You attempted to show that any scientific inference about what happened in the past was no better than conjecture.In my opinion science only knows how to make things and cure diseases. There is no way it can know what happened a million years ago from physics. Their theories say what COULD have happened, but there could have been a dragon that breathed the world out of its mouth a million are so years ago. That makes more sense then a fiery singularity. An eternal dragon. There is no real truth in science. Its about trial and error to see what we can DO, not what we know. Scientists say "this is what is in the sun" based solely on what they know COULD power a sun. They don't really know what's inside that thing and the idea that philosophy will go away while science will find the theory that explains everything is preposterous. If there was no more to search for everyone would kill each other anyway — Gregory
I remember back to my first experiences of consciousness and free will and see his I've seen science make things. — Gregory
What? — Banno
Actually, what you are saying is pretty clear, just wrong.trying to see what someone is really saying... — Gregory
I think a philosophy of time will necessarily consider the past more doubtful than the present — Gregory
If all you are doing is presenting bits of autobiography, why should we be attentive to your posts? — Banno
The account given by science, from big bang through star and planet formation, abiogenesis, evolution, geological change - it's extraordinary! It's brilliant - in the literal sense of shining brightly on who and what we are. And we built it ourselves, using our little ape minds. This must count amongst the greatest achievements of humanity. — Banno
You debate, you don't try to dialogue — Gregory
That's your opinion. — Gregory
Rubbish — Banno
If all you are doing is presenting bits of autobiography — Banno
I do have a specific point and have not changed my views. We know certain elements have specific effects but other things can have this as well. So we can know "so-and-so causes cancer" but not what happened millions of years ago because other things (call it a dragon, exotic matters, parallel worlds, God, or whatever) could have caused the effect ("now") other than the causes they assign to it — Gregory
It is a fundamental assumption of all science that the laws of physics are the same everywhere in our universe, have been the same since the universe began, and will be the same forever. — T Clark
Aren’t both of those disproven by quantum mechanics? — DingoJones
It is a fundamental assumption of all science that the laws of physics are the same everywhere in our universe, have been the same since the universe began, and will be the same forever. — T Clark
I’m not sure that’s the case...”everywhere in the universe”? ”will be the same forever”?
Aren’t both of those disproven by quantum mechanics? How does science account for variables of what is surely a vast amount of knowledge we do NOT posses about the way the laws of physics work? — DingoJones
What is the speed of light outside the universe? — Gregory
if the universe turns inside out the speed of light changes. So the laws may not be the same for future eternity. — Gregory
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