I thought it was a 'well known fact' that he was a theist. But I can check for evidence if you like; there was a book about it if I recall - probably some Christian nutters tho, so not sure if you'd count that...let me get back to you with quotes and references after I catch up on the posts....SpeedOfSound wrote:You can call it R3. Even though we have left the reality life raft at that point.Little Idiot wrote:It is indeed a good example.SpeedOfSound wrote:The idea is to identify a clear subset of knowledge that is common amongst us all. Things we can know with some great certainty yet without complete certainty. These are things that are empirically verifiable. Science or R2 is a rigorous and formal extension of R1.Little Idiot wrote: I agree that they are restrictive definitions, but lets see what SoS has in mind for them. After all he's defining them in this way for a purpose, I assume.
An example might help. In R1 I declare the wall solid stuff because I can't pass though it. R2 takes a look and says that the wall is mostly empty space but you still can't pass through it. So in R1 you had a slightly wrong idea about solids. So you may have to modify how you think about it by R2.
We still talk about solid walls and we are warranted to do so. Yet R2 has told us something new about solids.
This is a very rich example that shows something very interesting about beliefs and I would like to get back to it a little later.
I understand what you are saying, in a broad sense that our scientific understanding improves the understanding of our ordinary experience.
What I would suggest is that R3 would be an interpretation of our understanding by R1 and R2, this would be our metaphysical understanding. Maybe you dont like R3![]()
Science can change because of the beliefs of the scientist. Einstein was convinced that his general theory of relativity demonstrated a finite time, a creation and therefore a creator.Science can't change because of your beliefs. The body of knowledge and the evidence are not changed. The conclusions drawn from science are of a different nature than what you are talking about. I think you are talking about a hypothesis and I hardly see why we would call one of those things metaphysics.Little Idiot wrote:R2 however certainally will change dependent on the metaphysical position; the observed data will be the same, but the conclusion drawn from the data may be different. And since R2 consists of conclusions supported by data, R2 is different.
What's this shit about Einstein being a theist? Got proof?
EDIT to add;
I note that you didnt touch my point about a lot of science being done prior to any emperical measurement, I doubt that fits your model very well.