Z
Variable Constant
Science... unverifiable.
The Clown has returned!
FYI, Rad - Science assumes NOTHING. Individual scientists may - alas, they are only human - but science as a whole is specifically about avoiding assumptions and finding VERIFIABLE truth.
This is why gravity is science but homeopathy is NOT. One can be verified, the other cannot. When we discovered that mercury expands and contracts in relationship to atmospheric pressure, we could then verify it repeatedly, and do so daily via thermometers. When we discovered the internal combustion engine, it wasn't a singular event; it was a reproducible, verifiable device.
I will concede, some assumptions are made, the first of which is that other verified facts remain true; water still freezes at 32 degrees farenheit, which is useful for experiments involving freezing, unless other factors act upon it (which we know and can verify as well). Nonetheless, this does not require belief; only knowledge. If you know something, you have no reason to believe it. Belief only comes into play when knowledge is uncertain - and some things are certain. In fact, any scientist who produces an unverifiable result has failed. Any scientist who bases his research on unverified assumptions has failed.
Obviously, Rad, you have no grasp of science whatsoever. But, then, from someone who takes a centuries-old book of politically-rewritten fables as fact, that isn't too surprising.
The Clown has returned!
FYI, Rad - Science assumes NOTHING. Individual scientists may - alas, they are only human - but science as a whole is specifically about avoiding assumptions and finding VERIFIABLE truth.
This is why gravity is science but homeopathy is NOT. One can be verified, the other cannot. When we discovered that mercury expands and contracts in relationship to atmospheric pressure, we could then verify it repeatedly, and do so daily via thermometers. When we discovered the internal combustion engine, it wasn't a singular event; it was a reproducible, verifiable device.
I will concede, some assumptions are made, the first of which is that other verified facts remain true; water still freezes at 32 degrees farenheit, which is useful for experiments involving freezing, unless other factors act upon it (which we know and can verify as well). Nonetheless, this does not require belief; only knowledge. If you know something, you have no reason to believe it. Belief only comes into play when knowledge is uncertain - and some things are certain. In fact, any scientist who produces an unverifiable result has failed. Any scientist who bases his research on unverified assumptions has failed.
Obviously, Rad, you have no grasp of science whatsoever. But, then, from someone who takes a centuries-old book of politically-rewritten fables as fact, that isn't too surprising.