I apologize in delays in response. I myself don't really like the "driveby shooting" type of discussion, but such is life recently.
Of course these can be derived. Anything can be derived, but that's a assumption, which is what I'm pointing to.
You can assume anything you like, but you are trying to make a case that your assumptions are better, and you have not demonstrated it so far.
Clear and unambiguous is always a context of agreement with definable model. To someone who never picked up any pre-requisite physics material, quantum theory will look like ... as you would put it ... "word salad".
The point of this article is that falsifiability is not the hallmark of research and understanding, because it will always be contextual.
I'm not sure what you mean by "Unpredictable predictions". Can you clarify or reword? Do you mean uncertainty?
I think you don't really get the point of that story, hence you are clamoring to invalidate it via "dead people don't walk again". First of all, in the story Jesus is an incarnation of God who created this reality, so IN CONTEXT OF THAT MODEL.
You are evaluating it in context OF YOUR MODEL, and of course in that model people don't rise from the dead, and God does not exist. So, of course in that model of reality such things are nonsense.
Our provisional belief in any given claim resides on a axiomatic presuppositions that we frame as A PREFERENCE. You can't validate or invalidate axioms. These are not falsifiable. This is something that you seem to misunderstand when you attempt to "logically argue" here. Your logical framework resides in presuppositions of your models. Thus, if something outside of that model is fed into yours, it naturally becomes "illogical".
But you have yet to validate your assumptions that you claim should be valid IN ANY CONTEXT.
You still don't understand what we are talking about
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The above claims are contextual, and dependent on personal experience of any given party. In order to present this claim to a guy in Africa, you have to tell him a STORY about how monetary system works, and what is IRS, what are taxes, and what happens to someone when they don't pay it. And you have to describe it in the language that they can relate to.
In doing so, you have not validated anything. You've made a claim of how these things work. They may believe you. They may think it's ridiculous and won't believe you. In which case you can bring documents and show videos of people in jail. It's an evidence, but outside of context of understanding legal system and how jails work, etc... it's still an ambiguous claim. These people don't know you, and they are not certain of your intentions. You could be fabricating all of the evidence.
The point being is that we first would have to agree on our "axiomatic baseline" before we can even have conversations about what's a "better description of reality". Luckily for us, there are plentiful overlaps. And what we generally do is go by way of pluralistic pragmatism. And that's fine.
But what you don't seem to get is that because certain model of reality works in many contexts DOES NOT MEAN that it works IN ALL CONTEXTS.
Yes, there are plentiful claims which are limited in context, but you can only convince only if there are a good overlap match in baseline presuppositions.
Your #3 is as broad as it can be, and you can't demonstrably justify. All you are doing is throwing out individual cases, claiming that because this case is correct ... that means that the rest of them too.
I already said that I agree with it as a good principle, but as an axiom that's all it is.
I already agreed with you that Biblical narrative is not a scientific or historical literature. Much like most of the narrative of that time is a form of "poetic tribal wisdom" that was aggregated over time and consolidated as a moral literary device.
Predictive usability of Biblical narrative does not rest in context of it's nominal claims. It rests in its sociological claims, many of which don't carry over well from that era. I'm not sure what you think I'm arguing here, but you seem to consistently presume much
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A law in science is not an "upgrade of theory". Please look it up.
Theory is an explanation, and a law is a description of observable consistency. Theory of Gravity attempts to model gravity. Law of gravity describes consistent measurements that outline the "laws of gravity".
There's a saying that scientific laws are descriptive and not prescriptive, meaning that laws are consistencies that we observe and label these as such. Just because WE SUBJECTIVELY describe consistency in a limited context, it doesn't apply to everything. It's our assumption, and it's pragmatic. Our brain works that way.
Gravitational calculations can be derived with respect to any environment.
Of course these can be derived. Anything can be derived, but that's a assumption, which is what I'm pointing to.
Adding "quite a few books-on-epistemology-seized[sic] gaps in there," doesn't make our basal fundamental assumptions any less prescient.
You can assume anything you like, but you are trying to make a case that your assumptions are better, and you have not demonstrated it so far.
By "definite" we simply mean that they say something clear and unambiguous about how reality functions."
The above quote doesn't bode well for those making god claims, does it?
