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by rayiner
1427 days ago
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> You're applying far too strict of a definition to science. This isn’t a fun theoretical exercise. In the public sphere, “science” tends to get invoked with dispositive weight. And it should in many cases. But for that to work, “science” must meet the level of rigor people associate with “science.” To be called “science” it should be like physics in terms of providing truth value, not psychology. Aristotle didn’t do “science.” He was a philosopher. His ideas were precursors to science, but weren’t science. |
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It's possible to form a truth about human behavior, for example, I did X because Y. If someone points my behavior out to me, then in the future I may do Z in response to Y. Human behavior can change upon observation [1]. That doesn't make the study of human behavior "not science" in my opinion.
> Aristotle didn’t do “science.” He was a philosopher. His ideas were precursors to science, but weren’t science.
In that case, I suppose you will acknowledge that Galileo did science, despite not having a lot of data points. I think Aristotle did too, because I draw the line at hypothesis, observation and conclusion, which may or may not result in some ultimate truth that remains constant.
I suppose you would also say that the double slit test is science. Yet that result changes, and there is no truth value that we can explain, except by noting that the result changes when the experiment is observed.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32233420