position of the Earth using a 3 point system that has 2 moving points?
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Old 10-29-2005, 02:41 PM   #374
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Originally Posted by NOGO
I agree that astronomy is a science but it does not use the scientific method. Or rather much of the knowledge which is astronomy was not obtained using the scientific method.

The scientific method demands that one verifies one's hypotheses through experiments.
A good advice: Please do not show your ignorance of science by making such a statement, especially as you may be basing your world view on "the scientific model".

What I think you imply by the word "experiment" is not used by all sciences. Science is rather about quantifiable testing of hypotheses, whether through experiments or evaluation of available data, e.g. through statistical methods.

Or you may perhaps have access to some privileged knowledge of what "science" is?
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Old 10-29-2005, 04:42 PM   #375
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Originally Posted by Buridan
A good advice: Please do not show your ignorance of science by making such a statement, especially as you may be basing your world view on "the scientific model".
Some good advice: stop the overtly rude responses to other forum members. Such action ultimately ends in offenders being thrown off the list. (That is my learned opinion.)

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Originally Posted by Buridan
What I think you imply by the word "experiment" is not used by all sciences. Science is rather about quantifiable testing of hypotheses, whether through experiments or evaluation of available data, e.g. through statistical methods.
Some more advice: please try to understand what is being talked about. When a person formulates a theory, there may not be the science to back it up, even though the theory is based on science. Demonstrations of theories may take a long time or may never be performed. Steps may be taken to falsify certain theories without necessarily verifying them, in order to show that the theory is consistent with the state of science.

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Originally Posted by Buridan
Or you may perhaps have access to some privileged knowledge of what "science" is?
This is the sort of low rhetoric you can do without.


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Old 10-30-2005, 02:59 AM   #376
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Originally Posted by spin
Some good advice: stop the overtly rude responses to other forum members. Such action ultimately ends in offenders being thrown off the list. (That is my learned opinion.)
It is rather interesting to observe that my comment on one member's seemingly lack of knowledge in a specific field was not countered by providing more insight about the subject matter under discussion. As you did not defend his statement or use of terms, I take it to imply that you cannot defend them either.

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Originally Posted by spin
Some more advice: please try to understand what is being talked about. When a person formulates a theory, there may not be the science to back it up, even though the theory is based on science. Demonstrations of theories may take a long time or may never be performed. Steps may be taken to falsify certain theories without necessarily verifying them, in order to show that the theory is consistent with the state of science.
I am sorry to say that this is not my impression of what was being talked about.

1: NOGO made unqualifed assertions about "The Scientific Method" as if this was one and only one thing, and I made some comments and questions on this, in several messages.

2: The issue at hand here (if it is about Kepler or Bruno) is not whether there is "science to back it up" at the moment, it is whether those making assertions have any interest in following various quantifiable methods to "back it up" at all. If they are making attempts - by following more or less the quantifiable Mathematics or Physics of their day - they may be considered as serious Natural Philosophers or Scientists (a far later term), whatever original source there may be for their original assertions. If they do not, they will not qualify to those terms. IMHO Kepler does qualify, along with Copernicus, Galileio and Newton, Bruno does not.

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This is the sort of low rhetoric you can do without.
Whenever someone makes an unquailified assertion which goes against the broad view among Philosophers of Science (like Popper, Lakatos, Bauer, Brush, Hull, Laudan, Carnap, Ruse etc.) of what science is, and what kind of sciences there are, and how methods do differ among these, I find it important to ask what the source for that view is. Or we are stuck with just common misperceptions which are rather unhelpfull in a serious discussion.

So, sorry if my question sounded a bit too ironic. It was simply intended as a humorous way of asking for sources, I now understand it does not sound equally humorous to all:Cheeky:

So my question is: Where do these assertions, which make it seem like there is one and only one "Scientific Method", come from?
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Old 10-30-2005, 03:38 AM   #377
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Originally Posted by Buridan
It is rather interesting to observe that my comment on one member's seemingly lack of knowledge in a specific field was not countered by providing more insight about the subject matter under discussion. As you did not defend his statement or use of terms, I take it to imply that you cannot defend them either.
You make statements which you have insufficient knowledge to make. You can take whatever you like, but take it with a grain of salt.

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Originally Posted by Buridan
I am sorry to say that this is not my impression of what was being talked about.
Mine was a general reaction to your statement whose core was "Science is rather about quantifiable testing of hypotheses", which I found limited.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
1: NOGO made unqualifed assertions about "The Scientific Method" as if this was one and only one thing, and I made some comments and questions on this, in several messages.
I wasn't dealing with NOGO when I made my statement.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
2: The issue at hand here (if it is about Kepler or Bruno) is not whether there is "science to back it up" at the moment, it is whether those making assertions have any interest in following various quantifiable methods to "back it up" at all. If they are making attempts - by following more or less the quantifiable Mathematics or Physics of their day - they may be considered as serious Natural Philosophers or Scientists (a far later term), whatever original source there may be for their original assertions. If they do not, they will not qualify to those terms. IMHO Kepler does qualify, along with Copernicus, Galileio and Newton, Bruno does not.
You're starting to sound like the old Roman who kept ending his speeches "et carthago delenda est."

