dafydd
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FYI: You responded to a former member who was banned well over a year ago, on 11 December 2010.
I missed that bit.
FYI: You responded to a former member who was banned well over a year ago, on 11 December 2010.
We have already had this debate on another thread.Farsight
When you find out just how much pseudoscience is out there, it's scarey. And it isn't just the obvious stuff. Some of it is peddled as "mainstream science". We are regaled with time travel, brane theory, the multiverse, the anthropic principle, entropic gravity, the mathematical universe, the holographic universe... the list goes on
You shouldn't make a distinction based upon the qualifications of the author. You should make the distinction based on the science, taking note of the supporting evidence and the logical argument and the predictive mathematics etc.We have already had this debate on another thread. I don't regard speculative conjectures made by accomplished professionals as "crackpot."
There's plenty of people out there who think they can contradict scientific evidence, and general relativity, and Einstein, etc etc etc, and who have cultivated a religious-like following. The thing is, some of them are professional physicists. Think Hawking. Some of them have no understanding of the science because they're essentially mathematicians rather than scientists adhering to the scientific method.I am writing here about people who have publicly promulgated conjectures that contradict scientific evidence. Many of these people (like EU peddlers) have cultivated a religious like following. Typically, they have no understanding of the science they are contradicting. Many of them don't know enough mathematics to solve a quadratic equation, yet think they can contradict stuff like general relativity with their folksy home-spun conjectures.
Don't treat the guy like some high priest of physics. If it's BS it's BS, it doesn't matter whose mouth it comes from. And note this: conjectures are sometimes deliberately armoured against being disproven by scientific evidence. They rumble on for decades wasting everybody's time and money, and people believe in them despite the total lack of supporting evidence.In contrast someone like Tegmark, who is an accomplished physicist and cosmologist, full well knows his conjectures are speculative and is willing to subject his thinking to whatever scientific evidence may someday be available.
And I find you siding with Tegmark's universe made of mathematics to be deeply ironic.Frankly, I find your inability to make this distinction a bit "crackpot."
Not at all. The vast majority of physicists certainly aren't crackpots. I suppose you could claim that some of the things in the textbooks are crackpot, but I think it's better to say that they're wrong. IMHO the biggest crackpots are the celebrity physicists promoting themselves by peddling woo.In fact, there are so many physics crackpots that even the vast majority of people who write the textbooks and teach the university courses on physics are crackpots.
There's plenty of people out there who think they can contradict scientific evidence, and general relativity, and Einstein, etc etc etc, and who have cultivated a religious-like following. The thing is, some of them are professional physicists. Think Hawking. Some of them have no understanding of the science because they're essentially mathematicians rather than scientists adhering to the scientific method.
I am making distinctions based on the science. As I have said several times now (you do not seem to be paying attention), I regard conjectures as "crackpot" when they contradict established and proven scientific theories -- like EU nonsense. Professionals with qualifications (like Linus Pauling) can certainly take a crackpot direction, but when respected professionals go out on a limb with some conjectures that go beyond current knowledge, they are not necessarily crackpots.You shouldn't make a distinction based upon the qualifications of the author. You should make the distinction based on the science, taking note of the supporting evidence and the logical argument and the predictive mathematics etc.
Please explain how and when Hawking has contradicted scientific evidence. To my knowledge he has accepted reality when he has been demonstrated to be wrong.There's plenty of people out there who think they can contradict scientific evidence, and general relativity, and Einstein, etc etc etc, and who have cultivated a religious-like following. The thing is, some of them are professional physicists. Think Hawking. Some of them have no understanding of the science because they're essentially mathematicians rather than scientists adhering to the scientific method.
An example: A respected professional might speculate about GR in scenarios where GR has no experimental evidence, but anyone persisting in some conjecture about GR that contradicts experimental evidence is indeed a crackpot, regardless of credentials. In any case the kind of stuff that "rumbles on for decades" seems to die out over time unless they become the core beliefs of some cult, in which case they do become crackpot theories.Don't treat the guy like some high priest of physics. If it's BS it's BS, it doesn't matter whose mouth it comes from. And note this: conjectures are sometimes deliberately armoured against being disproven by scientific evidence. They rumble on for decades wasting everybody's time and money, and people believe in them despite the total lack of supporting evidence.
I am not "siding" with Tegmark. I find his conjectures strange but interesting. Note the thread I stared about Craig Hogan (a physicist at the University of Chicago) and his work at Fermilab, which might support Tegmark's conjectures. However strange and counter-intuitive the concept, if it can be supported by evidence, it merits consideration. At first sight, Einstein's theories were strikingly strange and counter-intuitive. Was he a crackpot?And I find you siding with Tegmark's universe made of mathematics to be deeply ironic.
No. But since you mention it, I know more about time than Stephen Hawking. Have a look on the internet at what he says, and I'll tell you about it if you like. Straight up.Errm... are you trying to suggest you know more about physics than Stephen Hawking?
