This example seems further support for my suggestion that talking about whether something is “scientific” mostly obscures the key issues.
I disagree; I think this example clarifies the issue. The point is that statments about nanotechnology aren’t scientific (not dervived from replicated experiments) but despite this, they aren’t meaningless or empty of rigour.
Setting aside a special domain that is “scientific” clarifies those domains that aren’t. And demonstates why answering the statement “nanotechnology will do such and such in a few years” with “show me a replicated experiment that proves what you’ve just said, or I won’t believe it” is the wrong response. Though it would be the proper response for a scientific statment.
This example seems further support for my suggestion that talking about whether something is “scientific” mostly obscures the key issues.
I disagree; I think this example clarifies the issue. The point is that statments about nanotechnology aren’t scientific (not dervived from replicated experiments) but despite this, they aren’t meaningless or empty of rigour.
Setting aside a special domain that is “scientific” clarifies those domains that aren’t. And demonstates why answering the statement “nanotechnology will do such and such in a few years” with “show me a replicated experiment that proves what you’ve just said, or I won’t believe it” is the wrong response. Though it would be the proper response for a scientific statment.