Cathbad
Level 30 Geek Master
I am not sure that everyone does have a desire to live forever - keeping going can be an effort.
Sooner or later, we'd want it to end.
But with one form of "immortality", we could choose when that was!
I am not sure that everyone does have a desire to live forever - keeping going can be an effort.
Well, yes, some individuals and some corporations do fudge stuff or make exaggerated claims - however the concept of the peer reviewed journal is a key check and balance. I don't know if you are familiar with it but this is how it works.
1. A scientist or scientists do some research and write a paper on it, which has a summary, methodology of the experiments (types of equipment used, how it was calibrated), the results - tables of data and graphs, discussion of the implications of this and conclusions. Generally there are references to other such papers in the field.
2. The paper is sent to a journal. The journal editor will send it out to one or more reviewers who are scientists working in the same field at different institutions from the first scientists.
3. These peer reviewers read the paper, comment on it for ease of comprehension, accuracy of theories referenced, quality and quantity of data and whether or not the data justifies the conclusions drawn. They may also repeat a subset of the experiments to see if they get the same results (within the stated error margins) of the original researchers.
4. The reports from the peer reviewers are sent back to the editor of the journal, and depending on the type of comments the editor will either schedule the paper for publication, or send it back to the submitter with the comments from the peer reviewers and will then wait for it to be re-submitted with corrections, further supporting data or whatever else is required.
5. This cycle can easily take a year.
6. When a paper is published in a peer reviewed journal, other scientists in the field will read it, may also repeat an experiment, or in some way use it in their own research. They may then write papers which reference that paper.
I have on occasion seen published papers heavily criticised by other research groups and the publicly published ding dong can last years.
These scientific journals are available to buy from the publishers and there will be copies in University research departments, University libraries and the Science Reference Library at High Holborn. In my day you could walk in the SRL for free and read any paper. Generally people write to the SRL for copies of a particular paper and a photocopy is posted. Any University will not have every copy of every journal - it is too expensive - but they will have access to online search machines and you can order individual papers pertinent to your research that way.
The scientific literature goes back to the days of Newton. You can read Newton's papers on gravity in the Royal Society journal published at that time. Rigorous science is based on making accurate information publicly available, and questioning it. So things change with time. As a chemist I am familiar with the theory of phlogiston - which was overtaken by scientific experiment showing the existence of oxygen and how combustion really works.
I personally believe, based largely on pretty much every scientist I have ever known (which is quite a few though not a statistically large sample) and based on my personal view of the integrity of the majority of people I have ever met, that the vast majority of scientist have an extremely high level of both honesty and integrity. I think that it is very unfair to condemn all science and scientists based on those few that hit the headlines with one scandal or another.
Good scientist absolutely do not do this, my experience has been that most scientist say something along the lines of "this is our current best model of xxxx." It is generally the media that ignores this and reports all scientific announcements as the final word. And if you take your example of nuclear power, I think you'll find it was mainly governments that were trying to paint it as harmless not the scientists.
By "dark," people also sometimes mean that they were pre-Renaissance, pre-Reformation and pre-The Age of Enlightenment. These changes brought about freedom to think, freedom to worship, and free will. Only after those changes could Science flourish in the way we know now.
So, if by "dark", Baylor means taking away those freedoms, and ideals such as liberty, tolerance, fraternity, constitutional government and a separation of church and state, well yes, we could very easily return to that kind of society based instead upon religious dogma, superstition, intolerance, authoritarian government. I'd say that the last year and a half has already started to take us down that Orwellian road, but I'm not allowed to say any more.
I am very familiar with the idea of how scientific journals are supposed to work - however - they have on many an occasion been fudged themselves with peer reviews being bought. So yeah - science needs more than journals - they need a whole new ethic system - a law and someone to enforce it.
That strikes me as a horrendous idea:So yeah - science needs more than journals - they need a whole new ethic system - a law and someone to enforce it.
I started to watch the YouTube video but it was too early in the morning for it. Speaking from general experience of life and of discussions on forums, I'd like to say I do agree that there are intolerant groups around in many areas of opinion. There always have been. As a re-enactor I have studied the English Civil War and there was at times extreme intolerance on both sides, and vicious mud-slinging - but this was not universal.What's interesting at present is how intolerant and authoritarian Western democracies are becoming towards anyone who disagrees with their ideology. The whole gay rights movement, speaking in the name of liberty, tolerance and fraternity, is using the legal system to crack down on anyone who doesn't actively and publicly endorse their position. Here's a good example, but it's only one of many.
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@Justin Swanton
I agree with most of your post, felt this bit below was somewhat generalised and a bit harsh. Where humans are concerned, there is rarely unanimity of behaviour or aims, and sometimes a vocal group can be seen as being the only group.