Bruno came to his conclusions through available knowledge, uniformity and logic. To be able to scientifically demonstrate them was beyond anyone's abilities at the time. Bruno's tools for developing theories were scientific tools.

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Originally Posted by Buridan
Whenever someone makes an unquailified assertion which goes against the broad view among Philosophers of Science (like Popper, Lakatos, Bauer, Brush, Hull, Laudan, Carnap, Ruse etc.)...
Sound like drug companies to me.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
...of what science is, and what kind of sciences there are, and how methods do differ among these, I find it important to ask what the source for that view is. Or we are stuck with just common misperceptions which are rather unhelpfull in a serious discussion.
Do you have problems with the notion that a thinker can form hypotheses which cannot be scientifically verified at the time of formulation?

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Originally Posted by Buridan
So, sorry if my question sounded a bit too ironic.
I didn't say ironic. I merely said low rhetoric.

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Originally Posted by Buridan
It was simply intended as a humorous way of asking for sources, I now understand it does not sound equally humorous to all.
I see no such intent. Your back-peddling doesn't change your original tone.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
So my question is: Where do these assertions, which make it seem like there is one and only one "Scientific Method", come from?
I think you are attempting to make too much out of a definite article.


spin
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Old 10-30-2005, 07:56 AM   #378
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
You make statements which you have insufficient knowledge to make. You can take whatever you like, but take it with a grain of salt.
Beg your pardon? Which statements? What salt?

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Mine was a general reaction to your statement whose core was "Science is rather about quantifiable testing of hypotheses", which I found limited.
For anything to be called "scientific" it has to have quantifiable elements. Else it is or mere opinions, reports or speculations - all of which of course may also be part of science. But as isolated elements they do not make it science as such, if there is such a thing

Quote:
Bruno came to his conclusions through available knowledge, uniformity and logic. To be able to scientifically demonstrate them was beyond anyone's abilities at the time. Bruno's tools for developing theories were scientific tools..
This is your version of "et carthago delenda est." If Bruno did science, why did not later scientists build on Bruno? Where did he show that he even was interested in doing advanced Geometry and Mathematics at all, like Copernicus before him and Kepler just a few years later?

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Sound like drug companies to me.
A statement which does not excactly strengthen your reputation as one well versed in the area of Philosophy of Science.

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Do you have problems with the notion that a thinker can form hypotheses which cannot be scientifically verified at the time of formulation?
Not at all. Does anyone else?

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I see no such intent. Your back-peddling doesn't change your original tone.
Tone and experience of intent is very much in the eye of the beholder. But I do notice that your intent seems very much to focus on my way of expressing things, rather than dealing with the subject matter at hand.

Quote:
I think you are attempting to make too much out of a definite article.
As long as noone answers my questions about what was being meant with "The scientific method", and instead chooses to focus on their feelings around my "intentions", I am inclined to think it is an attempt to make too little out of that definite article.
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Old 10-30-2005, 07:58 PM   #379
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
Beg your pardon? Which statements? What salt?
Please read what is said to you in context. You made this erroneous leap: "As you did not defend his statement or use of terms, I take it to imply that you cannot defend them either." Note the word "take" in your statement which I played upon. You are not a mindreader. So anyone should take your efforts at such with a grain of salt.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
For anything to be called "scientific" it has to have quantifiable elements. Else it is or mere opinions, reports or speculations - all of which of course may also be part of science. But as isolated elements they do not make it science as such, if there is such a thing
You are ignoring the formation of hypotheses.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
This is your version of "et carthago delenda est."
So you liked this use of the phrase. Your application of it is merely appreciation and of little consequence.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
If Bruno did science, why did not later scientists build on Bruno? Where did he show that he even was interested in doing advanced Geometry and Mathematics at all, like Copernicus before him and Kepler just a few years later?
Firstly Bruno's works were placed on the List. Galileo for example could never show dependence on a heretic. Now Bruno, as I said, was not a scientist in the sense that he didn't make observations himself, though this did not stop him from formulating hypotheses based on the science he knew.

You are making artificial separations for a time in which such separations did not exist. Strangely, Bruno attempted to obtain a post at the university in Padua in mathematics, a post awarded to Galileo.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
A statement which does not excactly strengthen your reputation as one well versed in the area of Philosophy of Science.
Your citing of a list of names was pretty useless in the context.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
Quote:
Do you have problems with the notion that a thinker can form hypotheses which cannot be scientifically verified at the time of formulation?
Not at all. Does anyone else?
Do you have problems with the notion that a thinker can form scientific hypotheses which cannot be scientifically verified at the time of formulation?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
Tone and experience of intent is very much in the eye of the beholder.
It's not that simple, Buridan. Your tone was clearly aggressive in impact, whether it was your intent or not. I think your coyness is merely a cover up.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buridan
But I do notice that your intent seems very much to focus on my way of expressing things, rather than dealing with the subject matter at hand.
I have consistently dealt with the topic of Bruno being hypocritically treated by those who would try to assign him to the sidelines of his era. I have also pointed out that you are not dealing with the subject when you employ empty rhetoric for no useful purposes. Your quibbling over a definite article is further example of your having got off track. I have no interest in following you off.

