Not having really read through all the relevant threads I thought I'd just post a counter-thread to Jon Miller's seemingly pointless one where he asked philosophers to answer science questions, totally unrelated to their own discipline. I'll instead try to ask a series of questions about science.
What is science?
What processes are involved in the scientific method, and in what order do they take place? What forms the basis of the formation of hypotheses?
Are causal events always in temporal sequence? Always with a physical connection? If we could go back in time and replay a causation again with exactly the same environmental factors, would it come out exaclty the same?
What factors about a scientist's mind before an observation will cause a change in how he observes it? Can a scientist ever "objectively" observe anything without slotting it into a pattern of observation or expectence?
What makes one Hypothesis better than another?
Why is Astrology considered a "pseudoscience" rather than a real science?
Not using scientific standards, can you explain what makes science prefferable to any other method of supposedly acquiring knowledge?
Can science explain the cause of the universe?
Can science explain those particular features about the universe that make it inhabitable by human life?
If you don't feel like answering any of these questions, could you at least acknowledge that they might be interesting or even important?
What is science?
What processes are involved in the scientific method, and in what order do they take place? What forms the basis of the formation of hypotheses?
Are causal events always in temporal sequence? Always with a physical connection? If we could go back in time and replay a causation again with exactly the same environmental factors, would it come out exaclty the same?
What factors about a scientist's mind before an observation will cause a change in how he observes it? Can a scientist ever "objectively" observe anything without slotting it into a pattern of observation or expectence?
What makes one Hypothesis better than another?
Why is Astrology considered a "pseudoscience" rather than a real science?
Not using scientific standards, can you explain what makes science prefferable to any other method of supposedly acquiring knowledge?
Can science explain the cause of the universe?
Can science explain those particular features about the universe that make it inhabitable by human life?
If you don't feel like answering any of these questions, could you at least acknowledge that they might be interesting or even important?
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