I started to watch the YouTube video but it was too early in the morning for it. Speaking from general experience of life and of discussions on forums, I'd like to say I do agree that there are intolerant groups around in many areas of opinion. There always have been. As a re-enactor I have studied the English Civil War and there was at times extreme intolerance on both sides, and vicious mud-slinging - but this was not universal.
These days we have a general expectation of freedom of speech being supported - and there have been long legal and political fights to ensure the state allows this. (Speaking primarily of the UK as that is what I know the most about.) So I would in general agree that it is sad that a group that was looking for tolerance for their cause, would then act in an intolerant way. But campaign groups do tend to be people who are prepared to fight for their cause. Also, knowing when you have won is hard - in fact there is rarely an outright clear win - or rather what you have is that a war is a series of battles.
So, you were free from serfdom and bondage under feudalism? Free from religious oppression? You were free to criticise the sale of indulgences by priests? Free to refuse to venerate religious images of saints? You were free to publish work that said the Earth revolved around the Sun? Free to question that the Earth was created in six days?A fairly cursory glance at pre-Renaissance, pre-Reformation and pre-Enlightenment society, at least in European society, is enough for one to realise that the individual was free to think, free to worship and remained in possession of his free will. Shall I give some examples?
So, you were free from serfdom and bondage under feudalism? Free from religious oppression? You were free to criticise the sale of indulgences by priests? Free to refuse to venerate religious images of saints? You were free to publish work that said the Earth revolved around the Sun? Free to question that the Earth was created in six days?
However, this will inevitably become a religious argument so I had best stop here. I know nothing about the 'gender pronoun' stuff except that it is the antithesis of tolerance as I would regard tolerance. While I believe we should allow people to hold other views, and have ancestors persecuted for their religious views, I guess I am hypocritical in that I believe that only as long as they stay in their box. When it comes to education and the teaching of science, I'm pretty much up there with Richard Dawkins, although I do find him an extremely intolerant man. And yes, this is now way off-topic and becoming political and religious.
I think it was clear that @BAYLOR simply meant "Can we ever loose our collective knowledge and return to a time of ignorance?" To take us back on track, I'd say it was possible, even inevitable, and I agree with previous posts that the bigger and more interconnected our society is, the harder and quicker that fall will be. We should probably discuss that, and is there anything we can do to prevent it?
So, you were free from serfdom and bondage under feudalism?
Free from religious oppression?
You were free to criticise the sale of indulgences by priests?
You were free to publish work that said the Earth revolved around the Sun?
Free to question that the Earth was created in six days?
It's worth spending a little time and doing some digging - the point behind the Lindsay Sheperd affair is that the law was invoked against her - the C16 bill to be precise. That law, to cut a long story short, obliges anyone to use whatever made-up gender pronouns non-heterosexuals require when speaking to or about them. There are about 15 pronouns (and growing) that replace the conventional 'he' and 'she'. Anyone who doesn't comply is liable to a hefty fine and, if they don't pay the fine, to jail time. This is not just a minority group being intolerant; this is a minority group whose intolerance is backed up by the legal system. Pretty dark-agey to me.
But this is all probably getting seriously off-topic.
My friend tried to find an apprentice to work with an eighty-year-old man who was the only person left who knew a particular kind of coracle boat-building. There were no applicants and those skills have been lost now. It is ironic that sometime in the future, there will probably be a university research project to try to recreate his methods again....one of the areas of knowledge which is in very limited circulation today is all the "crafts" - low tech ways of making stuff for yourself. If we do hit an economic dark age and have a plummet in wealth, that will be an area of lost knowledge that will hurt until people work it out again.
there were no cities
The 'rent' was not onerous since the lord would have had no way of disposing of a vast amount of agricultural produce.
He was bound by law
If you were not a Catholic you were free to practise your religion
This was why the Inquisition was set up: not to force non-catholics to become Catholics
union of Church and state
The indulgence scandal came only at the end of the Middle Ages when churchmen changed indulgences from a spiritual practice into a moneymaking venture.
Some odd comments on Mediaeval Europe coming up - it certainly wasn't a place of pastoral bliss - so I'll tackle them.
The Dominican Order began it's inquisition in Acquitaine, on Papal orders, to destroy the Cathars. It was done to ensure there was no opposition to the Roman Catholic Church, and restore it's authority in the region. Heretics were rarely regarded as Roman Catholics.
There was no union of church and state until after the Reformation. Before then, the church was very much the property of the Roman Catholic Church in Rome - and Rome was very keen to exert control in national politics.
Henry VIII made himself head of the church and state precisely to negate this influence - his reasons were selfish, and had nothing to do with the rights of his people, especially not Catholic ones.
The perceived greed of the church is a repeated motif throughout the Mediaeval period. There's a reason why monks are commonly portrayed as overweight.