DogmaHunter
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- Jan 26, 2014
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That is unreal. How can predictions support a theory as being fact when it can never by directly verified to establish that fact. This is what I am talking about where the method is flawed. If this is how you say something can be established as a fact then the method is wrong for establishing the fact.
For crying out loud...
The theory is based on facts.
It explains the facts and the facts support the theory.
The theory also makes predictions. All testable, except the prediction of a multi-verse.
All that are tested, confirm the theory.
It is then infered that the last, untestable, predictions is very likely also correct.
The theory is based on facts.
The prediction flows from the theory, which is based on facts.
propose predict I can't see much difference
I know you don't. That is part of the problem.
I am fully aware that string theory predicts multiverse that's why I mentioned it with multiverse. Multiverse are also predicted from inflation theory which has its own problems.
None of those problems are being denied. I stated quite clearly that at this point, there is no such theory as I described.
The problem is more and more ideas are added to solve previous hypothesis which then create more problems and it ends up becoming a complicated mess.
Science is hard work, yes.
I understand it might sound easier to just say that a god-dun-it and leave it at that. But that's not really very satisfying, now is it?
That's a good example of what I mean when you say that if 99 out of 100 predictions are shown to be correct that it can make an idea fact.
That's not what I said. That's what you mistakenly took from what I actualy said.
But science does not have all the answers.
Nobody is saying otherwise.
What I will add though, is that when science doesn't have the answer, there is exactly zero reason to assume that (any) religion does.
The problem is the scientific materialist view will limit what is possible and dictate what is.
False. Science will consider those things possible, which are well motivated to being possible. For which there is evidence supporting the possibility.
There is exactly zero reason to assume X is possible, when there is exactly zero evidence supporting that notion.
And before you start babbling again...
As I explained, there are scenario's where a multi-verse could be very well motivated, eventhough it couldn't be tested directly.
It is not always about looking for answers but deciding what is and then trying to make everything fit that preconceived world view.
That's what creationists do.
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