doppelgänger;1085281 said:It depends on where you are trying to drive.
Genius answer.
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doppelgänger;1085281 said:It depends on where you are trying to drive.
Something just occurred to me: is it important to prove anything?
Something just occurred to me: is it important to prove anything? I know it is human nature to be curious, but some people need absolute proof of everything, in order to believe that it's true.
Should we denounce/ mock/attempt to disprove someone's deepest beliefs -- simply because we can't see it, or feel it? I don't think so.
So much of the need for proof is counter-productive.of course, some beliefs are ridiculous to the point of being dangerous; those are troublesome. In most cases, though, it is live, and let live.
Too much about time on this Earth, is spent trying to prove someone else is wrong. All this negative energy!
No. It just closes in on the truth using the simple assumption that repeated and diversified experiements yielding the result you anticipated in your theory indicate a good aproximation of the daily workings in this universe.Can science prove anything? If so, what and why? If not, why not?
Actually no. He more often tries to tell me i just imagine those because of phsycholgical stress. He is not very good at prooving that either howeverBonus question: Can your doctor prove the pain in your arm is caused by a broken bone?
Can science prove anything? If so, what and why? If not, why not?
Yes. We can anaesthetise the fracture zone of the broken bone. If the pain ceases that proves it came from the fracture. We can also stimulate the sensory nerve. Suppose it is the ulnar nerve from the mid bone of the Ulna. We can stimulate with a bipolar electrical stimulator or the newer Magnetic transcutaneous stimulator. Then we measure with electrode placed over the brachial plexus in the neck, the posterior sensory ganglia of the C-7/8 in the cervical spine, and the scalp over the main sensory parietal cortex. Each site has well established latencies (time of impulse travel) and established conduction velocities. Where a nerve is injured, one may find absense or marked delay in the latency, slowing or absense of a conduction velocity. That is about as good as proof gets. That way we can also distinguish from phantom pain arising at the root entry zone or myofascial nerve generated pain by local adrenergic agonists that initiate inhibitory pain at that junction.Bonus question: Can your doctor prove the pain in your arm is caused by a broken bone?
I have to disagree with you. Yes, there is merit in proving things, because correct information is one of the necessary elements of making decisions for which actions we should take. If we want to abolish suffering, we need to know first what the causes of suffering are, else we're almost hopeless to abolish them. The same is true of the so-called "spiritual" experiences. Once neuroscientists complete the map of the biology behind them, we'll be able to treat them the way we do mental illnesses (ie- with medicine and therapy).
Can science prove anything? If so, what and why? If not, why not?
Bonus question: Can your doctor prove the pain in your arm is caused by a broken bone?
Bonus question: Can your doctor prove the pain in your arm is caused by a broken bone?
Can science prove anything? If so, what and why? If not, why not?
Bonus question: Can your doctor prove the pain in your arm is caused by a broken bone?