tomspug
Absorbant
Not having a lot of experience in the scientific world, it seems that scientific "findings" and "conclusions" tend to be in constant flux. For example, the Atacama desert is deemed inhospitable for life and is believed to have been that way for approximately 23 million years (a number determined by the findings of a few scientists) only to find later that there is evidence in the desert of hunter/gatherer civilizations. Now the number is 120,000 years of dryness (according to Wikipedia).
But this kind of process is inevitable, right? It's just the way science is. You look at what you know, you draw conclusions, and you assume that those conclusions are right until they are conclusively proven wrong... like the medicinal removal of "bad blood".
But that's where the problem is. The criteria for drawing a conclusion is very little, but the criteria for DISPROVING a previous conclusion is incredibly high. Shouldn't we then be constantly taking the "findings" of science with a grain of salt? Who is to say that what is "popular" science now will be popular later (the point at which your career no longer benefits from the former? I'm not implying that scientists intentionally draw incorrect conclusions for their own benefit... but I kind of am.
I think that we have, to a fault, a need as a race to explain EVERYTHING. With this drive, we see the inability to draw a conclusion as a kind of failure. You are only successful if you establish a "truth". But what is wrong with inconclusive findings? What is wrong with saying "we think this, but there is not enough data to support it"? Have you EVER heard that from a scientist? No, because those scientists don't get to go on TV shows or get federal grants...
But this kind of process is inevitable, right? It's just the way science is. You look at what you know, you draw conclusions, and you assume that those conclusions are right until they are conclusively proven wrong... like the medicinal removal of "bad blood".
But that's where the problem is. The criteria for drawing a conclusion is very little, but the criteria for DISPROVING a previous conclusion is incredibly high. Shouldn't we then be constantly taking the "findings" of science with a grain of salt? Who is to say that what is "popular" science now will be popular later (the point at which your career no longer benefits from the former? I'm not implying that scientists intentionally draw incorrect conclusions for their own benefit... but I kind of am.
I think that we have, to a fault, a need as a race to explain EVERYTHING. With this drive, we see the inability to draw a conclusion as a kind of failure. You are only successful if you establish a "truth". But what is wrong with inconclusive findings? What is wrong with saying "we think this, but there is not enough data to support it"? Have you EVER heard that from a scientist? No, because those scientists don't get to go on TV shows or get federal grants...