Topic: Kepler ST discovers 715 new planets | |
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Science isn't based on evidence, it relies on evidence. Imagination helps us dream up what may be. Evidence proves if we are right or not.
Evidence is integral to science and is used always. Imagination is what furthers science. Science is both, based upon current knowledge - which is based upon and verified with observation(evidence), and it relies on verification(observational evidence)... Again, imagination plays a role, perhaps even a key role, Einstein's thought experiments immediately come to mind. But... The issue was posed towards looking for planets capable of sutaining life as we know it. I simply stating that life as we know it, in all of it's forms, requires water. We could imagine all sorts of life that doesn't require what life as we know it does. One of those imaginings may indeed reflect a life form that exists unbeknownst to us. However, there is limited funding, effort, and time to invest in looking for things like planets that would sustain life. It makes no sense whatsoever for us to spend, time, effort, and limited funding seeking planets that would would support some imagined(perhaps possible, perhaps not) life form, that we have absolutely no knowledge of. |
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Science isn't based on evidence, it relies on evidence. Imagination helps us dream up what may be. Evidence proves if we are right or not.
Evidence is integral to science and is used always. Imagination is what furthers science. Science is both, based upon current knowledge - which is based upon and verified with observation(evidence), and it relies on verification(observational evidence)... Again, imagination plays a role, perhaps even a key role, Einstein's thought experiments immediately come to mind. But... The issue was posed towards looking for planets capable of sutaining life as we know it. I simply stating that life as we know it, in all of it's forms, requires water. We could imagine all sorts of life that doesn't require what life as we know it does. One of those imaginings may indeed reflect a life form that exists unbeknownst to us. However, there is limited funding, effort, and time to invest in looking for things like planets that would sustain life. It makes no sense whatsoever for us to spend, time, effort, and limited funding seeking planets that would would support some imagined(perhaps possible, perhaps not) life form, that we have absolutely no knowledge of. i think your over thinking this... they are looking for any planet, and once they find one, then they figure out whether it could sustain life as we know it... if the planet is out of the "temperate zone",(how close or far from it's sun) they lose interest in thinking there could be life on it, but other astronomers will still study it... if it's in the temperate zone, the scientists looking for life will study it more, no matter if it has water or not... they key in on earth like planets first, but they study all the planets they find... but they are not going to find life on any other planet through a telescope, they basically make notes on everything they find... |
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Sorry funky, but you're ill-informed. All life as we know it requires water. There is no life that we're aware of that does not require water. Every bit of evidence suggests that, and there is no evidence that doesn't. "Evidence" here being every instance of life that we know of. We know of no life form which doesn't require water. That's just the way it is. That sad, we can imagie all sorts of things, however, those things exist only by means of our imagination. science is about 50% imagination, just because we don't know something doesn't mean it can't exist...it jut means it's a possible, not to be discounted... I' not sure how much "imagination" science consists of. Rather, it seems to me that that statement is untenable and/or unjustifiable. Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying that imagination isn't sometimes key, if by "imagination" I mean the ability to infer, deduce, and/or envision something novel, something new. Nothing you've said here contradicts anything I've said. I fail to see the counterargument or point which applies to my own. What is the following supposed to mean? "...just because we don't know something doesn't mean it can't exist." That sounds like nonsense to me. I mean, things that exist aren't the sort of things that can be known. It doesn't make much sense to talk about knowing my car, or the sun, or some such. Knowing "something", when talking about knowing about the world and/or ourselves as opposed to knowing how to breathe or walk or some such, usually refers to knowing something about something. I know my car in the sense of I know what my car looks like, how it drives, etc. To know something is to know something about something. One cannot know something about that which does not exist, real, imagined, or otherwsise. Of course things exist which we are unaware of. At least, that's the only reasonable inference I can make based upon the history of human knowledge. could anyone explain a black hole 200 years ago? no, because no one had a clue they existed... now, it's common knowledge... what will we know in another 200 years? |
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.. do fish drink water..??. i like Raj's question on Big Bang Theory better... Where does Aquaman poop? |
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Edited by
no1phD
on
Tue 03/11/14 10:11 AM
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.. yes I too. believe we gain knowledge the deeper we go. but we only receive what we need when we need it.... like a cache of information.. you.... receive it at A scheduled point...
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.. yes I too. believe we gain knowledge the deeper we go. but we only receive what we need when we need it.... like a cache of information.. you.... receive it at A scheduled point... yea, it takes time to interpret the data found...some we can't because we just know know enough yet... |
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.. either that or the correct person has to walk . through the data stream.. so to speak..
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Edited by
no1phD
on
Tue 03/11/14 10:21 AM
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.. meaning. it would serve no purpose.. for a caveman.. to receive working knowledge.. of a cell phone..
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it serves a purpose, after a time, even the caveman will learn enough to use it...
thats kinda been my point on this thread, all the data may not make sense now, but in 50 years it just might... |
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. but then it becomes a question of storage capacity.. how to retrieve lost pieces of data.. embedded are encoded somewhere.. to be retrieved at a later date..
