Dark Energy and Empirical Science
Dark energy is a perfectly straightforward hypothesis.
It's not "perfectly straight forward" enough to demonstrate it in a lab, now is it?
So what? That has nothing at all to do with the question. Whether or not dark energy is empirical in nature is not directly dependent on laboratory experiments. It is yet another
fatal flaw in your thinking that you believe laboratory experiments are the only source of empirical facts. We have been over this ground before as well (e.g.,
What is "Empirical" Science? IV,
What is "Empirical" Science? III,
What is "Empirical" Science? II and
What is "Empirical" Science?).
Consider this quote from
What is Empirical Science? II:
One of the essential points of science vs religion is the empirical verification of an hypothesis through observation. Dark energy & dark matter are in fact 100% empirical because their existence, as well as all of the physical properties of both, are derived entirely from observation. If you are going to claim that dark matter & dark energy are "religious", then you have no choice but to reject the validity of observation as a method for the verification of an hypothesis. This too is clearly a religious, rather than a scientific point of view.
And consider this quote from
What is "Empirical" Science? (emphasis added for this occasion):
If you are suggesting that dark matter & dark energy are "religious" in nature, you are quite mistaken. Of course, we have had this discussion before, and will no doubt have it once again. Both dark matter & dark energy are 100% pure and unadulterated empirical concepts. If you intend to argue that they are not, then it is necessary to deny the validity of science altogether, which then clearly makes yours the 100% pure & unadulterated religious position.
I guess my prediction from January has come true 4 1/2 months later. We are having this discussion again, as predicted. And once again I will predict again that we will have this discussion again, as we seem to have every discussion again, sooner or later. You are just as wrong now as you were then in your assessment of controlled laboratory experiments as the
exclusive arbiter of empiricism.
Controlled laboratory experiments have an obvious, and sometimes crucial role in all empirical sciences, everybody knows that. Specific claims about the precise physical circumstances in the melting transformation of water ice into liquid water are obviously in the realm of precise & controlled laboratory experimentation. Anyone can see that controlled laboratory experiments will be crucial to the verification or falsification of hypotheses on that question. However, specific claims about the formation of large scale structure in the universe are equally obviously
forbidden to the realm of controlled laboratory experimentation. The only avenues of exploration available to study such cosmological phenomena are astronomical observations and numerical simulations based on the fundamental
mathematical physics (the numerical simulations are in my opinion a form of controlled laboratory experiment, though this might be a controversial idea).
The heart of empirical science is the ability to formulate & test relevant hypotheses, and to make progress in understanding based on the outcome of those tests. Whether or not the tests are, or should be, physical, controlled laboratory experiments, depends entirely on the nature of the hypothesis and the question at hand.
It's not perfectly straight forward in the sense it is based on known laws of physics, now is it?
On the contrary, dark energy is firmly rooted in the known laws of physics, a fact which could easily escape your careless approach to what you call "science". First, dark energy is constrained by observation, which makes it empirical. Second, dark energy is constrained by the fundamental laws of physics, by which I mean, for example, that it must conserve energy & momentum and obey the laws of thermodynamics, just like everything else. Dark energy is no more "magical" than is gravity; it's just another
field in the great scheme of things, just like everything else.