xkcd is one of the best comics on the web, and definitely the best science-related one. Although this one got me a little depressed about our government's current state of affairs...
POIFECT! Love it, thanks!
This would be a great line for a bumper sticker:
"Science doesn't ask for your faith. Only your eyes."
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ." The trouble with those words is that the belief of scientists really is distinguishable from religious belief, but the ambiguity of the phrase makes the religious think that the nature of the belief is like religious belief (and hence, e.g., "Darwinism" is just another religion).
In reality, when a scientists says "I believe . . .", it is really shorthand for "I provisionally accept based upon a slew of data and analysis . . .", not "I have a religious faith that . . .".
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ."
The problem is that there's no other convenient verb in English that one can plug in there.
The problem is that there's no other convenient verb in English that one can plug in there.
Oh, I don't know. The word "believe" does tend to be the most natural choice if the journalists aren't used to thinking about what it means, but any of these would work:
think
conclude
infer
I'm sure there's a few others
Personally, I would rather use the word "trust," rather than "believe."
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ."
"Believe" mean to hold to be true, so that usage is correct. The problem only comes in when belief based on faith is incorrectly considered to be the equivalent of belief based on evidence.
"The trouble with those words is that the belief of scientists really is distinguishable from religious belief, but the ambiguity of the phrase makes the religious think that the nature of the belief is like religious belief"
I think you're correct here. The word "believe" in common use doesn't strongly imply that the belief is based on anything science would include as evidence. The result is that very many hearers/readers interpret the phrase "scientists believe" to have the same sort of meaning as "Catholics believe." The word is not inaccurate in "scientists believe," but it is easily misunderstood. "Scientists think" or "Scientific evidence indicates" would be much clearer to the general public. Of course, if one isn't much interested in attempting to be clear to the general public, then I suppose the wording wouldn't matter.
When people learn that I do not believe in any gods, they will sometimes ask what I do believe. My answer is "the evidence."
When I debated creationists last February in Fresno, one of my lines that got the strongest response from the audience (it was in a church), was that "science doesn't care what we believe. It's interested in claims that can actually be tested."
BTW, it was an almost overwhelmingly positive response.
SH
Nitpick: While the image link above is correct, the text link incorrectly has "title=" rather than "href=" before the URL.
Sorry. Nerd moment, there.
Fine as far as a comic goes, but it is important to stress the rationalistic aspect of science, not just empirical stuff (i.e., one's eyes).
Good one. When I read the last panel, lil ricky santorum came into my mind. What a loon.
There's a wonderful quote which I have often seen attributed to one of the more interesting SF authors, Phillip K. Dick:
"Reality is that which remains after you stop believing in it."
The two versions of "believe":
Scientists have worked out that ...
vs
Religionists have made up that ...
Did anyone else notice that the people in the comic don't HAVE eyes?? Just thought that was odd
I heart xkcd. This one made me get up and dance around the living room with my sweetie, for no reason other than that I could.
That's because they have given their eyes to science.
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ."
The problem is that there's no other convenient verb in English that one can plug in there.
Yes, there is: "infer".
What about, "I've deduced..."?
"Deduced" is good as far as it goes, but most of science is not pure deduction--the process of hypothesis generation, for example, is inductive. So it seems a little too specialized for this purpose.
So, "inferring" or "deducing" or "concluding" or "believing" are OK if you're a scientist but not a Christian?
Unbelievable that so many can't recognize their own preconceptions that lead to their conclusions. Sounds like a religion to me.
Science doesn't ask for faith? Now that's rich.
Im so going to post it in my blog !! ^^
I like the scientific cartoonist too, great
biology related jokes inside, jeje.
xkcd is one of the best comics on the web, and definitely the best science-related one. Although this one got me a little depressed about our government's current state of affairs...
POIFECT! Love it, thanks!
This would be a great line for a bumper sticker:
"Science doesn't ask for your faith. Only your eyes."
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ." The trouble with those words is that the belief of scientists really is distinguishable from religious belief, but the ambiguity of the phrase makes the religious think that the nature of the belief is like religious belief (and hence, e.g., "Darwinism" is just another religion).
In reality, when a scientists says "I believe . . .", it is really shorthand for "I provisionally accept based upon a slew of data and analysis . . .", not "I have a religious faith that . . .".
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ."
The problem is that there's no other convenient verb in English that one can plug in there.
Oh, I don't know. The word "believe" does tend to be the most natural choice if the journalists aren't used to thinking about what it means, but any of these would work:
think
conclude
infer
I'm sure there's a few others
Personally, I would rather use the word "trust," rather than "believe."
"Believe" mean to hold to be true, so that usage is correct. The problem only comes in when belief based on faith is incorrectly considered to be the equivalent of belief based on evidence.
"The trouble with those words is that the belief of scientists really is distinguishable from religious belief, but the ambiguity of the phrase makes the religious think that the nature of the belief is like religious belief"
I think you're correct here. The word "believe" in common use doesn't strongly imply that the belief is based on anything science would include as evidence. The result is that very many hearers/readers interpret the phrase "scientists believe" to have the same sort of meaning as "Catholics believe." The word is not inaccurate in "scientists believe," but it is easily misunderstood. "Scientists think" or "Scientific evidence indicates" would be much clearer to the general public. Of course, if one isn't much interested in attempting to be clear to the general public, then I suppose the wording wouldn't matter.
When people learn that I do not believe in any gods, they will sometimes ask what I do believe. My answer is "the evidence."
When I debated creationists last February in Fresno, one of my lines that got the strongest response from the audience (it was in a church), was that "science doesn't care what we believe. It's interested in claims that can actually be tested."
BTW, it was an almost overwhelmingly positive response.
SH
Nitpick: While the image link above is correct, the text link incorrectly has "title=" rather than "href=" before the URL.
Sorry. Nerd moment, there.
Fine as far as a comic goes, but it is important to stress the rationalistic aspect of science, not just empirical stuff (i.e., one's eyes).
Good one. When I read the last panel, lil ricky santorum came into my mind. What a loon.
There's a wonderful quote which I have often seen attributed to one of the more interesting SF authors, Phillip K. Dick:
"Reality is that which remains after you stop believing in it."
The two versions of "believe":
Scientists have worked out that ...
vs
Religionists have made up that ...
Did anyone else notice that the people in the comic don't HAVE eyes?? Just thought that was odd
I heart xkcd. This one made me get up and dance around the living room with my sweetie, for no reason other than that I could.
That's because they have given their eyes to science.
This illustrates one of my pet peeves about news articles. They very often include in the story, "scientists believe . . ."
The problem is that there's no other convenient verb in English that one can plug in there.
Yes, there is: "infer".
What about, "I've deduced..."?
"Deduced" is good as far as it goes, but most of science is not pure deduction--the process of hypothesis generation, for example, is inductive. So it seems a little too specialized for this purpose.
So, "inferring" or "deducing" or "concluding" or "believing" are OK if you're a scientist but not a Christian?
Unbelievable that so many can't recognize their own preconceptions that lead to their conclusions. Sounds like a religion to me.
Science doesn't ask for faith? Now that's rich.
Im so going to post it in my blog !! ^^
I like the scientific cartoonist too, great
biology related jokes inside, jeje.