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Well said Mel. IMO creativesoul's comments are an example of the rigid narrow attitude that has developed within the academic establishment and it limits the potential for new discovery. Rubbish. Gratuitous and irrelevant assertion anyone? It's always easiest to attack a position by first misconstruing it. Well done. I respect your opinions, though disagree that what I said is rubbish, gratuitous, or irrelevant. Asserting my opinion was not intended as an attack which implies aggression, also not intended. To clarify: I was not suggesting that I believe you to be or not to be a member of the academic establishment. Your assertion that "Science is all about positing things that are based upon the evidence we have... " in my opinion is a rigid and narrow attitude. An attitude that again in my opinion is on par with that of academic establishment. While establishing parameters for focused study is of course logical, it by intent is limiting. Limitation suggests boundaries, however the perceived existence of boundary is not evidence that nothing exists beyond it. |
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.. to be a Explorer.
. a knowledge seeker. . you must dispose of all. concepts of boundaries. our borders.. there too difficult to climb over.. |
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Well said Mel. IMO creativesoul's comments are an example of the rigid narrow attitude that has developed within the academic establishment and it limits the potential for new discovery. Rubbish. Gratuitous and irrelevant assertion anyone? It's always easiest to attack a position by first misconstruing it. Well done. I respect your opinions, though disagree that what I said is rubbish, gratuitous, or irrelevant. Asserting my opinion was not intended as an attack which implies aggression, also not intended. To clarify: I was not suggesting that I believe you to be or not to be a member of the academic establishment. Your assertion that "Science is all about positing things that are based upon the evidence we have... " in my opinion is a rigid and narrow attitude. An attitude that again in my opinion is on par with that of academic establishment. While establishing parameters for focused study is of course logical, it by intent is limiting. Limitation suggests boundaries, however the perceived existence of boundary is not evidence that nothing exists beyond it. i agree with ya, tech... thats where the imagination comes in, so we can expand our minds and look to prove or disprove hypothesis.. it's a slow process, but way worth it... |
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i think your over thinking this...
Ya think so, huh? they are looking for any planet, and once they find one, then they figure out whether it could sustain life as we know it... if the planet is out of the "temperate zone",(how close or far from it's sun) they lose interest in thinking there could be life on it, but other astronomers will still study it... if it's in the temperate zone, the scientists looking for life will study it more, no matter if it has water or not... they key in on earth like planets first, but they study all the planets they find... but they are not going to find life on any other planet through a telescope, they basically make notes on everything they find...
This is funny. After you charge me with "overthinking", you then proceed to delve even deeper into thought than I, all-the-while never once addressing what I did say... Ho hum... Bah. |
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i think your over thinking this...
Ya think so, huh? they are looking for any planet, and once they find one, then they figure out whether it could sustain life as we know it... if the planet is out of the "temperate zone",(how close or far from it's sun) they lose interest in thinking there could be life on it, but other astronomers will still study it... if it's in the temperate zone, the scientists looking for life will study it more, no matter if it has water or not... they key in on earth like planets first, but they study all the planets they find... but they are not going to find life on any other planet through a telescope, they basically make notes on everything they find...
This is funny. After you charge me with "overthinking", you then proceed to delve even deeper into thought than I, all-the-while never once addressing what I did say... Ho hum... Bah. ?? ehh, whatever... |
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.. to be a Explorer. . a knowledge seeker. . you must dispose of all. concepts of boundaries. our borders.. there too difficult to climb over.. true, when boundaries are set, most people won't pass them... |
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Well said Mel. IMO creativesoul's comments are an example of the rigid narrow attitude that has developed within the academic establishment and it limits the potential for new discovery. Rubbish. Gratuitous and irrelevant assertion anyone? It's always easiest to attack a position by first misconstruing it. Well done. I respect your opinions, though disagree that what I said is rubbish, gratuitous, or irrelevant. Asserting my opinion was not intended as an attack which implies aggression, also not intended. To clarify: I was not suggesting that I believe you to be or not to be a member of the academic establishment. Your assertion that "Science is all about positing things that are based upon the evidence we have... " in my opinion is a rigid and narrow attitude. An attitude that again in my opinion is on par with that of academic establishment. We are all entitled to our own opinions. We are not entitled to our own facts. The fact is that "science is all about positing things that are based upon the evidence we have" is not an attitude at all. It is a statement about science, and it's true. While establishing parameters for focused study is of course logical, it by intent is limiting. Limitation suggests boundaries, however the perceived existence of boundary is not evidence that nothing exists beyond it.
That would all depend upon the kind of boundary we're talking about. Other than that, I don't see an argument here. I see, once again, the peddling of mere opinion. Got an argument? |
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i think your over thinking this...
Ya think so, huh? they are looking for any planet, and once they find one, then they figure out whether it could sustain life as we know it... if the planet is out of the "temperate zone",(how close or far from it's sun) they lose interest in thinking there could be life on it, but other astronomers will still study it... if it's in the temperate zone, the scientists looking for life will study it more, no matter if it has water or not... they key in on earth like planets first, but they study all the planets they find... but they are not going to find life on any other planet through a telescope, they basically make notes on everything they find...
This is funny. After you charge me with "overthinking", you then proceed to delve even deeper into thought than I, all-the-while never once addressing what I did say... Ho hum... Bah. ?? ehh, whatever... Still no better than you were years ago, I see... |
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There's a bit of irony here. Kepler was one of the first observation based scientists... you know, evidence based?
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