Now on ScienceBlogs: "Investigative science journalism" and books I like to read [All of My Faults Are Stress Related]

Seed Media Group

The Week In ScienceBlogs: Sign up for our newsletter.

Evolving Thoughts

One man's struggle against impermanence

Search

Profile

John Wilkins is an eternal student, who thinks philosophy of biology is at least as interesting as politics or sport and twice as important. He has a PhD from the University of Melbourne and worked at the University of Queensland, in Australia, before taking up a research fellowship at the University of Sydney. After a varied career, involving factories, gardening, civil service, publishing, graphics, public relations but not, unfortunately for the CV, driving a truck, John finally completed his thesis on species concepts in 2004, which he has worked into two books.

This blog is designed evolved to host any random thoughts that happen to be passing through my forebrain at a given moment. So there will be errors...

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

Search old and new blogs



Other Information

The previous instantiation of this blog is accessible here.




Add to Technorati Favorites: Technorati Profile
Wikio - Top of the Blogs - Sciences
Blog Directory - Blogged
John Wilkins's Profile
John Wilkins's Facebook Profile

« Biohumanities podcasts | Main | Not just science »

Science and nonscience again

Category: CreationismGeneral SciencePhilosophy of Science
Posted on: February 5, 2007 9:06 PM, by John S. Wilkins

I just can't escape that damned Demarcation Principle...

A fellow emailed me the other day, asking what I thought about String Theory. Was it science? He was trying to argue with Intelligent Design folk, and they brought String Theory up as a case of science that doesn't have any testable evidence yet. He responded "science is what scientists do", and ask my opinion about that claim...

I responded thus [names removed to protect the innocent]

[Name], you are stepping in deep, very cold, and very dank waters.

In public, when trying to deal with soundbite science, it is worthwhile saying something like "science is testable", but what that means is not easy to describe, let alone define. There is no such thing as a universal scientific method or procedure. Some science is testable, and some isn't. Some science is empirical and some (theoretical cosmology) isn't. Some science is quantifiable, some isn't.

In philosophy there's a thing known as a "family resemblance predicate" in which something is a member of a family of things if it exhibits most of the properties of that group, but not necessarily all. Science is like that. ID fails to be science for many reasons, not least being the lack of an active research program and a failure to discriminate its explanation from one without ID involving only selectionist explanations. But there's no simple knockdown criterion for excluding it, and in fact, at one time ID was an active research program. Granted, that was in the 17th and 18th centuries, but that only goes to show that what counts as science at a particular moment is relative to the past history and present activities of science.

So, you are right in that "science is what scientists do", but there's more to the story than that. Science is (FRPishly) empirical, explanatory, theoretical, active, historically related cognitive activities. It is partly political, for it is done by humans, and they are political animals. It is partly social, for humans are social animals. But it is also engagement with nature, the parts of the world that aren't us, and that is where ID fails - it doesn't engage with nature, it doesn't do research. It just takes an apriori view, and trawls for ways to make that view seem scientific.

The motto of the Royal Society - the first such society in the world - is "Nullius in verba" - nothing in words. The motto of the ID crowd is "Omnia in verba" - it's all in the words.

String Theory sits uncomfortably at the edge. It is clearly a progressive research program in Lakatos' sense, but it has no empirical consequences at present, so it is at best a conceptual program only. It is within science, but if it doesn't make any progress, eventually it will be abandoned. So it is the best example of "science is what scientists do" because if scientists stop working on it, it will cease to be part of science just in virtue of that fact.

By the way, I have a short post on demarcation criteria here, and here. The latter got included in the volume of best science blogging of 2006.

If anyone wants to argue this, I'm happy. But if you correct my Latin, I'll sulk. I decline to argue that.

Did you like this post? If so, please click on the "Share this" link above and add it to your favourite social bookmarking service, or submit it to the Open Laboratory 2009 via the link on the left bottom of the page. Many thanks. John.

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/32634

Comments

1

John wrote

But there's no simple knockdown criterion for excluding it, and in fact, at one time ID was an active research program. Granted, that was in the 17th and 18th centuries, but that only goes to show that what counts as science at a particular moment is relative to the past history and present activities of science.
Which is why Phillip Kitcher (in Living with Darwin) rejects the "non-science" label for ID, and calls it "dead science", and calls its modern proponents "resurrection men".

Posted by: RBH | February 6, 2007 2:03 PM

2

The biggest difference is in the future... as means are found to test string theory, they will be used, and if it fails the tests, scientists will turn to something else. Meanwhile, the woosters will still be blathering about how string theory proves that angels vibrate on a higher plane, but now, for just $199.95, you too can....

Posted by: David Harmon | February 6, 2007 2:53 PM

3

Hmm, I think this arose out of discussions at Uncommon Descant (or whatever we're calling it nowadays). Deep, very cold, and very dank waters indeed.

Bob

Posted by: Bob O'H | February 6, 2007 3:10 PM

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Advertisement

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM