How are the words "best" and "real" not based on science? Are you trying to say I haven't made a scientifically sound conclusion? Science rates, ranks, and classifies things all the time. For example, science evaluates whether one drug is better than another for a specific purpose. I'm not sure you have a clear understanding of what science is and how it works.
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That better is based on the outcome you subjective choose to evaluate for a specific purpose. E.g. do you want to kill or heal/cure a human. Which drug is better depends on the outcome you want.
You are confusing 2 elements in your thinking: How something works and if that is useful to you.
Here it is for what you fail to understand in regards to science. Science relies on objectivity, either thorough observation or using an instrument.
You can't observe useful or measure it using an instrument. Useful is a subjective standard in you for what you want; i.e. a specific purpose.
You are in effect apparently unable to understand that this - "...whether one drug is
better than another for a specific purpose." - is in part subjective because what qualifies as a specific purpose is subjective.
So here is a standard test you can use for a word or a combination of words: Are there in part some form of subjectivity going on? You test that in the follow manner:
Can you observe according to the following definitions regarding observations, that the word(s) used meet the standard of observation:
- expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations.
- of, relating to, or being an object, phenomenon, or condition in the realm of sensible experience independent of individual thought and perceptible by all observers.
So let us use a dog and the purpose of killing a human.
Can you see a dog? Yes.
Can you see that you want to kill a human? No! You can't see that. That is in you as a thought/feeling and if you don't want to kill a human, then that is also in you as you want to do something else. But that you want to achieve a specific purpose, is in you as a thought/feeling/interpretation.
So let us use water as an example. Can you give water to a human to help that human? Yes! Can you forcefully give water to a human so that kills the human? Yes. Both outcomes are a part of how water works in regards to the human body, but the specific purpose is in you.
In effect you use incomplete language. The full correct statement should have been:
...whether one drug is
better than another for a specific purpose, for which the purpose is subjectively decided by one or more humans.
I.e. water can save a human or kill a human. Both are facts and can be tested using science. How you use that, is subjective in you.
That you are apparently unable to catch when you are not using observation/testing and using what you subjectively want to achieve as useful/good, is your problem, not mine.
I know how observation/testing works and when we are not doing that. You apparently don't!