Perhaps because in normal science, no hypothesis shot through with so many holes will ever get off the starting block?
Yes, it would, it'd make it as far as the 'refine' step.
I agree in a way. However, I think the scientific method applies broadly on two levels. There's the internal process where an individual or group of scientists applies it to their own work. Then there's the process of others examining the work once it's in the public domain.
When I say it wouldn't get off the starting block, I mean there's no flat earth "model" (that I'm aware of) anywhere near complete enough to be presented as a credible hypothesis for scientists to properly pick apart.
I believe Rab's point, and the point of the topic is that flat earthers (at least most who post here) seem happy to leave it at that stage. Where everything is just a "possibility", and no one even seems willing to start eliminating ideas that don't work.
This should be something any serious flat earther should be doing anyway. Ideally long before they post "da troof" on youtube and alleging massive conspiracies.
The problem is when REers deny the existence of that step.
Strongly disagree. The reason I joined is because I was interested to see if flat earthers were willing or able to refine their ideas when presented with internal contradictions or observations that don't match the hypothesis. I believe others may be here for similar reasons.
As flat eartherism is more a community effort than an organised group of researchers, it actually needs people like Rab to say "hang on, this idea doesn't match these observations", or "this part of it directly contradicts another" He should be viewed as a valued resource for providing checks against real astronomical and other observations. He gives clear, concise explanations, and answers every question thrown at him, and should not just be dismissed as an "angry globularist".
Somebody has to do it. Provided of course that flat earthers are even interested in finding a hypothesis that works. And of that, I'm honestly not sure.
FET's possible, anything is possible, so long as you have sufficient details to muddy the water, up to and including just including a God dedicated to tricking people. it is scientifically justifiable to reject something that is possible, simple due to lack of evidence.
That's all that's being said, it seriously shouldn't merit an argument.
God tricking people seems to me the most plausible FE explanation. I've mentioned before that so many as yet unexplained principles and parameters need to line up to exactly match the far simpler heliocentric model and what we see, it implies everything was deliberately designed to make us think the heliocentric model is correct. I've never had a FE response to that though.
It's a point that would eventually need to be addressed though. In other words, if flat earthers could eventually come up with working model, we still need to answer the question "so, why does the heliocentric model still work?"
Trying to insist that soem stronger standard is necessary is why pseudoscience gets spread around so easily. Starting on the grounds that refutation is required makes your position weaker, because you're likely not going to be able to address any model that's been refined. Refinement is always possible. Anyone could make a totally functioning FE model (see: trickster God), no contradictions to be found; holes in a scientific theory aren't a death knell, they're a baptism. Literally everything starts out like that, then it gets developed and refined until they vanish.
Evidence is what matters.
I really don't understand what you mean by this. Evidence that directly contradicts a hypothesis must be a stronger argument to dismiss or change it, than lack of supporting evidence.
I can't imagine how this is insisting on a stronger standard or leads to pseudoscience.