Maybe now would be a good time for you to explain how something can be deemed as a closed system when one has absolutely no entrance into issues of the micro/macrocosm.
If you don't consider our increasingly expansive views of the entire natural universe--which incidentally, due to the lightspeed limitation, also happen to give us a view more than ten billion years into the past--an "entrance into the issues of the... macrocosm," then I don't understand what you mean by "macrocosm." Likewise for quarks and leptons, and the word "microcosm." All I can deduce from your rhetoric is that you're simply not using scientific language, in which case--as I've noted before--this discussion should be moved to the Philosophy board.
I am asking what empirical evidence you have of the micro/macrocosm currently available..... without any empirical evidence for your claims you have just tarred yourself with the same brush you painted religion with.
I have dutifully responded to your request for examples of empirical evidence, i.e., I have been moving my argument forward in accordance with the scientific method. You, on the other hand, do little more than repeat the same questions without moving your argument forward, which is a violation of the scientific method.
charming reading there, but its all part of the mesocosm no matter what manner of jazzing up you care to utilize.
.... and occasionally toss in some meaningless words like "charm" and "jazz" which still do nothing to clarify what you're asking for. Yes, I too have made a few comments that are off topic, after all this is not a graduate seminar and we're not being downgraded for failure to always be serious. But I also make substantive comments which you have not refuted. Calling something "jazz" is not the same thing as explaining why it does not make my point.
Last post you posted that the question has been already answered due to a short sighted examination of the word "amplify". Now you are doing the same with the words "closed system".
You missed my point. Someone else misused the term "closed system," as though we're defining the science that is a tool for examining the universe, rather than defining the universe itself. I felt that was important to clarify.
The irony is that not even the essentials of empiricism (as the monoplizing force on all knowledge based claims) fall within empiricism.
That is one of your arguments which I have refuted several times, and you have not offered a proper rebuttal to my refutation.
Again, this discussion feels less and less like science every time I drop back in.
The reason is because our (empirical) understanding of the topic is surrounded by mysteries of the macro and microcosm. The evidence is that there is still continued research going on in the field.
There are mysteries everywhere; obviously we will never be able to know
everything because our speed of learning is finite. But that doesn't mean we're not on the right track. It is certainly no reason to adopt an unsubstantiated belief in the supernatural, which is to throw up our hands and give up on science because it's all just too damn difficult. Or because it conflicts with the instinctive, archetypal beliefs which we were born with and which thousands of generations of parents reinforced in their children, before they had science to help.
Perhaps now it is starting to dawn on you the gravity involved when you make such claims of a "closed system" from a knowledge base thoroughly planted in the mesocosm.
You have not offered any compelling evidence for your assertion that as we approach, literally, the ends of the natural universe in both spatial and temporal dimensions, we are nonetheless still mired in the "mesocosm."
If not, feel free to offer another example of how having a universe that isn't closed violates some empirical finding, much like having water that doesn't have a boiling point of 100 degrees violates our understandings of metal fabrication.
You ragged on me for daring to bring software engineering into this discussion, and here you are bringing in metallurgy? That's not science, it's engineering. Bronze technology was invented several centuries before written language, one of the key technologies that made science possible five thousand years later. Of course humans are resourceful and we'll find a way to cope with an illogical universe perturbed by the capricious actions of invisible gods. But that way will not be very much like science as we've spent the last 500 years defining it.
You mean you have pre-existing beliefs that you won't budge from! How non-empirical of you!
Very funny. No, what I mean is that our arguments are not in the same plane. From my perspective you are not respecting the scientific method in the way you conduct your argument. I'm sure you have an equivalent criticism of my slavish adherence to it.
In any case, I have a tendency to co-hijack threads with one person on the opposite side of its issue, and that's not always the best way to run this website. It's one thing if it's the history of the Indo-European languages or tips on hand-feeding a parrot hatchling, but if it's just reasoning and rhetoric I fear that the other members will lose interest. It's good to let them chime in and see if they take it in a new direction.
a software project that is so advanced that it can not be approached by any empirical paradigm or measurement? sounds like a marketing prop to me
Oh it can be and we've done it. For many years I was a guru in the field of software measurement. It's just that America is run by cowboys and cowboys don't like to measure anything because it's no fun.
ever wondered why they catagorize his [Abraham Maslow] entire field of discipline [psychology] as "soft science"?
Every science started out as "soft." As a metrician, I see the transition beginning at the point where the first measurements are taken, even if qualitative. Maslow's Hierarchy is a way of qualitatively measuring one dimension (or perhaps five) of a person's feelings.
ever wondered why they [psychoactive drugs] have no effect on a dead person? unless you are alive to consume it, it will have as much effect on you as pouring it over your great great grandmother.
No, I haven't wondered about that. I've had enough elementary courses in biology and chemistry to understand it. When you die your synapses degrade irreparably within a few minutes so there is no infrastructure upon which to "have an effect."
In short there is a gynormous difference between life and the chemicals that life utilizes. There are moments when material reductionists get all excited, like when it was discovered how to synthesize urea for example, but there is a big difference between one's self and one's urine.
I can tell you're not a computer programmer. Your grasp of deep levels of structural decomposition is as tenuous as your grasp of extremely large numbers.
The problem is that there is no empirical evidence for this
You continue to repeat that like a broken record, even though I have provided evidence.
The argument is, however, that the universe is "closed" to those things that transcend standard empirical inquiry.
No. If the universe is not "closed," it simply means that supernatural forces are able to affect it. Those forces will leave evidence and we will be able to examine it using "standard empirical inquiry." The point is that there is no evidence. Or to be precise, there is always evidence that transcends the observational technology of the era, and as the technology improves the evidence continues to move just out of reach. Notice how gods, like space aliens, never show up on the quad of a state university? They used to turn people into pillars of salt; now they manifest themselves by casting provocative images on potato chips.
If the god is defined, we can usually disprove it. Since every monotheistic deity I have ever heard of has these two qualities: (1) They are eternal and (2) they created the universe, I am willing to say that I can disprove all major gods.
How can you disprove the existence of gods by either of those means? 1) We cannot see eternity and 2) We don't know how the universe got here. In fact, those are two facets of what I suspect may turn out to be the Big Question that will puzzle us for some time: What exactly is time? I have said before that we're making a rash assumption when we cavalierly postulate moments in time before the Big Bang. Temperature has an Absolute Zero, why can't time have one? As we continue to uncover more of the universe's secrets, we may discover that the nature of time is such, that if we attempt to solve an equation in which
t < 0, our solution will be full of imaginary numbers, just as if we try to solve an equation in which
T < 0.
And of course some religionist will jump up and insist that it just can't be a coincidence that both of those quantities are represented by the letter Tee.
But even if I couldn't, it is still "scientific" to say that the things for which we have zero evidence do not exist.
No it's not. As I've posted multiple times, all we can say is that they do not exist
beyond a reasonable doubt. That's not the same thing as saying their existence is impossible. I borrow the language of the law because the language of science does not communicate well with laymen.