Actually I'm more of a Feyerabend guy myself. After all, anything goes.
I'd still like to know what qualifies someone to talk about matters of science. If someone like me, with 15 years of laboratory research and a Ph.D isn't under my belt, then who?
Love,
Ian
I'm certainly not qualified to talk about it either, so my statement was a bit unfair.
That said, someone with a working knowledge in Philosophy of Science or History of Science would be better fitted. You are in the trenches of science, and as such it would be very hard for you to see the complete picture or be able to give an honest account. You are going to have your own views by necessity of your position. I shouldn't have shut you down like that. As a scientist though, why would you want to introduce this bias?
Another point I should bring up is that I'm not discussing the kind of science you perform (which is necessary and good.) I'm discussing the outwards reaching science, not the specialized and inwards moving science.
All this said, I'm a bit skeptical - you have no idea how many supposed 'PhDs', 'Astronauts', 'Pilots' and 'Aerospace engineers' we get here that turn up to be some guy in a basement. I even had the other day someone claiming to be working on her PhD in Astrophysics tell me surface integrals are 'fake math.' I've got a quite a few friends that are practicing scientists in various fields. Most won't even give the flat earth idea so much as a breath, and the same seems to be true of most academics we contacted for my radio spot on the BBC that ultimately would not argue against it. While a few professors and what not have contacted me over the years, and have discussed it with me privately, for the most part they are confident in what they know and have a point of view that will not change - even when they admit my arguments are valid. Their goal is to convert me to their view like an evangelist might.
And why would they give this crackpot idea time, effort, or open mindedness? They have everything to lose and nothing to gain. It could quite literally drive them insane to agree with me due to how heavily entrenched their worldview is. To function as well they have to work off their already existing web of knowledge and stand on the shoulders of giants. Few I've met have ever taken the time to consider their entire belief structure from the base premises they are derived from. Just some thoughts on it.
Actually I'm more of a Feyerabend guy myself. After all, anything goes.
Even though I am not sure what Feyerabend meant was that any nut with his "theory" is justified, Feyerabend's ideas on the subject are a bit... I don't want to say crazy, but... Uh... Whatever. The problem is that he extrapolates and uses reductio ad absurdum too much, and most of what he says is very abstract and doesn't really help. His philosophy essentially revolves around not giving a fuck about logic, even though he pretends to use logic to reach those conclusions, and if one follows his tenets, he gets nowhere useful. Denying the possibility of knowledge in general gets you nowhere useful, and is actually against what Kuhn said. Philosophical skepticism to that extent is useless and a bit ridiculous. So yeah, he is a problem. Anything doesn't go, unless you want to run around in circles.
He does support his argument through quite a few historical examples. How do you account for these examples being successful if they are indeed against method? Several very notable examples, at that - let alone the work done to show similar examples by those who followed him. If anything doesn't go, then surely these examples of science ignoring method would not be functional or as wildly successful as they are.
Going further, if we ignore the Kuhn cycle and look at Popper we see falsifiability is really only valid if ad hoc hypotheses are not allowed to the extent which they are in use today. What is the difference between Dark Matter and Russel's Teapot or Leprechauns that alter rotational velocities of certain galaxies? Not only historically do we see us work against method but also today right now.
Let's look at what some of those in the trenches - those who practiced - say about method instead of those who talk of it from the outside in philosophy of science.
Carl Sagan “Anyone who witnesses the advance of science first-hand sees an intensely personal undertaking, A few saintly personalities stand out admist
a roiling sea of jealousies, ambition, backbiting, suppression of dissent, and absurd conceits. In some fields, highly productive fields,
such behavior is almost the norm”
Lindegren: method “is permeated with
opinions which pass for valid scientific inductions and with
contradictions which are disregarded because it is too painful to face the prospect of the revisions of the theory which would be required to reconcile the contradictory observations with the dominant theory.”
Medawar When asked about method, the scientist “ will adopt an expression that is at once solemn and shifty eyed; solemn because he feels he ought to declare an opinion; shifty eyed because he is wondering how to conceal the fact that
he has no opinion to declare." and that methods “are simply the postures we choose to be seen in when the curtain goes up and the public sees us. The illusion is shattered if we ask what goes on behind the scenes.” If Medawar doesn't think the working scientist has any idea of method, what hope do you have of understanding method?
And what of the experts of the past? Those Giants?
As Richard Westfall, noted biographer of Newton says parts of newtons work the principia are “nothing short of deliberate fraud” and “no one can manipulate the fudge factor quite so effectively as the master mathematician himself”
Einstein faked the gyromagnetic ratio. When experiment disproved it he stubbornly ignored it.
Copernicus ignored that his theory was directly against known knowledge.
Galileo had no empirical basis in Optics for use of his telescope and many of his 'moon drawings' can be debunked by simply looking to the sky. This is ignoring the issues with several of his dialogues which he must have been aware of.
And what about studies about scientists working today? Who we surely should trust as they are responsible for handing down knowledge to society. The promise of empiricism during enlightenment was a movement away from a specialized class handing down dogma like the role the Church played.
Well looking at Brian Martinson's survey and Normal Misbehavior (2006) by Raymond De Vries we see this trust really isn't well founded.
But surely this gets weeded out in peer review right? That's how science works. Wrong. Just check out John Bohannon's "Who's Afraid of Peer Review" or the thousands of SciGen submitted papers to peer reviewed journals that have yet to be redacted.
The working scientist we see - from the horses mouth - are folks happy with academic misconduct and using their opinions as fact as well as "contradictions which are disregarded because it is too painful to face the prospect of the revisions of the theory" while they bounce around in their " roiling sea of jealousies, ambition, backbiting, suppression of dissent, and absurd conceits" with no real fear of falsification because, after all, who is afraid of peer review?