Hey nothing personal. Don't worry about it.
The question of the limits of science is really a metaphysical question. As soon as you stop doing experimental science and making observations and start thinking, 'what does this mean?' - in the sense that Einstein and Bohr were doing in that photo that Seeds provided - you're doing metaphysics.
There has been a big push in modern philosophy to get rid of anything metaphysical whatsoever. The point about QM is that it has imposed the requirement to think about metaphysics on us again. (Etienne Gilson: 'Philosophy always buries its undertakers'.)
I had written a post about that point but the Safari Browser Bug destroyed it and I have to go and do other things now.
Incidentally I am not nearly so sceptical as Xris about the general outlines of modern physics and cosmology. I agree it has enormous gaps and unanswered questions, but I don't think that fringe physicists like - what was his name? - understand it any better, and besides in some major ways, I am sure the science has it right. But, as I said, I am interested in philosophy. The difference between science and philosophy is a difference that is really only intelligible to philosophers- because it's a philosophical difference.
Janus wrote:The problem I see with this statement is that, if we forget logic, how will we know what is entailed in the light of QM, that is, what its results entitle us to believe?
I agree with that, but at the same time, I think recent science has pushed
beyond logic. The strangeness of quantum mechanics seems to undermine or contradict basic logical laws, like the law of the excluded middle.
However I don't think this nullifies logic, but it simply shows that logic has its limits, which, I think I am correct in saying, was already anticipated by Kant in his
Antinomies of Reason.