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Mainstream Science

Nick M

Black Rifles Matter
LIFETIME MEMBER
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Incidentally, I am not apposed to all government funded research but it should be limited to those areas that pertain directly to proper governmental roles such as the military, crime investigation and prevention, and infrastructure.
The places where government mostly does what it should do have banned preaching the gospel. I might go anyway.
 

Nick M

Black Rifles Matter
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
Why is that question a logical fallacy? It is not an argument, just a question based on Clete's earlier comment.
It falls under the false dilemma, because of the presumption that mainstream science is correct.
 

Avajs

Member
It falls under the false dilemma, because of the presumption that mainstream science is correct.
Well, the entire basis of science is skepticism so there is always the possibility that a particular bit of science would not be accurate. That's the reason science changes on occasion---we got past the miasma theory of disease for example when scientists started to understand and formulate the germ theory of disease. In the mid 1800's John Snow investigated cholera outbreaks and determined they were connected not by "bad air" but by something bad in certain wells in London.
Scientists also determined that atoms, first thought to be indivisible, in fact are made up of protons, neutrons and electrons which are themselves made up of other pieces--quarks for example.
Many thought the unit of inheritance had to be a protein base because proteins are complicated---surprise DNA
But I think the general thought now in 2024 is mainstream science is in fact correct on most things. Again, if you are the person able to show major inconsistencies in a generally accepted scientific theory---Hello Nobel.
 

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But I think the general thought now in 2024 is mainstream science is in fact correct on most things. Again, if you are the person able to show major inconsistencies in a generally accepted scientific theory---Hello Nobel.
Quite the classic response.

Why does "general thought now" hold any weight with science? It does not.
 

Avajs

Member
Quite the classic response.

Why does "general thought now" hold any weight with science? It does not.
Of course it does. Do you question the fact the earth revolves around the sun? Germ theory vs miasma? That DNA is transcribed/translated to RNA and that is how proteins are made in cells?
Aren't each of those examples part of generally accepted mainstream science?
 

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Of course it does.
No, it does not.
Do you question the fact the earth revolves around the sun? Germ theory vs miasma? That DNA is transcribed/translated to RNA and that is how proteins are made in cells?
Aren't each of those examples part of generally accepted mainstream science?
I don't believe anything is "scientific" because it's "generally accepted". That's not how science works. You are falling into fallacy again.
 

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Well, no. I asked a couple of specific questions and you did not answer them. OK if
You don't want to do so.
The answers to those were implied in my previous answer. The answer was YES, but NOT because they are "generally accepted". General acceptance is meaningless with regard to scientific truth.

I believe that the earth orbits the sun based on many simple observations and not because many people agree with it.

I think that Michael Crichton said it very well (as you can see in my signature lines):

Consensus is the business of politics. If it’s consensus, it isn’t science. If it’s science, it isn’t consensus. Period.”​
 

Avajs

Member
The answers to those were implied in my previous answer. The answer was YES, but NOT because they are "generally accepted". General acceptance is meaningless with regard to scientific truth.

I believe that the earth orbits the sun based on many simple observations and not because many people agree with it.

I think that Michael Crichton said it very well (as you can see in my signature lines):

Consensus is the business of politics. If it’s consensus, it isn’t science. If it’s science, it isn’t consensus. Period.”​
Crichton said that in a speech at Cal Tech in 2003. He was a climate change skeptic and was bemoaning the consensus then developing around climate change. I think this was not long after Mann's hockey stick graph became well known.
But Crichton overstated his complaint re science consensus. He gave several examples in his talk about consensus in science. But his examples each ended in the particular consensus changing. His examples dealt with change in consensus based on better information. One was my favorite about Alfred Wegener in the early 1900's. Wegener described continental drift based on geology, biology, paleontology etc. However, Wegener had no mechanism to support his theory. It wasn't until the middle of the last century when Heezen and Tharp, mapping the sea floor, were able to suggest a mechanism for plate tectonics that Wegener made more sense. There is now a consensus in science, a general agreement, that plate tectonics is actually the likely explanation for certain geological processes over time.
Crichton died almost 16 years ago so we cannot know if his position on climate change would have remained the same. I'll note too that Crichton was a fiction writer with an MD who never practiced. He was not a scientist. One of his complaints, maybe justified, about climate change was that emphasis and government and other money spent there took away from funds available to cure disease, feed people and ameliorate poverty. Since climate change has the potential to cause a great deal of damage to, and interference with, human culture I think understanding it is likely to effect our understanding of the impact of disease on certain areas, crop and food production and poverty. Crichton's criticism may have been well-meaning but perhaps misplaced.
 

