After reading through the thread (apart from all of PT's links) I must say I've rarely felt such admiration I feel right now in the way you, athon, once again handle your communications here on the forum.
As somebody who's "foreign" English needs A LOT refinement (especially in how to relate a differing opinion/questions about it without making it sound hostile towards the person), I find great inspiration. Respect. Hope you do too, PT.
Oh, sorry for the off-topic...
Science thrives on debate. In fact, it's its single biggest virtue, allowing it to self-correct as new information comes to light. Often, disagreements come down to one of three things;
1) The precise meaning of a term
2) The actual presence of a particular observation
3) The relevance of one observation to another
The first one is tough, as it arises out of the discussion of ideas. We get around most of it through using unambiguous language such as jargon, or mathematics. We try to share a language, such as Latin or Greek, to get around it as well. But no matter what, we're impeded by how we're understood. Good ideas can get lost with poor discussion.
The second is improved with repeated experiments and more people looking. Yet it isn't a dichotomous situation - as I suggested to PopTech, there is no universal threshold for observations that distinguishes 'proof' from 'no proof'. We all have personal thresholds for evidence, with some set higher than others.
The third requires modeling to compare observations within a possible context. Arguing the strengths of models is what scientists do. Yet dismissing the notion of using models seems to be like asking a musician to play a song without making a sound.
Athon
