What does this notion of testability do for our understanding of scientism? Or is it more a matter of evaluating the truth of theories? Or what? — Moliere
so it could be interpreted as saying "X is proven to be true" — leo
So, for example, how exactly evolution happened is not directly observable being in the past, whereas the proposition that water boils at 100 degrees at sea level can be tested by direct observation in the present using a thermometer. — Janus
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:clap: — Noah Te Stroete
"Science will answer all our questions and solve all our problems" or "any question that is not answerable by science is not a coherent question" (this latter would probably count more as positivism, but I think it is also an expression of a kind of scientism). — Janus
Minor differences due to air pressure and the supposed variation in accuracy of thermometers can be taken into account and are irrelevant to the point. — Janus
But then if the speaker of those statements does not define what she thinks science is, then we don't know exactly what it is that she thinks will answer all our questions and solve all our problems, or what she thinks it is that can answer any coherent question and why she thinks a question that cannot be answered by it is incoherent. — Janus
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