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> On 18 Sep 96 at 21:52, zaimoni@ksu.edu wrote:
> 
> > As far as I know, science works to the extent that:
> >      1) "This experiment directly contradicts that hypothesis/theory."
> > [Proof by contradiction.]
> >      2) "This experiment provides strong evidence that major deviations
> > from this hypothesis/theory are false."  [Proof by statistical
> > contradiction.]
> 
> Yes, but this is all based on the belief that what we subjectively 
> experience is a sufficiently close approximation of objective reality (if such 
> exists) for our methodology to have meaning and value. This is a 
> belief that most of us share (I think) or at least we are prepared to 
> live our lives as if it were true. If it is based on subjective 
> experience then it is not scientific so our belief in science is 
> non-scientific...faith. 'I believe, with no scientific evidence to 
> support that belief, that my subjective experiences are sufficiently 
> close to objective events that the scientific method is valid'. That 
> is my belief, from which you will have difficulty dissuading me. 
> However, I don't consider it to be of any greater objective value 
> than your beliefs, whatever they may be. To paraphrase somebody; I 
> don't share your beliefs, but I will vigorously defend your right to 
> believe them.
In other words: one must make certain assumptions about how to go from
subjective perception to predictions about 'objective reality'.  The
philosophers call this field 'phenomenology', and [as usual] get nowhere
very slowly.  This doesn't require faith [Virian def.] to arrive at
working hypotheses for.  It may require outright assumptions.
One's work, of course, colors one's metaphors.
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/   Kenneth Boyd
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