Nick, understand that scientists sometimes use some words differently that you do, especially when arguing with each other. "Irrefutable" is one example. To you, it means: "it is impossible that it could ever be proven wrong, ever." To a scientist, it means something more like: "something so established, so tested, and so agreed upon by the scientific community, for so long, that it is not under discussion". Same goes for words like "fact" and "known", etc etc.
This sometimes makes scientists seem arrogant when they talk, and especially when they try to educate. The use of these words does not imply that the speaker does not understand the scientific method. Understand this before blowing up at steingar, or at textbooks, or whoever else.
Science is not a "mystical thing" that some small population of brainiacs is asking the rest of us to swallow without question. But to argue about it, you gotta learn it. ANYONE can learn it. (Sometime, let me derive "conservation of momentum" for you, from the principle of translational invariance. It's a hoot, you'll love it.)
--Kath
Edit: the same confusion happens with words like "believe". To many, it implies "faith", so when a scientist says that he or she believes this or that about the universe, it sounds religious almost. But it's not. To a scientist, it means more like "have formed an opinion".
This sometimes makes scientists seem arrogant when they talk, and especially when they try to educate. The use of these words does not imply that the speaker does not understand the scientific method. Understand this before blowing up at steingar, or at textbooks, or whoever else.
Science is not a "mystical thing" that some small population of brainiacs is asking the rest of us to swallow without question. But to argue about it, you gotta learn it. ANYONE can learn it. (Sometime, let me derive "conservation of momentum" for you, from the principle of translational invariance. It's a hoot, you'll love it.)
--Kath
Edit: the same confusion happens with words like "believe". To many, it implies "faith", so when a scientist says that he or she believes this or that about the universe, it sounds religious almost. But it's not. To a scientist, it means more like "have formed an opinion".
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