What you usually find with these kinds of things is that the moral majority determine what a word means and the linguists and philosophers follow half a century later.
And the linguists and philosophers still see the word “science” being used as “an organized body of knowledge.” Get with the program.
Congratulations on completely mangling the context behind that.
Congratulations for not explaining how I mangled it.
I’m not sure what you hope to achieve by this insistance that there is no science behind music, but in any case you’re wrong.
I’m insisting that some musicians possess a science of music (i.e. an organized body of knowledge regarding music) and some do not, which runs contrary to your assertion that all musicians necessarily have an organized body of knowledge regarding music. Because some musicians have a organized body of musical knowledge and some do not, it shows that the original definition of science is useful and meaningful.
Yes, it does. No one of Earth could recreate Beethoven’s Ninth by intuition.
I may agree. Most, at least, would therefore require an organized body of musical knowledge … i.e. musical science.
What? You don’t accept that I know what my own opinion is? Why should I lie?
You’re not necessarily lying. You probably just not thinking logically.
I think that to term something as an “organized body of knowledge” is vague enough to mean many things to many people.
… okay. Well, that’s what it means. It’s much
broader than you’re used to. But that’s how many people use it and have used it since the very beginning. This is what Aquinas meant when he mentions it in the quote on his thread (bringing it back on the topic).
As far as I’m concerned that is an oxymoron. Any science where there is no experimental verification is not science.
That’s because you have too narrow a definition of science. Experimentation pertains to methods of physical sciences and not all sciences.
The vast majority of physicists wouldn’t know a logical fallacy if they fell over one.
How interesting that you admit that.
Would it be fair to say then that
physicists do not think logically? I want a clear yes or no answer on that … or you can qualify it. But a clear answer, nonetheless.
That is a debate that I fear you and I are doomed to remain on opposite sides of.
What a grim outlook. I personally have faith that you’re smart enough to see that “science” is aptly fit to be defined as “an organized body of knowledge” because, after all, that’s what it has meant forever and how it is often still used today. It’s not a realization that I think you’re incapable of making.
No it isn’t. It’s an heuristic question.
Observe → Hypothesize → Experiment with Controls → Repeat.
That is all a scientists needs to know. He needs to be trained how to conduct a controlled experiment, not how to split hairs with philosophers and linguists.
Why? Why does he need to be trained this way? You haven’t answered that. You’re just making assertions without backing them up. What’s to say that “a scientist” needs to know more … or less … than what you have said here? Well?
In order to answer that, you need to use philosophy. So, all scientists (physical or otherwise) need philosophy (i.e. to be told what the meaning of their field is at least) otherwise they have no idea what they should be doing and why.
I’m pretty sure that for most scientists, the why would be to do with the remuneration that feeds his family and keeps a roof over their heads, not to mention allowing him to have a nice motor car, a large flatscreen television and a summer vacation.
I know that’s why I go to my work.
So, the reason for being “a scientist” is to do all these things. But people achieve these goals without being a physical scientist (they can be a lawyer for example). Why does a physicist operate in a different way than a lawyer if they are achieving the same goal? There must be a reason why a physicist acts in a particular way, different from how lawyers act, and apparently you have no idea why? Or do you? If a physicist really didn’t know why he was doing what he was doing … why doesn’t he start acting like a lawyer? Obviously, the physicist needs to know why he’s doing the thing he’s doing, otherwise he wouldn’t act like a physicist.
Indeed… I still have high hopes that the scientists of the world will send all the philosophers and linguists on a huge rocket on a collision orbit with the Sun when the “Great Awakening” comes, then we can maybe get down to scientific experimentation without all the silly attacks on verbal intent.
This is why physical scientists need logic (or at least philosophers to guide them). Otherwise, they sometimes say garbage like this. They want to “get down to scientific experimentation” and yet have no idea why they should. Lunatics.
By the way, I personally know some physicists who accept the original definition of science, so I’m not bashing all physicists … just the ones who want to hijack the word and redefine it to their own ends, in order to feel more special than everybody else or something … I don’t really know why they insist on changing it … I still don’t know why. You have not given a reason yet.