No, not necessarily. But knowing what you do about c = √(1/ε0μ0) you must surely know about the vacuum impedance Z0 = √(μ0/ε0). And yet you dismiss "the electric universe" as nonsense whilst giving credence to "the mathematical universe". That seems a bit black and white, with a whiff of Emperor's New Clothes.I am making distinctions based on the science. As I have said several times now (you do not seem to be paying attention), I regard conjectures as "crackpot" when they contradict established and proven scientific theories -- like EU nonsense. Professionals with qualifications (like Linus Pauling) can certainly take a crackpot direction, but when respected professionals go out on a limb with some conjectures that go beyond current knowledge, they are not necessarily crackpots.
I don't think he has. But note that he has specialised in topics that have not been subject to scientific evidence.Please explain how and when Hawking has contradicted scientific evidence. To my knowledge he has accepted reality when he has been demonstrated to be wrong.
Agreed.An example: A respected professional might speculate about GR in scenarios where GR has no experimental evidence, but anyone persisting in some conjecture about GR that contradicts experimental evidence is indeed a crackpot, regardless of credentials.
I'm afraid M-theory is one of them.In any case the kind of stuff that "rumbles on for decades" seems to die out over time unless they become the core beliefs of some cult, in which case they do become crackpot theories.
Fine, no problem, but IMHO you should apply your criteria evenly.I am not "siding" with Tegmark. I find his conjectures strange but interesting. Note the thread I stared about Craig Hogan (a physicist at the University of Chicago) and his work at Fermilab, which might support Tegmark's conjectures. However strange and counter-intuitive the concept, if it can be supported by evidence, it merits consideration.
No. And don't forget, other people worked on relativity before he did, Lorentz, Poincare, Fitzgerald, and Voigt to name but a few. SR wasn't that novel. But also remember that SR wasn't "mainstream" until the late twenties, and GR languished until its "golden age" that started in about 1960. See post#2 here. So I imagine there were people in the intervening years who called him a crackpot. Remember the snippet on page 53 of Graham Farmelo's The Strangest Man, which was referring to Einstein in 1923: "At that time, Cunningham and Eddington were streets ahead of the majority of their Cambridge colleagues, who dismissed Einstein's work, ignored it, or denied its significance".At first sight, Einstein's theories were strikingly strange and counter-intuitive. Was he a crackpot?
Agreed. IMHO whilst they're being proven wrong and refusing to accept the scientific evidence, they're fighting tooth and claw to maintain their standing. That's when they call the challenger a crackpot.I might add that even if some theory were proven wrong, it does not follow that the author of that theory is a crackpot -- as long as he/she accepts being wrong. Crackpots either start their "careers" promulgating wrong theories and persist in the face of evidence or continue to advocate some conjecture -- at first plausible -- even after it is proven to be wrong -- like Fred Hoyle.
No. But since you mention it, I know more about time than Stephen Hawking. Have a look on the internet at what he says, and I'll tell you about it if you like. Straight up.
In fairness when conventional science can not explain things that can be observed with ones own eyes such as the creation of ancient megalithic Structures all over the world, many of which contain stones weighing hundreds of tons, people are compelled to 'think out of the box".
Therefore, the door is open to these crackpots to try to explain what real scientists can not.
OK, so you're claiming here that the existence of ancient megalithic structures proves that some aspect of modern science is wrong.
Do you have any evidence to back that claim up?
(Though perhaps you should go over to General Skepticism & Paranormal and start a new thread there.)
Clearly, I did not say that, I said modern "science can not explain" these things not that it was wrong! If fact I have given a great answer to question asked on this thread by the TS IMO. Perhaps you should have read my post again before answering as such.
Ted, you have now made several "testy" responses to perfectly polite posts. I read your post the same way ctamblyn did. If this was a misunderstanding---well, please get used to it, it happens all the time in written communication. Don't get mad, don't blame the poster, just respond to the post and clarify your meaning.
If you find it happening a lot, perhaps the problem is not that other people are failing to read---perhaps the problem is that you're not writing clearly enough, and that other people are merely failing to read your mind.
Clearly, I did not say that, I said modern "science can not explain" these things not that it was wrong! If fact I have given a great answer to question asked on this thread by the TS IMO. Perhaps you should have read my post again before answering as such.
Don't treat the guy like some high priest of physics. If it's BS it's BS, it doesn't matter whose mouth it comes from. And note this: conjectures are sometimes deliberately armoured against being disproven by scientific evidence. They rumble on for decades wasting everybody's time and money, and people believe in them despite the total lack of supporting evidence.
And I find you siding with Tegmark's universe made of mathematics to be deeply ironic.
ETAA: Actually, would you mind clarifying what you mean by "the existance of the structrues themselves and the belief that there are technologies we do not have at this very second is not conditional on our science being incorrect"? Perhaps in different words, as I want to be sure I understand your position correctly?
Not an issue although I'm sure you understand exactely. "The belief that there are technologies we do not have at this very second" as used means that given the tools for building and possible methods to move rocks weighing up to hundreds of tons for large distances available thousands of years ago when these ancient megalithic structures were built, these structures should not exist without exception;therfore, logiclly there were an alternate technology used that we do not have at this second.
Not an issue although I'm sure you understand exactely. "The belief that there are technologies we do not have at this very second" as used means that given the tools for building and possible methods to move rocks weighing up to hundreds of tons for large distances available thousands of years ago when these ancient megalithic structures were built, these structures should not exist without exception;therfore, logiclly there was an alternate technology used that we do not have at this second.