Originally posted by Slytovhand
The reason anecdotal evidence is what "encourages scientists to go bush to look for 'drugs'" is precisely what I said above: anecdotal evidence is the thing that leads scientists towards theories.
So...IF acupuncture works, and IF there is actually a force called Qi, then it would help us getting a little bit towards some of the other big questions that religion asks
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I just sometimes think that science decides what's 'disprovable' after a only few experiments and then let it go.
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I spose I just get annoyed that things get thrown to either the 'debunked' or the 'that's religion' way of things way too soon.
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If the creator of the universe wasn't actually a 'god' but in fact an alien scientist performing an experiment in a petri dish, shouldn't our scientists, eventually, be able to find evidence of that?? If they don't look, they'll never find.
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Couldn't God (or whatever) and the way god's things are manifested be considered a truth to be investigated?
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Getting back to the OP, is there evidence to suggest a lack of intelligence in the design? Isn't that a question scientists could work on? Or mathematicians?
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I just sometimes think that science decides what's 'disprovable' after a only few experiments and then let it go.
<snip>
I spose I just get annoyed that things get thrown to either the 'debunked' or the 'that's religion' way of things way too soon.
<snip>
If the creator of the universe wasn't actually a 'god' but in fact an alien scientist performing an experiment in a petri dish, shouldn't our scientists, eventually, be able to find evidence of that?? If they don't look, they'll never find.
<snip>
Couldn't God (or whatever) and the way god's things are manifested be considered a truth to be investigated?
<snip>
Getting back to the OP, is there evidence to suggest a lack of intelligence in the design? Isn't that a question scientists could work on? Or mathematicians?
HOW?
How do you investigate the presence or absence of God?
How do you investigate the intelligence or lack of intelligence in the design of the universe?
How do you look for Qi?
How do you look for evidence that the world was created by a giant scientist working in a giant petri dish?
Scientists are humans. Just like you and me.
Now, I'm pretty sure, Slyt, that you've mentioned living in Melbourne before. That's a city with several universities and a fine state library. You therefore have access to a significant subset of the body of human knowledge.
You're absolutely free to go looking in the experiment results of previous scientists, and to absorb the existing knowledge, existing observations on the universe.
You have the same resources available to you as any theoretical scientist, and a great deal more than any scientist of previous generations.
(Admittedly, you lack the resources of many modern experimental scientists, but they have to go through about a decade of proving themselves before they get them - and even then they have to go through an experiment-approval process before they're allowed near the supercollider.)
You're perfectly free to go ahead and work on any problem you think 'they' should be working on. You're human, just like them. And you have most of the resources 'they' have. For free, even. Or for the cost of a train ticket into the city.
Originally posted by Slytovhand
1. Observe.
2. From those observations, attempt to develop a hypothesis.
3. Figure out ways to disprove that hypothesis by experiment or observation.
4. Attempt to disprove the hypothesis.
5c. If the attempts succeed, repeat from step 1.
5b. If the attempts fail, tentatively accept the hypothesis as a theory. Repeat from step 1.
5c. As technology improves and observations increase, repeat from step 4.
This method cannot be performed on things which we cannot observe. It also cannot be performed on hypotheses which cannot be disproved.
If you can think of ways to apply this method to other worlds, to the presence or absence of God, or more mundanely, to the presence or absence of Qi - go right ahead and apply it.
Write up a paper, explaining your hypothesis, your disproofs, and your proposed or practiced experiments - including results. A university library will have many examples of papers available, and the library staff may be able to point you to a mentor if you need one.
Your paper, presuming it is in an appropriate format, will be peer reviewed.
Peer review involves other scientists checking that your hypothesis explains current observations in the relevant field and that your disproofs actually are valid disproofs against your hypothesis. They then perform your experiments and check that your results approximately equal theirs within the tolerance for that particular science.
(Physics tends to require a great deal of precision, biology doesn't. No two pea plants are identical, after all.)
Should your paper pass peer review - congratulations. You'll have just scientifically studied something you considered scientists to have ignored. And it will be added to the body of human knowledge.
However, for the most part, the things science doesn't study are things it can't study.
There is a hypothesis (from Roger Penrose and S Hawkings I think...) that suggests we (our universe) is the product of a previous Black Hole. There is also a hypothesis that suggests that all Black Holes create new Baby Universes.
Thought experiments and other such speculations are how scientists figure out things they can't actually study. But they don't call their speculations 'hypotheses' or 'theories' or even 'science' - because they're not science. They're speculations and thought experiments.
If this is true, then there should only be speculation about the nature of those universes - both before and after ours. If this is the case, is there any point trying to look at them, in the same vein as ascertaining a designer of them. After all, while there might be 'evidence' to suggest things about them, we really can't go and find out....
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