Clear and unambiguous is always a context of agreement with definable model. To someone who never picked up any pre-requisite physics material, quantum theory will look like ... as you would put it ... "word salad".
The point of this article is that falsifiability is not the hallmark of research and understanding, because it will always be contextual.
Other than theoretical physics, please describe a situation in which a model making unpredictable predictions is preferred.
I'm not sure what you mean by "Unpredictable predictions". Can you clarify or reword? Do you mean uncertainty?
Like Jesus Christ rising from the dead? All we can do is provide likely explanations, those that comport with reality. In the case of a dead man resurrecting, well, as they say, extraordinary claims require...
I think you don't really get the point of that story, hence you are clamoring to invalidate it via "dead people don't walk again". First of all, in the story Jesus is an incarnation of God who created this reality, so IN CONTEXT OF THAT MODEL.
You are evaluating it in context OF YOUR MODEL, and of course in that model people don't rise from the dead, and God does not exist. So, of course in that model of reality such things are nonsense.
Our provisional belief in any given claim resides on a axiomatic presuppositions that we frame as A PREFERENCE. You can't validate or invalidate axioms. These are not falsifiable. This is something that you seem to misunderstand when you attempt to "logically argue" here. Your logical framework resides in presuppositions of your models. Thus, if something outside of that model is fed into yours, it naturally becomes "illogical".
But you have yet to validate your assumptions that you claim should be valid IN ANY CONTEXT.
Which scenario better describes reality, in your opinion:
1. People who intentionally seek to illegally defraud the IRS, risk being prosecuted for it, and possibly spending time in jail.
2. People who intentionally seek to defraud the IRS, risk being rewarded with an annual income of @300K per year, for the rest of their life, tax free.
You still don't understand what we are talking about
The above claims are contextual, and dependent on personal experience of any given party. In order to present this claim to a guy in Africa, you have to tell him a STORY about how monetary system works, and what is IRS, what are taxes, and what happens to someone when they don't pay it. And you have to describe it in the language that they can relate to.
In doing so, you have not validated anything. You've made a claim of how these things work. They may believe you. They may think it's ridiculous and won't believe you. In which case you can bring documents and show videos of people in jail. It's an evidence, but outside of context of understanding legal system and how jails work, etc... it's still an ambiguous claim. These people don't know you, and they are not certain of your intentions. You could be fabricating all of the evidence.
The point being is that we first would have to agree on our "axiomatic baseline" before we can even have conversations about what's a "better description of reality". Luckily for us, there are plentiful overlaps. And what we generally do is go by way of pluralistic pragmatism. And that's fine.
But what you don't seem to get is that because certain model of reality works in many contexts DOES NOT MEAN that it works IN ALL CONTEXTS.
Yes, there are plentiful claims which are limited in context, but you can only convince only if there are a good overlap match in baseline presuppositions.
Your #3 is as broad as it can be, and you can't demonstrably justify. All you are doing is throwing out individual cases, claiming that because this case is correct ... that means that the rest of them too.
I already said that I agree with it as a good principle, but as an axiom that's all it is.
You fail to understand what having "predictive value" means. For instance, when an ancient text claims that millions of Hebrews were lost in a ten square mile of desert for forty years, yet zero archaeological evidence exists to support such a claim, the claim can be considered as having zero predictive capabilities.
I already agreed with you that Biblical narrative is not a scientific or historical literature. Much like most of the narrative of that time is a form of "poetic tribal wisdom" that was aggregated over time and consolidated as a moral literary device.
Predictive usability of Biblical narrative does not rest in context of it's nominal claims. It rests in its sociological claims, many of which don't carry over well from that era. I'm not sure what you think I'm arguing here, but you seem to consistently presume much
Incorrect, as 9.81m/s/s is independently verified and found so sound, that at this point in time, it is no longer considered scientific theory, but a "law."
A law in science is not an "upgrade of theory". Please look it up.
Theory is an explanation, and a law is a description of observable consistency. Theory of Gravity attempts to model gravity. Law of gravity describes consistent measurements that outline the "laws of gravity".
There's a saying that scientific laws are descriptive and not prescriptive, meaning that laws are consistencies that we observe and label these as such. Just because WE SUBJECTIVELY describe consistency in a limited context, it doesn't apply to everything. It's our assumption, and it's pragmatic. Our brain works that way.
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