Too restrictive. Science is not synonymous with the hypothetico-deductive method, and nor is there any sort of thing called the “scientific method” from which scientists draw their authority on a subject. Neither is it a historically accurate description of how science has done its work. Read up on Feyerabend.
Science is inherently structureless and chaotic. It’s whatever works.
See, now there’s a prime example of corrupted reasoning right there. Science is carefully structured chaos, ordered according to certain fundamental principles. Meeting those principles is what we mean when we talk about something ‘working’.
The recognition of what ‘working’ is, and the tools that have been found useful in reaching that state, is what constitutes the scientific method.
Scientists do not concern themselves with what philosophers say about science—it is my experience that they are actively contemptuous of such. Yet science goes on. Strange, isn’t it? It’s almost as though the philosophers didn’t know what they were talking about.
(Additional: the central metaphor of this discussion is flawed—the Light and Dark sides define and require each other; contrastingly, both Jedi and Sith are corruptions and failures to properly represent the two sides of the Force. Accept one, and you reject the truth of things.)
Scientists do not concern themselves with what philosophers say about science—it is my experience that they are actively contemptuous of such.
These comments are largely true
Yet science goes on. Strange, isn’t it? It’s almost as though the philosophers didn’t know what they were talking about.
These comments don’t follow from the above. Yes,scientists dont need philosophers to tell them how to science, which they can do on the riding-a-bike basis. That doesn’t mean philosophers are wrong. Birds don’t need scientists to tell them how to fly..doesn’t mean the scientists are wrong.
“Scientists do not concern themselves with what philosophers say about science—it is my experience that they are actively contemptuous of such. Yet science goes on. Strange, isn’t it? It’s almost as though the philosophers didn’t know what they were talking about.”
This is a rather tribalistic disciplinary dogmatism, which is really quite out of step with your subsequent claim to universal monological truth (scientists think it works, so who cares what philosophers think) - a clear demonstration of Archimedean rationality...
Do scientists think it works, or does it work? The end result is a model for a particular phenomenon which can be tested for accuracy. When we use a cell phone we are seeing the application of our understanding of electromagnetism, among other things. It’s not scientists saying that science works—it’s just working.
My original objection, to which you responded, although not explicit, was that ‘science going on’ is not sufficient reason for the philosophy of science ‘not knowing what they are talking about’ - the entire post is puerile dogmatism.
My point was not really related to your discussion, I just wanted to clarify on your paraphrasing of “scientists think it works, so who cares what philosophers think.”
I think it is slightly silly to worry about who thinks it works when the fact of the matter is that it works—this is not a point directly against your comments, just a point of clarification in general.
See, now there’s a prime example of corrupted reasoning right there. Science is carefully structured chaos, ordered according to certain fundamental principles. Meeting those principles is what we mean when we talk about something ‘working’.
The recognition of what ‘working’ is, and the tools that have been found useful in reaching that state, is what constitutes the scientific method.
Scientists do not concern themselves with what philosophers say about science—it is my experience that they are actively contemptuous of such. Yet science goes on. Strange, isn’t it? It’s almost as though the philosophers didn’t know what they were talking about.
(Additional: the central metaphor of this discussion is flawed—the Light and Dark sides define and require each other; contrastingly, both Jedi and Sith are corruptions and failures to properly represent the two sides of the Force. Accept one, and you reject the truth of things.)
These comments are largely true
These comments don’t follow from the above. Yes,scientists dont need philosophers to tell them how to science, which they can do on the riding-a-bike basis. That doesn’t mean philosophers are wrong. Birds don’t need scientists to tell them how to fly..doesn’t mean the scientists are wrong.
“Scientists do not concern themselves with what philosophers say about science—it is my experience that they are actively contemptuous of such. Yet science goes on. Strange, isn’t it? It’s almost as though the philosophers didn’t know what they were talking about.”
This is a rather tribalistic disciplinary dogmatism, which is really quite out of step with your subsequent claim to universal monological truth (scientists think it works, so who cares what philosophers think) - a clear demonstration of Archimedean rationality...
Do scientists think it works, or does it work? The end result is a model for a particular phenomenon which can be tested for accuracy. When we use a cell phone we are seeing the application of our understanding of electromagnetism, among other things. It’s not scientists saying that science works—it’s just working.
Can you clarify what your point is?
My original objection, to which you responded, although not explicit, was that ‘science going on’ is not sufficient reason for the philosophy of science ‘not knowing what they are talking about’ - the entire post is puerile dogmatism.
My point was not really related to your discussion, I just wanted to clarify on your paraphrasing of “scientists think it works, so who cares what philosophers think.”
I think it is slightly silly to worry about who thinks it works when the fact of the matter is that it works—this is not a point directly against your comments, just a point of clarification in general.