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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 05:44
^ Another evasion. Let's say you're refusing to answer, and leave it at that. Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 05:25
^ The context here has nothing to do with "sciences" per se, methinks; or at least the pivotal aspect is not that.

I already said this in my "first" post (that you quoted and initiated this dialogue): 

Originally posted by Archisorcerus Archisorcerus wrote:


I'm a bit off-topic, though. Sorry.


I say let's move on from this (off-)topic.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 05:03
^ You're really not willing to differentiate, are you? That's blatantly unscientific. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 04:10
^ "Think like we do." doesn't necessarily mean that, "We are 100% percent sure about the truth of our theories."

They want all the people to believe in a cartoon-like world where even the craziest things can be possible.

I don't buy them. I'm a solid materialist.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 04:02
^ So no conspiracy theorist who invites others to question things is interested in empirical evidence?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 04:01
^ I didn't say that all the conspiracy theorists "invite" others to question things. But, when one does that, s/he means what I said.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 01:46
Originally posted by Archisorcerus Archisorcerus wrote:

^ When a spiritualist and/or conspiracy theorist "invites" you to question some things, they clandestinely mean "Think like we do."

Can we really generalise conspiracy theorists like that? You seem to be implying that no conspiracy theorist is interested in empirical evidence. I would argue that this is throwing out the baby with the bath water - in the recent past there have been several conspiracy theories which were later shown to be correct, and in those instances at least some of the individuals promoting these theories were pointing to the empirical evidence, while most other people misjudged them as nut-jobs and essentially said "think like we do" (and support the current thing).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2024 at 00:41
To clarify: Previously I drew a distinction between proper science and improper science. Proper science relies on experimentation, while improper science does not. It is in that context that I said that with proper science, it is "extremely easy to know the truth", by which I meant the result of experiments. The experiments might be quite complex and difficult to perform of course, and in that respect science is hard. But with a proper scientific theory it is really easy to think of an experiment that would falsify it, and if that experiment is done but fails (to falsify the theory), we gain confidence in the theory. On the other hand, in improper science there are no experiments we could do to gain that confidence, so it is extremely hard to know anything with any degree of certainty. I was going to post the Ioannidis paper, but someone beat me to it. I'm not sure why they posted it, but the point I am making is essentially that most research conducted today is improper science, which is fundamentally why there is such a high risk of it turning out to be wrong and, in effect, leading to the now common impression among laypeople that "science is always changing".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 21:22
Originally posted by Hugh Manatee Hugh Manatee wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

The most wonderful thing about living in a democracy is the right to state your opinions without being censored. You can't yell fire in a movie theater but you can say almost anything else. There are also civil law procedures for those engaging in public misinformation. See Rudy Giuliani. A wonderful check against these koo-koos.


There are also regulations against "Hate speech" and this is where the waters start getting murky.

There never has been freedom of speech really. There is only a line that keeps shifting depending on the dominant prevailing attitudes. It is the fight for control of this line that engages most people.

The misreprentation of facts is not hate speech. The two are distinctive and separate. Luckily, the line that determines what is false is under no threat as that is a simple legal or civil benchmark that is not determined by changing attitudes. Only the presentation of facts to support such claims or a lack of them to do the same.

Edited by SteveG - April 08 2024 at 21:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 20:44
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

The most wonderful thing about living in a democracy is the right to state your opinions without being censored. You can't yell fire in a movie theater but you can say almost anything else. There are also civil law procedures for those engaging in public misinformation. See Rudy Giuliani. A wonderful check against these koo-koos.

There are also regulations against "Hate speech" and this is where the waters start getting murky.

There never has been freedom of speech really. There is only a line that keeps shifting depending on the dominant prevailing attitudes. It is the fight for control of this line that engages most people.

I should have been a pair of ragged claws
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 20:37
Science is the death of certainty. Now there is only probability.

It is within those margins of probability that misinformation flourishes.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 17:00
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ In proper science it is extremely easy to know the truth: You form a hypothesis, the hypothesis makes a certain prediction, you and many other scientists perform experiments to (in-)validate the hypothesis.
Chances are you are not a scientist, otherwise I'd be very surprised by what you just wrote. This is a very naive view that is clearly not in line with how modern science works.

Thanks for educating me. By "validating" I did indeed mean (failing to) falsify a hypothesis. Scientific theories are never "proven to be correct", they just have never been shown to be incorrect. Which is, as others have pointed out, why proper scientists never speak in absolute terms.
...such as "it is extremely easy to know the truth"... but of course I know from earlier exchange that you're "choosing (your) words carefully" so I assume you mean what you're saying... or rather better not? Confused

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 16:00
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ In proper science it is extremely easy to know the truth: You form a hypothesis, the hypothesis makes a certain prediction, you and many other scientists perform experiments to (in-)validate the hypothesis.
Chances are you are not a scientist, otherwise I'd be very surprised by what you just wrote. This is a very naive view that is clearly not in line with how modern science works.

Thanks for educating me. By "validating" I did indeed mean (failing to) falsify a hypothesis. Scientific theories are never "proven to be correct", they just have never been shown to be incorrect. Which is, as others have pointed out, why proper scientists never speak in absolute terms.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 15:46
Originally posted by omphaloskepsis omphaloskepsis wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ In proper science it is extremely easy to know the truth: You form a hypothesis, the hypothesis makes a certain prediction, you and many other scientists perform experiments to (in-)validate the hypothesis.

Unfortunately nowadays many things masquerade as science, and the way to recognise these improper hypotheses is that you cannot design any experiment to (in-)validate them. 

