I agree with you, but that is kind of by design. For example, we know the Standard Model is not wholly true. We have found some flaws. However, it does the best job of prediction so far. So we stick with it until we find a replacement that does a better job.francisdesales said:In science, the currently held model will continue to thrive, even in the face of evidence - IF there is no other more "conclusive" model to hang one's hat upon.
A bad model is not bad itself. Newtonian Physics is not true. Special relativity revealed its flaws. However, we still steach Newtonian Phsyics because it works well for most common physics situations we encounter in our daily lives.
The difference is that if I so desire, I can doubt them and check out the experiment for myself. A scientist can lie, but eventually they will be caught.Faith is operative when we trust in the judgment of past scientist's hypothesis to an experiment's results.
I would say that it could be measured. The problem comes when people do not define love and keep it as a vague concept. However, if you say that love is an emotion that motivates one to help another even at the cost to the person, then you have a definition that could be tested.Go ahead and measure it. Determine, if you can, the empirical unit of measurement for a person's love. It cannot be done - and which scientist will then admit that love doesn't exist because it cannot be measured - but only inferred???
I see two problems with this. It assumes that we know the probability, which we don't. Maybe in the end, once we know everything, we will find this is the only possible universe and the odds are 1 in 1.Basically, you are betting on the 1 in 1 x 10_100 or so chance that the universe WAS randomly created. This is not logical.
The other problem is we don't know how many universes there are. For example, maybe there are 1 x 10_100 universes. Or maybe this universe cycles.
Back when I was Christian, I started to doubt. I made a promise that I would never lie to myself and so I knew I was doubting. So I prayed for God to let me know he was real. I figured he would know what would be convincing to me. After a year, I tried to ask for something specific like "If you are real, could you move this book across the floor?" I just wanted a sign to make sure I was worshiping something imaginary.Packrat said:First off, have you prayed for God to reveal himself to you?
In the end, I decided that I had tried but I could not force myself to believe something I had no evidence for. It would be like trying to believe that dragons are real. You can say you believe, but you really don't. So I decided that if God were real, he would understand why I lost my faith. If he still put me in hell, then he was not the being I would have wanted to worship.
But it is quite different when you deal with an all poweful being that sends you to eternal torment if you do not believe. If believeing someone was a 65 year old male kept me from torment, I would expect a picture.If someone said over the internet that they were a 65 yr-old man and I wanted them to give me a picture of them so that I knew they were telling the truth, they're not obligated to do so and it may in fact be better not to reveal oneself over the net at times.
One number they look at is the ratio of the strength of the strong force (that binds atom nucleus together) with the strength of the weak force (which is involved in some decay of necleus). If this ratio was off by even the smallest number, atoms would not form above hydrogen. However, maybe we will find that this ratio has to be this value? Or maybe it is a random value when creating a universe?Packrat said:I've always wondered how they come up with those numbers. I'd be interested in hearing more about what sorts of things they take into account. Undoubtedly, at least to me, that is a very rough estimate.