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One of my teacher said once in my Biology class "What I said to you today tomorrow may not be true". In other words since change so much, so is science trustworthy ?
so i we take for example "higher intelligence create the world", we can tasted using scientific method, tell me what that is different form religion?
Good point, therefore,, otherwise it become an absolute knowledge - so it become a religion.I believe science should not exclude the possibility that universe was created
when you investigate something you don't draw conclusion, you just try to find the answer,so I think actually it does>science already conclude the non existence of "Higher Intelligence",
for example using science or scientific method, scientists try to prove that the what is in the universe came for a small dot, it is possible using the same method to prove that God (higher intelligence) created the universe ?
when you investigate something you don't draw conclusion, you just try to find the answer, science already conclude the non existence of "Higher Intelligence", so I think actually it does>
when you investigate something you don't draw conclusion, you just try to find the answer, science already conclude the non existence of "Higher Intelligence", so I think actually it does>
...so is science trustworthy ?
Nothing wrong with science there. The problem is with the people using it.No. Science kinda sucks. But hey, it's not sciences fault. It's a symptom of a bigger suckiness.
Has Modern Science Become Dysfunctional?
WASHINGTON, DC March 27, 2012 -- The recent explosion in the number of retractions in scientific journals is just the tip of the iceberg and a symptom of a greater dysfunction that has been evolving the world of biomedical research say the editors-in-chief of two prominent journals in a presentation before a committee of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) today.
Incentives have evolved over the decades to encourage some behaviors that are detrimental to good science, says Ferric Fang, editor-in-chief of the journal Infection and Immunity, a publication of the American Society for Microbiology (ASM), who is speaking today at the meeting of the Committee of Science, Technology, and Law of the NAS along with Arturo Casadevall, editor-in-chief of mBio®,the ASMs online, open-access journal.
In the past decade the number of retraction notices for scientific journals has increased more than 10-fold while the number of journals articles published has only increased by 44%. While retractions still represent a very small percentage of the total, the increase is still disturbing because it undermines societys confidence in scientific results and on public policy decisions that are based on those results, says Casadevall. Some of the retractions are due to simple error but many are a result of misconduct including falsification of data and plagiarism.
More concerning, say the editors, is that...
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Nothing wrong with science there. The problem is with the people using it.
Yeah, just as the principles of Islam teaches suicide bombing and the principles of Christianity taught the Inquisition. People use ideas.Science is as science peoples.
People are often lousy practitioners of the scientific method.Science is as science peoples.
People are often lousy practitioners of the scientific method.
But until we train robots to do it for us, "people" is all we gots.
(I'm betting that robots will be screw-ups too.)