Gem Windcaster, on Aug 20 2009, 12:50 PM, said:
jitsukerr, on Aug 20 2009, 09:45 AM, said:
Gem Windcaster, on Aug 19 2009, 03:00 PM, said:
This smacks of the worst sort of post-modernist liberalism (a wider debate than this one). The search for objective truth is emphatically _not_ the province of navel-gazing philosophers or effete English graduates deconstructing texts in an attempt to fit them around their own preconceptions and prejudices. Science cannot be deconstructed in this way (and attempts to do so are completely laughable: http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/archiv...okal-hoax.html)
"Sokal" said:
WTF! Where did I say you can deconstruct science by searching for objective truth. If anything my above post agrees that science is not objective. Instead your criticism could be pointed at my counterparts in this debate. My use of objectiveness in my previous post was simply as a concept in the mind with which to compare the different viewpoints. Nor do I mean that intersecting the different scenarios would render an absolute truth, but rather the understanding of each other, so we can coexist. I'm not even sure I believe there are such a thing as objective truth, but if there is, we most likely won't find it right here and now, on this Earth.
For crying out loud, I know I can be pretty hard to get sometimes, but jeez, at least try.
1. I did say that your post "smacked of" (i.e. could be related in tone to) attempts to deconstruct science by post-modernists. I did not say that it was in fact doing so.
2. Nevertheless, looking closely at your post, it IS in fact doing so. I quote: "one has to find common ground in the fact that there is not a 'correct perception' ", and also " but also especially that the data itself is never completely distinguishable from the point of view from where it was gathered" are quite blatant attempts to interpret scietific data in the light of a relativistic (non-objective) framework. Dressing it up with pseudo-scientific terms doesn't change that. And attempting to use 'frame-of-reference' arguments (which is how I interpret the latter quote) is a wilful misunderstanding of relativity, which appears (to me, at least) to be invoked out of context in order to justify your position that there is not an objective reality.
3. "If anything my above post agrees that science is not objective." AGREES? With whom are you agreeing? My post above, containing the Sokal reference, is an emphatic denial of your position. If you think that science is not objective, then you are certainly not agreeing with me, or with my post, and I am left confused as to with whom it is that you are agreeing. Yourself?
4. "My use of objectiveness in my previous post was simply as a concept in the mind with which to compare the different viewpoints." Equating objectivity with relativism doesn't lead to the conclusion that objectivity is impossible. It leads to the conclusion that you don't actually understand what scientific objectivity is. Perhaps this is a difference in the definition of terms, but there's certainly some confusion here.