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by monochr
4249 days ago
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So get better telescopes for the tolerance you want. We have no problems making predictions over thousands of years with current technology when it comes to stellar mechanics that agree extremely well with the historical record. Yours seems to be a very medieval mindset. Just because we are ignorant of the initial conditions of a system doesn't mean we are ignorant of the equations by which it evolves. And the example of chemistry is just bizarre. If we couldn't reproduce the same reaction down to the atom time and time again our silicone based infrastructure would have filed a very long time ago. Similarly for nuclear bomb tests, if they were truly irreproducible then things like [1] should happen a lot more often than not. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Bravo |
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You claim that I have a medieval mindset. It seems you espouse a 19th century view of science, of the clockwork universe.
Science doesn't require reproducibility, nor your weaker requirement of "how to reproduce."
Predictability is the key to science, not reproducibility, though of course those are inexorably tied when it's possible to reproduce something. We can predict that fossils of a certain type will only be found in a specific layer of geological strata. We can predict that hurricanes will be created by and affected by certain wind patterns. We can predict that radioactive atoms will spontaneously decay.
Even though we certainly cannot reproduce those.
Chemistry is a field where it's easy to set up very similar conditions to previous experiments ("reproduce") and where the expected confidence of predictability is quite high. Hence my use of it as an example. It's much harder to reproduce an observation of a supernova, but we have pretty high confidence that when we do see one it will follow certain patterns.