ericmurphy
Member
How so?
Let's say what we assess is a fact. Then isn't our assessing of facts untrustworthy because our assessment of facts may change? How can we know which facts we assess are the "right" facts and which ones are untrustworthy, if they are all assessed as facts?
I guess what I'm trying to say is you're speaking nonsense.
I'm not. Of course, at bottom, even mathematical proofs rest on axioms, which are not themselves proven but are nevertheless believed inductively to be true. At some point, the ability to "prove" something to be true runs out of steam, and you get to the whole "brain in a vat" problem.
Nevertheless, something is either a fact or not, independent of whether humans believe it to be a fact. I can't deny that at some point we may discover that life has never changed, and is exactly the same now as it was three billion years ago, and our observations to the contrary are illusory. But I hope you'll agree that's extraordinarily unlikely. If it nevertheless turns out to be the case, I would concede evolution is not factual. I'm confident I will never have to.
I did, in the item that this is a reply to. It's all relative.
Just so I don't misunderstand you, your claim is now that life has not changed at all? Ever? If that is indeed your position, I'm afraid we're just going to have to disagree, and I'm not sure taking this discussion further is fruitful.
But have you considered that the reason you can trust them is because they're factual? They are built on factual observation, facts of prior theories, and they present us with data and results that we consider factual (such as how hard you will hit the ground after you catapult) on which to build future theories.
No. I trust them because they appear to be accurate descriptions of reality, and so far have withstood all tests. That does not make them "facts," in and of themselves. A theory simply is not a fact. We don't call it the General Fact of Relativity.
All true! Did you know it's still a fact that the sun revolves around the earth? I can even see it every day, as I look up at the sky. So what if we discover the 93rd naturally occuring element: is the fact that there are 92 naturally occuring elements still true? (hint: yes) It's all a matter of context.
Are you under the misapprehension that I don't think facts are true?
As to the last, I should clarify. It's a fact that there are only 92 naturally-occurring elements on earth. If we should find a 93rd naturally-occurring element on earth, the statement that there are only 92 naturally-occurring elements on earth would not be factual. It would never have been factual. That there are 93 naturally-occurring elements would be factual, and would always have been factual.
No; I'm a big fan of both evolution (the process of development) and the Theory of Evolution that sets it in stone. Both are true, factual and informative --and how can we not appreciate the things that inform us? We'd be nothing without them.
Then why have you been disputing my assertion that evolution (in either sense of the term) is a fact? I still dispute (and virtually every life scientist would agree with me) that the theory of evolution is not a "fact," as that term is used in the sciences. It is a theory. That doesn't make it somehow "less" than a fact. It makes it different from a fact.