To suggest that science can only be valid knowledge if it is a complete description of reality is incorrect. — counterpunch
The world described by science is a single planetary environment; occupied by human beings, who are all members of the same species, and presumably, have a common interest in sustainability! The earth is a big ball of molten rock that we could tap into, to meet all our energy needs, and more! — counterpunch
The point is that there's a difference between an ideological understanding of reality, and a scientific understanding of reality.
Do you understand that? — counterpunch
To suggest that science can only be valid knowledge if it is a complete description of reality is incorrect. — counterpunch
you reduce science to a loose collection of tools — counterpunch
Yes, I understand that too, and I addressed it. — Wayfarer
So, what does ‘a scientific understanding of reality’ mean, given that it must of necessity be ‘incomplete’? — Wayfarer
It means that it’s not ‘an understanding of reality’ as such. — Wayfarer
The ‘scientific worldview’ now is vastly different to the ‘scientific worldview’ of 1920 and it will probably be vastly different again in 2120. — Wayfarer
You're subtly conflating the two all the time in your posts. — Wayfarer
I agree that geothermal energy is likely important, but this thread is not about that issue. — Wayfarer
I really don't think that's true. Can you cite anything in support? — Wayfarer
The world understood via the lens of physics, chemistry and biology, as opposed to the world understood via the lens of God, flags and money. — counterpunch
Are you familiar with CRISPR? You seem very educated, so I thought you might be. — Foghorn
have consistently stated that one of their goals is to "democratize" this technology, that is, make it widely available to all. As example, basic CRISPR kits are already being sold on Amazon. — Foghorn
but it's an exagerration to say that it allows people to 'cook up new life forms'. — Wayfarer
No kidding. I have not said anything about religious conviction, you resort to that because your own dogmas are being challenged. — Wayfarer
I know you are an anti-science God botherer from previous discussions. — counterpunch
This seems a wildly inaccurate characterization of Wayfayer's writing. You're just sinking your own ship with this kind of talk. — Foghorn
Which seems an interesting investigation for philosophers to engage. — Foghorn
I think the idea behind the widespread distribution of CRISPR is the democratic distribution of the technology. I presume that this is the reasoning behind it. — Wayfarer
I also had a brief look around for info on that, and learned that Jennifer Doudna is widely engaged in discussions of the ethics of the technology. — Wayfarer
I also am aware that Walter Isaacson’s last book was about her, which I might well buy — Wayfarer
To which the obvious answer is ‘yes’. I get that you’re making a polemical point, — Wayfarer
I asked some inconvenient questions in an appropriate manner in the appropriate place. I was erased. — Foghorn
Here's the logic failure. We assume, typically without any questioning, that because adults can handle more than children, therefore they can handle anything. — Foghorn
I really wouldn’t waste too much time stewing over that. — Wayfarer
I suspect that their Facebook site gets an awful lot of commentary — Wayfarer
Again - not so. I am not licensed to, say, export plutonium, or access the central banking system's computer. There are thousands of things I'm not permitted to do. You're falling into flights of rhetorical fancy. — Wayfarer
This is the simplest thing really.
1) Everyone takes it to be an obvious given that the powers made available to children should be restricted due to their limited maturity, experience and judgement etc. — Foghorn
Whereas, to my mind, your Pandora's Box argument, speaks eloquently for the science based regulation of technology. i.e. making decisions about which technologies to apply on the basis of a scientific understanding of reality - rather than, religious political and economic ideology. — counterpunch
Only it's not simple, because your conclusion is a need to "dethrone the science clergy" whatever that means. — counterpunch
Ok, but science is not a machine. It's run by human beings. And so declaring management "science based" does not automatically remove that management from the kinds of emotional agendas which rightly concern you. — Foghorn
As example, quite a few scientists willingly volunteered to develop the atomic bomb, even though at least some of them were clear minded enough to understand that doing so would present an existential threat to civilization. They weren't evil, they were just human. — Foghorn
Slapping "science based" on the regulation process doesn't remove the human element, because scientists too have religious, political and economic agendas which they pursue, just like everybody else. — Foghorn
Science is not many things! It is however, an increasingly coherent and valid understanding of reality, — counterpunch
The nuclear bomb was developed because the US feared Germany would develop it first. Not because scientists thought it would be a spiffing idea. — counterpunch
but saying it's not possible to regulate technology with regard to a scientific understanding of reality, is false. — counterpunch
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