The decay of science? Science never has been more advanced than in these days! — VincePee
So, what do we commonly hear? -- anti-vaxers, superstition, creationism, etc. — Caldwell
What do you mean by the darker reality than we are used to? — VincePee
Okay, good. Can you please address my first point then? Your point might help with my point #3.So there are various kinds of shit flying around. And maybe science isn’t in decline at all. Maybe it is the ability of politics to keep up with the pace of technological and social change that is the issue, — apokrisis
Are in favor of science and afraid it will succomb to "dark pressure"? — VincePee
The cyclical-development thinking has already taken into consideration the maximum advancement in science in their formulation of this phenomenon. Cyclical in this regard means that it has a beginning, progressing into the more advanced stages, culminating in the most impressive reach of scientific knowledge, then gradually descending into decay. — Caldwell
Can you please address my first point then? — Caldwell
Can you please address my first point then? — Caldwell
Fair point. My first post addressed the idea that length of time is not an indication of success.While there may be a limit to the knowledge in the world that someday we might learn everything in the cosmos, which I would say is the most impressive reach of scientific knowledge. I am sure that we are nowhere near close to that ceiling. — I love Chom-choms
And indeed, we shall reach the glorious era when our science is the most fruitful. And precisely because of this, the root of self-destruction begins, according to cyclical thought.I am not sure who but there was some guy who said that we know less that 1% of everything. So if there was a decay then it is far away. — I love Chom-choms
Not at all. That is not the decay we are talking about here. Worship, belief without justification, and blind indoctrination?On the contrary, by "descending into decay" you could mean that all the knowledge that we have will be lost, like a return to stone age, — I love Chom-choms
Good point, but you missed my first point again. I said "or".So yes, science will after some point gradually decay but how is that an anti-scientific statement. Its not like by saying that all civilizations die, you become anti-civilizationist. — I love Chom-choms
Your point - that science is cyclical - is just postulated out of nowhere. "[J]ust like any other phenomenon in the history of histories of human civilizations" - that's too broad and vague to even discuss. — SophistiCat
Where is the evidence of science moving into the down phase of a cycle? — apokrisis
And indeed, it doesn't. So where does it start or what will cause the eventual demise? From within the authority of science. That's where. Now, this is where, you philosophy members, should be able to explain the phenomenon of power, authority, and far-reaching.Another thing is that the scientific enterprise does not exist independently of "other phenomen[a] in the history of histories of human civilizations". — SophistiCat
Furthermore as Bertrand Russell noted way back in History of Western Philosophy, scientific method has no inherent moral compass. One could have, and some do have, ambitious scientific research programs to produce superbly efficient killing machines, machines which could kill enormous numbers of people, or even rid the world of people altogether. There’s no scientific reason that such programs ought not to be pursued. There are plenty of reasons not to pursue them, but science doesn’t necessarily provide them. — Wayfarer
1. That just like any other phenomenon in the history of histories of human civilizations -- science is cyclical. No one can stop this as a natural occurrence. Length of time is not an indication of success, if you get my drift. — Caldwell
What do you mean by that? Science is a concept. A framework for building knowledge. You can "defeat" scientists, people who advocate science - but the concept itself is untouchable.2. That violence can defeat science. There is a tipping point after which, it's just all decay. — Caldwell
Is that what you understand as decay then? Again, I don't see that at all. Worship, belief without justification and blind indoctrination existed before science and have been declining as the scientific method evolved.Not at all. That is not the decay we are talking about here. Worship, belief without justification, and blind indoctrination? — Caldwell
Our good science before its maximum achievement. I agree. My first post addresses the time way after your description.Science’ is not an ideology nor a belief system. It’s a method of exploration, testing and validation of ideas and also a framework within which discoveries are shared and progressed inter-generationally. The OP situates science as a kind of ideology or belief system, which it isn’t. — Wayfarer
I can refer you to @I love Chom-choms post as this is a good suggestion.By what measure could there be a ‘maximum achievement’? Would could the ‘maximum achievement’ of science be? — Wayfarer
While there may be a limit to the knowledge in the world that someday we might learn everything in the cosmos, which I would say is the most impressive reach of scientific knowledge. I am sure that we are nowhere near close to that ceiling. — I love Chom-choms
Oswald Spengler. — Caldwell
The decay will be in the form of implosion from within the scientific community. How? — Caldwell
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