Nowadays we assume that Science - narrowly defined here as a system of gathering knowledge based on the scientific method - is some form of universally applicable system that is nearly flawless.
There's no question that it's better than what came before, but just because Aristotle came up with something that was better than anything before, science can still fall to a superior system of reasoning.
Some current flaws in science that suggest such a system might exist are present. The first I think of is the lack of firm integration with engineering. When people think science, they mostly think engineering, yet there is currently no reasoning within the method to incorporate any form of abstract problem solving. The method can comment on the success of the problem-solving, but that doesn't mean it necessarily integrates problem solving at all. As a result, solutions to problems frequently remain obscure long past the point we could solve them. Many other problems relate back to this integration problem - discoveries end when their impetus ends, until someone else picks them up and runs with them.
So, does a post-science paradigm exist? Is there a way to add abstract problem solving directly to the method, to increase interconnections? That would remove those 'oh duh' moments where we realize we could have solved a problem for 20 years, at no cost, and with an efficiency gain, but didn't because we didn't realize that we already had solved it. My favorite example of this is the transistor. It was invented in 1925, and yet vacuum tube computers persisted for nearly two decades.
I am not proposing a post scientific method paradigm. For one, when we find it, its going to revolutionize 'science' like Galileo did. For another, I'm nowhere close to putting together a method from my speculations. I'm just wondering if anyone else is curious about this.
There's no question that it's better than what came before, but just because Aristotle came up with something that was better than anything before, science can still fall to a superior system of reasoning.
Some current flaws in science that suggest such a system might exist are present. The first I think of is the lack of firm integration with engineering. When people think science, they mostly think engineering, yet there is currently no reasoning within the method to incorporate any form of abstract problem solving. The method can comment on the success of the problem-solving, but that doesn't mean it necessarily integrates problem solving at all. As a result, solutions to problems frequently remain obscure long past the point we could solve them. Many other problems relate back to this integration problem - discoveries end when their impetus ends, until someone else picks them up and runs with them.
So, does a post-science paradigm exist? Is there a way to add abstract problem solving directly to the method, to increase interconnections? That would remove those 'oh duh' moments where we realize we could have solved a problem for 20 years, at no cost, and with an efficiency gain, but didn't because we didn't realize that we already had solved it. My favorite example of this is the transistor. It was invented in 1925, and yet vacuum tube computers persisted for nearly two decades.
I am not proposing a post scientific method paradigm. For one, when we find it, its going to revolutionize 'science' like Galileo did. For another, I'm nowhere close to putting together a method from my speculations. I'm just wondering if anyone else is curious about this.