We have come no further from you denying that a person can advocate science without necessarily being a scientist. You must accept that Bruno advocated the copernican view of the solar system. However, through hypothesis extended that system to apply to all stars, using a well established scientific means of uniformity. There is nothing belief driven in this act. Your and Lafcadio's paltry attempts to paint Bruno's efforts in a poor light are simply hypocritical. He was silenced because he supported scientific views, views which were interpreted as theological by his inquisitors.

He had two options ahead of him: 1) recant his knowledge of the world as he had come to understand it, after having taught it wherever he went in Europe, and live imprisoned with that knowledge suppressed for the rest of his days, or 2) defy those who wanted to silence his views. He was in a no-win situation.

History remembers him for his originality of thought, for his thought experiments regarding the universe which ultimately proved correct, for his defiance in the face of corrupt power whose only recourse was to kill the man.

He said to those who were sentencing him to death:

"Perhaps your fear in passing judgment on me is greater than mine in receiving it."


spin
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Old 10-31-2005, 12:28 AM   #380
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The Great Debate continued:

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Please read what is said to you in context. You made this erroneous leap: "As you did not defend his statement or use of terms, I take it to imply that you cannot defend them either." Note the word "take" in your statement which I played upon. You are not a mindreader. So anyone should take your efforts at such with a grain of salt.
Ah, humour! :notworthy

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You are ignoring the formation of hypotheses.
Anyone taking (with or without salt) care to read my last messages may just come to a slightly different conclusion.

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So you liked this use of the phrase. Your application of it is merely appreciation and of little consequence.
Indeed, you taught me a new phrase there, and I used it as a way of appreciation:Cheeky:. It is of no consequence that I have been into Roman History for 40 years, and have used that phrase once or thrice through the decades. It is a rather common Latin quotation...

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Firstly Bruno's works were placed on the List. Galileo for example could never show dependence on a heretic. Now Bruno, as I said, was not a scientist in the sense that he didn't make observations himself, though this did not stop him from formulating hypotheses based on the science he knew.
This is a most peculiar excuse. Both Copernicus and Galilei's work was placed on that list. Still, they were used and referred to by many scientists down the centuries, quite the opposite of Bruno. Though I agree that Bruno formulated hypotheses based on the science he knew

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You are making artificial separations for a time in which such separations did not exist. Strangely, Bruno attempted to obtain a post at the university in Padua in mathematics, a post awarded to Galileo.
Anyone looking at the difference between Bruno and Galilei's use of Mathematics would understand perfectly well why Galilei got the position.

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Your citing of a list of names was pretty useless in the context.
Your joke about those names was extremely usefull in the context, for anyone into Philosophy of Science.

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Do you have problems with the notion that a thinker can form scientific hypotheses which cannot be scientifically verified at the time of formulation?.
Not at all. Does anyone?

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It's not that simple, Buridan. Your tone was clearly aggressive in impact, whether it was your intent or not. I think your coyness is merely a cover up .
Indeed, I have a lot to cover up :rolling:

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I have consistently dealt with the topic of Bruno being hypocritically treated by those who would try to assign him to the sidelines of his era. I have also pointed out that you are not dealing with the subject when you employ empty rhetoric for no useful purposes. Your quibbling over a definite article is further example of your having got off track. I have no interest in following you off.
So why then do you continue? I find it extremelig illuminating that neither NOBO nor you have taken (salt or not) up my specific question. As you still have not defended his statement or use of terms, I take it to imply that you cannot defend them either. :Cheeky:

Quote:
We have come no further from you denying that a person can advocate science without necessarily being a scientist. You must accept that Bruno advocated the copernican view of the solar system. However, through hypothesis extended that system to apply to all stars, using a well established scientific means of uniformity. There is nothing belief driven in this act. Your and Lafcadio's paltry attempts to paint Bruno's efforts in a poor light are simply hypocritical. He was silenced because he supported scientific views, views which were interpreted as theological by his inquisitors.
I am still missing out on any documentation from you of why he was silenced. So far it looks like nothing more than a belief on your side, as you have had ample opportunity to provide evidence for this the last weeks.

It is also interesting that you no longer bring in your original assertion: "Bruno was a staunch advocate of science" (your message #108). No one disagrees that he advocated the Copernican view, or extended it through the universe. That is a straw man. The issue is quite another: Did Bruno defend Science staunchly, or did he defend his religious philosophy?

As I have no problem with anyone defending their Religious Philosophy (staunchly or not), or using it to form Hypotheses, I don't use that as a negative term. It even looks like that you are using your Philosophy to form Hypotheses about Bruno, though they cannot be scientifically verified at the time of formulation.

To me this is just a matter of putting things into perspective. It is simply to understand the difference between someone striving to do science and someone striving to propagate their religious views. So far I can't see you have made reference to any modern Historian of Science, not to mention any drug company, who agrees with you that Bruno was a staunch advocate of science.

Sorry if I keep asking for documentation (Italian or not) and references. It is just that I am a staunch defender of science.

Ciao:Cheeky:
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