Perhaps you are not a scientist as someone suggested.  However, your shorthand description of the "scientific method" was valid.  The experiment must be also be repeatable so that the scientific community can perform the same experiment. Wink    Afterward, you apply a stat test on the experimental outcome. A t-test* is an example of such a statistical test. There are many stat tests you can perform, depending on the setup of your experiment.  There are protocols for writing up the results and presenting your results to the scientific community. 

You did an excellent job of describing the basics of the scientific method so that a non-scientist can understand!Clap   Scientists often report results as a correlation.  Even if the correlation is above 98%, scientists use the word "suggests" instead of stating the hypothesis as fact.  It's difficult to upgrade a hypothesis to a scientific theory.  For a hypothesis to become a theory it may take thousands of experiments.  And not one of those experiments can be shown to disprove the hypothesis.  You can imagine what it takes to upgrade a theory to a law.  Millions of experiments have been performed on the basics of The Theory of Evolution. Not one experiment disproved Evolution, yet Evolution is still a Theory. 


A t-test is a statistical test that is used to compare the means of two groups. It is often used in hypothesis testing to determine whether a process or treatment actually has an effect on the population of interest, or whether two groups are different from one another.

Thanks, and yes, you're of course correct. My post was an over-simplification, and my main point was that experimentation is the essential part of science, and it's exactly this part that is missing in much of the "research" conducted today, or is not done properly (e.g. power, statistical significance, accounting for bias or conflicts of interest etc.).


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 15:26
Originally posted by CosmicVibration CosmicVibration wrote:

Wasn’t there a chap here called Dean that went from being very religious to total atheist?

If you're asking whether Dean rejected his religious upbringing, that may be true.   I do believe he was an atheist by the time we knew him here.

"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 15:19
Originally posted by omphaloskepsis omphaloskepsis wrote:

 
Perhaps you are not a scientist as someone suggested.  However, your shorthand description of the "scientific method" was valid.  The experiment must be also be repeatable so that the scientific community can perform the same experiment. Wink    Afterward, you apply a stat test on the experimental outcome. A t-test* is an example of such a statistical test. There are many stat tests you can perform, depending on the setup of your experiment.  There are protocols for writing up the results and presenting your results to the scientific community.  
None of this is without controversy. 
Amrheim, Greenland and McShane in Nature: "Scientists rise up against statistical significance"
Ioannidis in PLOS Medicine: "Why most published research findings are false"

One thing you know as a researcher if you need to build your career on publications is that you better don't use your precious time to replicate other people's experiments, because journals don't like that. It doesn't count as original, and it has basically no chance of being published in a top ranked journal. Another thing that follows from this is that chances are very slim that anybody will replicate your experiment. Which isn't exactly a good safeguard against cheating.


Edited by Lewian - April 08 2024 at 15:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 14:16
Originally posted by CosmicVibration CosmicVibration wrote:

<p ="Msonormal">Let’s see how the Supreme Court rules on the issue. <span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>What if Trump gets into office and has the
power to influence censorship?<o:p></o:p>



<p ="Msonormal">https://reclaimthenet.org/biden-administration-urges-supreme-court-to-overturn-injunction-on-federal-agencies-influencing-tech-censorship<o:p></o:p>

Let's see if the SCOTUS rules that Trump had executive privilege when he was running the country into the sewer first, then we'll know.

Edited by SteveG - April 09 2024 at 07:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 13:22
Originally posted by progaardvark progaardvark wrote:

Sorry to be a nitpicker, but scientific hypotheses, theories, and laws are not upgraded from one to the other.


 I was trying catch the flavor/spirit.Wink  I did not wish to extend my post to extreme length with a deep dive.  That said...you are correct. I commend you for doing your research.Clap


Edited by omphaloskepsis - April 08 2024 at 13:26
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 13:10
Sorry to be a nitpicker, but scientific hypotheses, theories, and laws are not upgraded from one to the other.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2024 at 11:43
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ In proper science it is extremely easy to know the truth: You form a hypothesis, the hypothesis makes a certain prediction, you and many other scientists perform experiments to (in-)validate the hypothesis.

Unfortunately nowadays many things masquerade as science, and the way to recognise these improper hypotheses is that you cannot design any experiment to (in-)validate them. 

Perhaps you are not a scientist as someone suggested.  However, your shorthand description of the "scientific method" was valid.  The experiment must be also be repeatable so that the scientific community can perform the same experiment. Wink    Afterward, you apply a stat test on the experimental outcome. A t-test* is an example of such a statistical test. There are many stat tests you can perform, depending on the setup of your experiment.  There are protocols for writing up the results and presenting your results to the scientific community. 

You did an excellent job of describing the basics of the scientific method so that a non-scientist can understand!Clap   Scientists often report results as a correlation.  Even if the correlation is above 98%, scientists use the word "suggests" instead of stating the hypothesis as fact.  It's difficult to upgrade a hypothesis to a scientific theory.  For a hypothesis to become a theory it may take thousands of experiments.  And not one of those experiments can be shown to disprove the hypothesis.  You can imagine what it takes to upgrade a theory to a law.  Millions of experiments have been performed on the basics of The Theory of Evolution. Not one experiment disproved Evolution, yet Evolution is still a Theory. 


A t-test is a statistical test that is used to compare the means of two groups. It is often used in hypothesis testing to determine whether a process or treatment actually has an effect on the population of interest, or whether two groups are different from one another.


Edited by omphaloskepsis - April 08 2024 at 11:57
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