Raymond wrote:Of course science is objective. It deals with the physical stuff the world is made of. The story itself though is a story we tell and thus personal. Different people, different groups of people, tell different stories. All want their stories to be objectively true. Who doesn't? As long as we realize it are all just stories, everything is okay.
If these "stories" (or "truths" or "theories", etc) are "man-made", then they are subjective, not objective.
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LuckyR wrote:Ok, so when a scientist uses logic to make a hypothesis and then designs an experiment to support or disprove the hypothesis, and the experimental results are in conflict with the hypothesis (that was arrived at through the scientist's use of logic), what is the conclusion?
Sound deductive logic, like mathematics, doesn't commit errors.
Humans can make errors in math/logic, but math/logic itself can't make errors.
If an experimental result doesn't follow the logic or the math, then there is a human error somewhere.