I don’t think you’ve responded to my linked comment. But OK, looking up a result in a math book could count as an experiment, as could any method by which you might learn about dyslexia or whatever you suspect might be confusing you. If you don’t believe anything like that could happen to you, either you made that judgement based on experience and science or you are very badly misguided.
To be honest, your comments confuse me. I knew about the link but I didn’t see a connection between the link and experimental method and where the citations in the link came from. I am not sure what you mean by “anything like that” in your last comment and I am not very interested in it.
But I prefer to keep the original problem: If looking up a result in a math book could count as an experiment what is the (broader) definition of an experiment, then?
I don’t think you’ve responded to my linked comment. But OK, looking up a result in a math book could count as an experiment, as could any method by which you might learn about dyslexia or whatever you suspect might be confusing you. If you don’t believe anything like that could happen to you, either you made that judgement based on experience and science or you are very badly misguided.
To be honest, your comments confuse me. I knew about the link but I didn’t see a connection between the link and experimental method and where the citations in the link came from. I am not sure what you mean by “anything like that” in your last comment and I am not very interested in it.
But I prefer to keep the original problem: If looking up a result in a math book could count as an experiment what is the (broader) definition of an experiment, then?