| > Correctness in construction is not subjective. Perhaps, but it's never certain. So things that are "correct" can still be wrong. Here's how Einstein expressed his disagreement with what you are saying: > As far as the laws of mathematics are certain, they do not refer to reality, and as far as they refer to reality, they are not certain. Nothing in physics (or any other science) is certain. All one can do in science (other than mathematics) is disprove. One cannot prove. To prove you would have to be all knowing. You would have to have taken into account all relevant aspects of all physical characteristics. For example, all known aspects of quantum mechanics, including the uncertainty principle, AND all relevant unknown aspects of quantum mechanics, which is guaranteed to be hit and miss, and can rationally be expected to contain an unknown number of misses that isn't zero. It's the human propensity to ignore these fundamentals that leads to things like the Tacoma Bridge collapse.[0] [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacoma_Narrows_Bridge_(1940) |