why not?..how many things have you not seen that you confirm to be true or factual?
you're moving from the scientific method onto perception here. That's got nothing to do with confirmed observations of facts in science.
why not?..how many things have you not seen that you confirm to be true or factual?
You're confirming without having observed whatever was to be observed. It's not a confirmed observation then, just a mere confirmation based on whatever.
They get a group of people and check their observations/interpretations amongst themselves.
and people do this everyday, through out life, on many different levels
you're moving from the scientific method onto perception here. That's got nothing to do with confirmed observations of facts in science.
am i? it doesnt?
so if the scientific community as a whole agrees upon something without seeing it or conducting their own research/experiments ....it shouldn't be believed?
i am not confusing anything...i am playing "devils advocate" as it wereEvery hypothesis is supposed to be written clearly enough to be tested. The study itself should be clear enough so that it can be replicated.
Researchers used operational definitions so they know what to look for and what to classify each event that they observe. There are standardised measures in place so that everyone who is observing something all agree that THAT thing is the thing being observed.
Explanations however, go BEYOND what is observable. That's where theory is developed.
What you're confusing is, the study itself should be able to be replicated, from the types of participants, equipment, method, stimulus, etc. The results may vary because the participants will be different, it really all depends.
Scientific observations are different to non-scientific observations. Scientific observations are only fact when the observation matches the operational definition, and it is agreed upon by more than one of the observers.
In day-to-day life, when someone says "So and so did this" and we believe their observations, that's not scientific.
There are different perspectives of reality. Realism, relativism...and everyone has observer bias. But science uses measures to reduce observer bias. Like double-blind controls or some shite.
I don't know what you're trying to get at anyway.
do you agree that for most perception is reality?
I give up.
Nothing is ever 100% certain, we all know. But science is the best we have. Facts are facts, they are observed by one person at least. If you don't trust them well then good for you.
That hasn't been true since the 16th century.
:24::24::24:.....oh boy
I'm not sure why you're laughing, it's a movement called Rationalism, and it's about 400-500 years old.
so if something happens once but cant be reproduced it isnt fact? or doesn't exist?
do you agree that for most perception is reality?
If someone says the water in front of them one day just jumped into the sky and flew off, chances are they were on something pretty strong. We know this because it goes against the laws of that substance's behaviour and the laws of the environment around it.
That's a very bad example. If by example there was water in front of someone and a large enough dust devil came upon it it's very possible for it to jump into the sky and disappear. For every occurrence there are always explanations even if something happens just once. Sometimes they just take a bit longer to prove to the skeptics.
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