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Crichton said that in a speech at Cal Tech in 2003. He was a climate change skeptic and was bemoaning the consensus then developing around climate change. I think this was not long after Mann's hockey stick graph became well known.
Crichton was correct to be skeptical of the climate hysteria that is based on bogus science that had become a "consensus" as opposed to real science.
But Crichton overstated his complaint re science consensus. He gave several examples in his talk about consensus in science. But his examples each ended in the particular consensus changing.
Yes, the consensus is meaningless with regard to actual scientific truth.
His examples dealt with change in consensus based on better information.
Sometimes it works that way and sometimes not. Consensus is not science.
One was my favorite about Alfred Wegener in the early 1900's. Wegener described continental drift based on geology, biology, paleontology etc. However, Wegener had no mechanism to support his theory. It wasn't until the middle of the last century when Heezen and Tharp, mapping the sea floor, were able to suggest a mechanism for plate tectonics that Wegener made more sense. There is now a consensus in science, a general agreement, that plate tectonics is actually the likely explanation for certain geological processes over time.
Plate tectonics is another bogus theory based on nonsense and consensus. Seafloor spreading is a completely ridiculous idea.

https://hpt.rsr.org/onlinebook/FAQ223.html#wp16506849
Crichton died almost 16 years ago so we cannot know if his position on climate change would have remained the same. I'll note too that Crichton was a fiction writer with an MD who never practiced. He was not a scientist.
His knowledge of science seems to be much better than yours.
One of his complaints, maybe justified, about climate change was that emphasis and government and other money spent there took away from funds available to cure disease, feed people and ameliorate poverty. Since climate change has the potential to cause a great deal of damage to, and interference with, human culture I think understanding it is likely to effect our understanding of the impact of disease on certain areas, crop and food production and poverty. Crichton's criticism may have been well-meaning but perhaps misplaced.
Nope. His criticism was correct then and is just as valid today.
 

Avajs

Member
Crichton was correct to be skeptical of the climate hysteria that is based on bogus science that had become a "consensus" as opposed to real science.

Yes, the consensus is meaningless with regard to actual scientific truth.

Sometimes it works that way and sometimes not. Consensus is not science.

Plate tectonics is another bogus theory based on nonsense and consensus. Seafloor spreading is a completely ridiculous idea.

https://hpt.rsr.org/onlinebook/FAQ223.html#wp16506849

His knowledge of science seems to be much better than yours.

Nope. His criticism was correct then and is just as valid today.
Have a nice life
 

Avajs

Member
Yes, I understand that you cannot handle a justified criticism of your position.

P.S. The Hydro-Plate Theory is a much better scientific explanation of the earth than the current "consensus" of Plate Tectonics.
Uh, no. The Hydro-Plate Theory is funnier than plate tectonics--about the only thing it has going for it. How many H-bombs worth of energy does it take in what period of time to make it work?
 

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Uh, no. The Hydro-Plate Theory is funnier than plate tectonics--about the only thing it has going for it. How many H-bombs worth of energy does it take in what period of time to make it work?
Your opinion does not impress me.

The fact of the matter is that HPT explains all of the features that we see on earth far better than any other theory.

Things like:
  • The mid-Atlantic ridge
  • The 90 east ridge
  • The location of the major mountain ranges and the associated plateaus
  • The Grand Canyon
  • The earth's radioactivity
  • The Pacific ring of fire
  • The sunken crust under the Pacific ocean
  • etc. etc. etc.
Feel free to discuss your complaints about the HPT here: https://theologyonline.com/forums/the-global-flood-and-the-hydroplate-theory.254/
 
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