Zenith wrote:astronomy, archeology, and quantum physics use experimentation as much as any other science. its just that its a little different. its more of a process of trial and error, where it is easy for someone to prove that you are doing something wrong and correct them. astronomy is tied closely with physics, which is proven by mathematics, but they experiment with mathematical realities and how accurately they portray the universe. they make hypotheses concerning a certain aspect of the universe as shown by a mathematical theory and then they prove it by observing it in space.
You somewhat misrepresent what I said. I did not say that they do not use experimentation, I said that they did not rely on it as much as other scientific endeavors. As you pointed out, experimentation in those sciences have more to do with mathematical modelling and/or the inference of hypothesis. Sticking to the topic for a second, what about higher order sciences, like extra-sensory perception or human consciousness studies? Are those valid areas for scientific study? They follow the same method....lso, is it your position that all phenomena submit to necessarily naturalistic explanations?
archeology is just the process of finding, digging up, and reorganizing fossil remains. there is a lot of experimentation in all of these things. any of them can and have been done wrong, so we have to figure out how to do them better. thats experimentation.
You cannot recreate the exact environment around any of these, so to say that you experiment is painting experimentation with a pretty broad brush. While I don't deny that they do try to confirm and document their observations, it is not necessary to perform experiments to have a valid scientific theory.
You also did not answer my question, so I will assume that either you missed it, or you did not understand it, so I will elaborate a bit. My question was:
How can you prove that definition of science to be true by experimentation?
If this definition of science, in the form of physical reductionism and methodological materialism is true, can you point to any experiments which show this to be the case? Please note, I am not asking for an apparent success story in the application of the method, I am asking for experimental proof of this foundational underpinning of the scientific method as an absolute, meaning it must work in all cases, always.
macroevolution can be proven by solid logic with the evidence at hand. in the past, things such as this have not needed to be able to be disproven because so many people are able to agree with it.
What evidence would that be? And please show what laws of logic you use. Is it your position that the majority position is necessarily the right one?
the same goes for the belief in a god. there is no possible way that you can prove god to be false. there are, however, many ways in which you could prove evolution false. the fact that none have been proven is enough support for evolution at the moment.
What on earth are you on about? I will let this stand until bgood has made his final post, but we will get back to this.
i think there actually is one thing which, if proven wrong, could disprove evolution. the fact that all organisms change. if you could prove that there is a limit to the amount of change the genes of a type of organism go through as they are passed from generation to generation, then you could disprove evolution. if you could prove that there is a force which keeps genes from deviating too much from the norm over a period of several million years, then you could prove evolution is false.
Ok, I just want to make sure that I understand what you are saying...Do you mean that if there is proof of genetic limits, that evolution will be shown to be wrong? I want to expand on this, but I want to make sure that I understand you first.
the real problem with the ability to prove or disprove evolution is that it could take millions of years. the process is so incredibly slow that we arent able to observe it in full action, we can only find clues and glimpses.
Yes, that is right. What opponents of evolution take exception to is the amount of filling in that happens between the glimpses and how the clues are interpreted. Experiments performed on organisms with a short lifecycle, such as Drosphilia, shows no proof for macroevolution. This is what lead leading evolutionary biologists such as Dobzhansky to say that the application of experimental processes to macroevolution is all but impossible.
once you get into the intracacies of biological science you will know the answers to these questions. but its so incredibly complicated that i only know it works, not how. i've met a few of these people (i live near the university of florida) and they know so much about these things, about how everything interacts with each other or how we can gleam so much information about the environment from just a little piece of rock or dirt.
You seem to accuse me of being too stupid or uninformed to know that the problem of the natural origin of life has been solved. Why don't you provide some references from these very clever friends of yours, instead of asserting and reasoning in circles.
the only axiom i see that evolution depends on is that organisms change.
So according to you the theory of evolution includes the origin of life, since it is not taken to be axiomatic? But Bgood argues differently, he says it does not include the origin of life. If it is not included, but necessary for the ToE to work, i.e. organisms must exist before they can change, it is axiomatic.