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Yeah, but my point is that it was wrong. Science is very often wrong, and thats fine. Failure is one of the best ways to lead to success. For a long time Ive said House M.D. was actually one of the best pop culture representations of the scientific method in action. Because the whole episode he's wrong until at the 49 minute mark he drifts off in the middle of a sentence as it all clicks together. But every failure teaches something. All the failures led it there, but he was still wrong more often than he was right, because its a process, not an answer.Correct! The scientific process is why we no longer believe the earth is the center of the universe and leeching bad blood out will heal you. Both things that were wrong in the first place but treated as fact until scientifically didproven.
Basically what Im saying is, theres nothing wrong with skepticism in general. Skepticism doesnt mean belief in something else, though. But science and scientific proponents should openly welcome skepticism, and I think thats not the case far more often than it should be.
But even on top of that, sometimes its wrong simply because smart people talk out of their ass. its easy to make assumptions when you dont have details. Literally barely more than 100 years ago it was accepted that life couldnt exist at the bottom of the ocean for "scientific" reasons. Theres too little oxygen, its too cold, no sunlight, too much pressure. It was all very "obvious". Until closer observations were possible, and stuff like thermal vents supplied both heat and oxygen, etc. not only were the scientific predictions inaccurate but they were as inaccurate as they could possibly be. Sometimes I hear brilliant cosmologists talk about stuff like whats inside black holes and I just think of that same example. Especially when so many have such starkly different ideas. Anyway, that was a longer post than I anticipated.
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