Jayson_Virissimo comments on Rationality Quotes: March 2011 - Less Wrong

6 Post author: Alexandros 02 March 2011 11:14AM

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Comment author: Jayson_Virissimo 06 March 2011 10:27:50PM *  1 point [-]

...but that they agree on the procedures to be followed in testing theories and establishing facts.

I'm having trouble thinking of even a single decade in which all or even most scientists have agreed on what procedures should be followed in theory testing (let alone throughout the history of science). Can you?

Comment author: RichardKennaway 06 March 2011 11:16:33PM 3 points [-]

That depends on the distance you view them from. Look at any two things closely enough, and you will see differences. Look at them from far enough away, and they will seem identical.

One major difference in evidential standards I can think of is the use of statistics. No-one collects statistics on how often an unsupported body will fall. I doubt the early chemists, at the stage when they didn't really know what substances they were working with, would have benefitted from statistical analyses of their results. Instead, they worked to find experiments that produced the same result every single time. In other areas, especially psychology, people gather statistics that are sometimes completely meaningless.

That's the only substantial variation I have thought of so far. What counterexamples are you thinking of?