Humes fork
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- Jul 9, 2011
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azzthom said:As far as science itself goes, it is highly debatable what constitutes science. My suggestion would be that it started long before any of the early civilizations with what might be called 'Genetic Engineering'. Our very ancient ancestors were selectively breeding animals. I think it is reasonable to believe that they learned how to get the best results by a process of experimentation.
That's interesting, but I'd guess that's the first instance of applied science then.
azzthom said:As was stated by the previous poster, a lot depends on how you define science.
I guess so. I've even seen it claimed that science proper didn't start until the 20th century when Popper established the falsification criteria (though Popper is disputed). I myself found that very narrow. It would mean that Darwin was not a scientist.
Roboramma said:Before the scientific revolution people asked scientific questions, and sometimes answered them with reason and experiment, and sometimes not. But the methodology wasn't really developed, and that's why progress was so haphazard, and why mixed in with that progress was so much superstitious thinking.
Well yes. The pre-Socratics could never really test their ideas.
Roboramma said:Which suggests to me that the best answer is that sometimes they did science, but they didn't know how to tell the difference between science and pseudoscience.
I don't think they had a concept of pseudoscience, because they didn't have our concept of science.
Lowpro said:Science started when I gave my Sim his first chemistry set
Edited by LashL:
Edited for civility.
MG1962 said:Me thinks you are onto something there
Edited by LashL:
Edited for civility.
Halfcentaur said:Democritus learned it from some strange man down in the creek.
Thales (among others) was before Democritus.
Gazpacho said:There's a book called A People's History of Science that kind of addresses this question, pointing out for example that even hunter-gatherer existence requires a great deal of practical knowledge rivaling present-day naturalists.
Based on what I found on Amazon, it's a crackpot book.
crimresearch said:I would agree with that... even the simplest weapons required some of the skills of science in terms of observing what worked and rejecting the poorer choices.
Survival in terms of figuring out where food and water was probably depended on oral transmission and processing of data.
Those capabilities, especially the transfer of information, is one of humanity's key abilities in why it has been so successful compared to other species.
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