Jul 24 2009

Scientific Advance Through Subtraction

Published by Andrew Bernardin at 7:55 am under freethought, philosophy

In a freethought essay by Valerie Tarico, Christian Belief Through the Lens of Cognitive Science: Part 5.5 of 6, I came across a quote that caused me to emit a silent huzzah!

The scientific method has been called, “What we know about how not to fool ourselves.”

No, science is not one belief system among many. In fact, it may just be an antidote to belief. At least bogus belief.

What is science? Too often science is presented solely as the products of a process/enterprise. This strikes me as akin to pointing to a sack of rice and calling it agriculture.

We need more words!

There are the products of science and there is the enterprise or process of doing science.

Here is my spur-of-the-moment definition of “science.” At least the part I think needs to be emphasized.

Science is a set of thinking and information-gathering strategies developed to reduce error.

What differentiates science from non-science? The types of thinking and information-gathering processes used to come to a conclusion or form a belief.

Some fundamentalists view science with hostility, claiming it leads to atheism. There may be something to this, actually. In a sense, science is the process of subtracting the bogus to arrive at the more real (what we can more confidently know). When you apply scientific thinking to religious claims . . . they tend to fall away. In the area of supernatural belief, the atheist is one who has let fall away ideas unsupported by the best methods and technologies of thought.

The audacity! Dropping to the cutting floor another person’s cherished ideas!

Scientists aren’t arrogant or close-minded. They are confident that their cognitive tools are a prophylactic against bogus belief. And they are willing to put ideas to the test! And so they continue to advance, in part, by subtraction.

Technorati Links: , ,

One comment

One Comment to “Scientific Advance Through Subtraction”

  1. [...] Scientific Advance Through Subtraction posted at The Evolving Mind. [...]

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply