Francois Tremblay said:Proving universal negatives is not only POSSIBLE, but NECESSARY. It's what the scientific process does. We confirm propositions by falsification - by showing what is not so - and looking at what's left.
People who say we can't disprove things, are denying the scientific process itself.
jmercer said:Also, "Falling up" is kinda poor terminology - you might want to rethink it to be more specific, because falling is always down by definition.
spoilsport.c4ts said:Technically it didn't fall up, the atmosphere around it fell and the far less dense balloon was forced upwards by the pressure.
JustAnotherSkeptic said:I've been running this "can't prove a negative" thing through my head for a while, and I wanted to get other's opinions. Let's take a standard example:
The easter bunny doesn't exist.
Francois Tremblay said:Proving universal negatives is not only POSSIBLE, but NECESSARY. It's what the scientific process does. We confirm propositions by falsification - by showing what is not so - and looking at what's left.
People who say we can't disprove things, are denying the scientific process itself.
MRC_Hans said:The "you cannot prove a negative", is also to be viewed as a rule of debate. In this context, it should really be: You cannot require anybody to prove a negative.
And here it does not matter if that particular negative happens to be a provable one; what matters is that you cannot enter a claim into a debate and require to other part to prove you wrong. Whoever enters a claim has the duty to provide evidence for it.
Hans
Enter the "working assumption", another point believers often get wrong. So you say the Easter Bunny does not exist. This does not mean that you have positive proof of its non-existence, nor does it mean that you think absense of evidence is evidene of absense. It simply means that you observe that the idea is illogical, has no evidence to support it, and all observations of the alleged activities of the EB have more parsimonious explanations. So, till such time as evidence for the EB is presented, you have decided to leave it our of your world-picture.athon said:*snip*
The typical run of the debate often relies on a claim for the positive being addressed. If I say 'The Easter Bunny does not exist', I am really claiming 'I have not yet seen evidence supporting any claim that EB exists'. Definitions are the biggest tripping point.
Athon
I must disagree there.MRC_Hans said:Actually, that's a good point. Believers often say "You claim [insert belief system] is wrong, so you must prove your claim". While this is, technically, a fallacy, it is not entirely unreasonable. Whoever seeks the debate has a duty to provide evidence for his/her position, even if it is a negative one.
This is misrepresenting the claims that are being made.Actually, that's a good point. Believers often say "You claim [insert belief system] is wrong, so you must prove your claim".
I don't see 'Homeopathy doesn't work' as a claim in the same way as 'Homeopathy does work' is a claim.jmercer said:The JREF doesn't make any claims; they challenge them. If Randi made a negative claim - "Homeopathy doesn't work" - the Homeopaths of the world would be justified in saying "Prove it" - and proving that particular negative would be tough. There will always be an excuse about why the proof is incomplete, or a "special case exists", etc. However, critical thinking and skepticism should operate in an unbiased fashion; if a claim is made, it should undergo the same level of examination regardless of source.
I know, but as we know, just because a theory appears to violate previously observed evidence, does not make it incorrect. If it works, it works and it would only mean that our current theories were incorrect.delphi_ote said:I'm suprised you brought up the homeopathy threads, Ash. Though the burden of proof was on the h'paths of course, but we constantly provided scientific observation as to why the entire system on which homeopahty is based is impossible according to all previous observations we have made about our world. That was what made them look more ridiculous than anything else.
Ashles said:I don't see 'Homeopathy doesn't work' as a claim in the same way as 'Homeopathy does work' is a claim.
'Homeopathy doesn't work' (and any sceptical 'claim') is always going to be a response to an initial claim.
And most sceptical claims of this nature are based on the fact that there is no evidence for the initial claim.
Surely in such a debate the onus is firmly on the original claim (which will change scientific knowledge) to provide evidence. Without that a counterclaim is merely a request for evidence (or rather an illustration of the lack of evidence) put in a more strident way.
A claim that something doesn't work or doesn't exist, pretty much by definition, cannot ever have evidence, merely a lack of it.
Unfortunately that means (I would have thought) that in these cases we cannot use deduction, only induction to form conclusions. And of course that is very unsatisfactory. Hence the problem.
Thus it must always be up to the original claim to prove the existence as that is the only was we can ever reach a definitive conclusion.
The non-existence can only ever be assumed (albeit with very good reason).