And your basis for disagreement is totally without merit.
Why don't you engage my point?
If you accepted Randi's assertions because Randi is Randi, then you're not a skeptic.
If you accepted that Randi could be wrong, and you weighed his argument and considered it yourself, then you're not acting the way you say "science works".
Pretty simple.
You said Randi is respected because he's an authority.
I don't think so. You mean I'm ignoring that their work has stood the test of time, was innovative, &c?
It's not important to my claim, so I'm not roping it into the discussion. But sure: there's all sorts of things that brought to the position of being regarded as an authority.
This doesn't prove they're not authorities after all. It just explains it.
See post 77:I'm pretty sure I didn't.
blutosky said:Randi is respected because he's an authority on debunking.
See post 77:
Time for bed. I don't have the energy for a NASCAR thread tonight.
All I can say is, thank goodness neither science nor skepticism works the way you think they do, blutosky.
Wouldn't it depend? I mean: there's that great scene in Annie Hall where they're debating the intention of a play, and Woody Allen's character is able to back up his claim by producing the playwright in person...Marshall Mc Luhan is a playwright? What play did he write? "The Medium is the Massage"?
Wouldn't it depend? I mean: there's that great scene in Annie Hall where they're debating the intention of a play, and Woody Allen's character is able to back up his claim by producing the playwright in person...Marshall Mc Luhan is a playwright? What play did he write? "The Medium is the Massage"?
Hey, gimmie a break: It's been 30 years! Go with it.
Oh, for Pete's sake. How about this then: Randi is respected as an authority on debunking.
Again, your paychecks are only relevant in your authoritarian worldview.I have paycheques that say otherwise. At least as far as the science claim goes.
Skepticism promotes science because science follows skeptical rules -- it's based on sober review of evidence. This does not, however, imply that "as with science also with skepticism" for all things.In principle, skepticism is trying to promote science, so: as with science also with skepticism, I assume.
Again, your paychecks are only relevant in your authoritarian worldview.
Skepticism promotes science because science follows skeptical rules -- it's based on sober review of evidence. This does not, however, imply that "as with science also with skepticism" for all things.
And didn't your daddy ever tell you what happens when you assume?
No no no. No "for Pete's sake". In most other situations, it wouldn't matter, but in this context it did.
You have repeatedly asserted (incorrectly) that science and skepticism rely on appeals to authority. In doing so, you ignore the fact that only a consistently credible body of work (i.e., getting results that others can verify) leads others to judge that a scientist or skeptic is an expert.['quote]
No, I think this is true, and have said so *twice* in this thread. I'm not ignoring it- I don't see the point. This doesn't mean there aren't any experts - you just said there were. This doesn't mean they aren't considered the primary point of contact outside their peers, or even within it. This is my claim. I don't think discussing how they became authorities contradicts the statement that they're considered authorities. As a consequence, I haven't gone into it much, because I don't see the point.
If a scientist does not submit papers for peer review, if a skeptic withholds data, then other scientists and skeptics are not going to believe their claims, no matter who they are.
It's the method, the openness, the process that is science and which is skepticism. Appeals to authority are not needed.
Sure they are. Don't you go to a doctor when you're sick? Should people just 'read up' on 'medicine stuff' to figure out what ails them? Or do they go to an expert?
Continuing with this example, the defense of a doctor "I thought this treatment was better so I ignored the guidelines of the APA" is not "Hooray for thinking for himself" - It's "Malpractice."
When parents do it, it's "Neglect."
When skeptics encourage this behavior, they are joining the ranks of antiscience, not supporting science.
The reason we cite experts so often is that the experts have the most data. They have the largest body of verified results to refer to, and they're easier to find. It would be odd, therefore, if we didn't cite Randi's work or Hawking's work when discussing debunking and contemporary physics, respectively.
But if anyone cites these experts and merely references a conclusion without explaining its validity and relevance, this is a logical error.
No it isn't. I've provided citations that refute this. There are legitemate applications of appeal to authority. When there's a recognized field with general agreement &c. Or are you saying you don't believe this?
Suppose I cited Hawking and Hertog's new paper on quantum cosmology and claimed it proved string theory? Given that their predictions haven't yet been verified, I would be committing an error, even though Hawking and Hertog are experts, and are qualified to opine on the matter at hand.
The error would not be theirs, it would be mine, because I would be making a naked appeal to authority, rather than citing the work of an authority.
I don't understand the example. Are you saying that Hawking claims he's proved string theory, and if you report it, you're be making an error?
Or are you saying that if you've misrepresented the paper, that you've made a logical error?
If the latter, then no, this is not germaine. I can misread an instrument and report the wrong result. This doesn't make 'reading an instrument' a logical error.
To continue with this example, you could very well read into the paper with the best intentions of understanding it, misunderstand it because of a lack of education, and still misrepresent its findings. That is: an error followed after analyzing the data. This doesn't mean 'analyzing data' is a logical error.
So you realized he was wrong because he erroneously thought mass and weight were the same property. What he wrote - his "data" - was wrong. Not because he is not an authority in physics.
Haven't you just proved it is the data, not the authority, that counts?
That must go down as one of the more stupid statements ever made on this board. At no point is anybody actually reading the original experiments? How did they know what happened then? Psychic powers?
Of course somebody read, reviewed and replicated the original experimants. Agreed, not the people who wrote a school textbook. So what?
What in the world are you babbling about?
There is no "skepticism movement" that "was founded".
You suggest here that atheists should pipe down and restrict their comments on God and religion to other forums. To hell with that.
I am one of those skeptics who assert -- and can argue rationally for -- the notion that rigidly applied skepticism leads inevitably to the atheistic position.
If debates over this issue break up organizations, then that's how the cookie crumbles. I'm not going to shut up.
Please show me who you are talking about, who are these people who believe science has an answer for everything and can solve all problems?
Even on my "Killing Sagan's Dragon" thread, where many posters argued that I could not deny the dragon because going beyond science was irrational, I don't recall anyone making the sort of argument you describe.
You so silly, there is science and there is not science, there is no domain to which science should not be applied. There is no 'normal' science, there is merely science, sociology is an area of science that might even address the areas you feel should be off limit. Or possibly cultural anthropology.
Why would "social and political problems " be any different?
I think that science applies to all things why would there be an exclusion?
Then there's really nothing more I can say.No no no. No "for Pete's sake". In most other situations, it wouldn't matter, but in this context it did.
You have repeatedly asserted (incorrectly) that science and skepticism rely on appeals to authority. In doing so, you ignore the fact that only a consistently credible body of work (i.e., getting results that others can verify) leads others to judge that a scientist or skeptic is an expert.
No, I think this is true, and have said so *twice* in this thread. I'm not ignoring it- I don't see the point. This doesn't mean there aren't any experts - you just said there were. This doesn't mean they aren't considered the primary point of contact outside their peers, or even within it. This is my claim. I don't think discussing how they became authorities contradicts the statement that they're considered authorities. As a consequence, I haven't gone into it much, because I don't see the point.