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niceatheist
Guest
This seems like a strawman of what neurologists and pyschologists are studying. No, they don’t observe emotions in a test tube, they use actual subjects. And yes, there is an inherent subjectivity, in large part because we’re a long way from a “theory of the mind” as it were. But then again, we’re a long ways away from a unified theory of all the fundamental physical interactions, but that doesn’t make using General Relativity and quantum mechanics to answer many physics and cosmology problems impossible.
It strikes me you’re trying to argue for a god of the gaps argument here. That’s your prerogative, of course, and I won’t be able to counter it, other than to say that not being able to fully measure things today doesn’t mean we won’t tomorrow.
It strikes me you’re trying to argue for a god of the gaps argument here. That’s your prerogative, of course, and I won’t be able to counter it, other than to say that not being able to fully measure things today doesn’t mean we won’t tomorrow.