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by epgui
1538 days ago
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This perspective is true to some extent, but it’s counter-productive to think of science as being wrong. You should think of science as the “least wrong” set of beliefs we have at any point in time. It will never be perfectly right, and every day it’s less and less wrong. The reason it’s so reliable is because it embraces (and doesn’t dismiss) this uncertainty. |
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Terribly often, science grinds to a dead halt on some range of subject matter until certain scientists retire or die. It is easy to list remarkably recent cases where they did finally die and work could proceed, and many others where they have not died yet and the field is still stuck fast.
Science will always be incomplete. It has nothing to say yet about most possible questions. What it does pronounce upon should be reliably correct, but that is often not true, traceably to those individuals who maintain falsehoods. Sometimes the falsehoods become doctrine and hang on even after the offenders have obliged by dying.