ZarathustraDK
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Just to clarify an equivocation I saw in this thread.
Theory can mean 2 things depending on the reader. Theory can be as in "I think that these things behave such and such" which laymen often use in everyday language. Theory can also mean "scientific theory" which is great step beyond a mere gist'm'guess about the reality of things.
Still, believers have a tendency to equate the latter with the former (which is no foul unless it's on purpose of course, hell, even non-believers do it sometimes), when the correct term for "laymans theory" applied to science would be "scientific hypothesis".
Relativity-theory, for instance, we don't really take as an "opinion" about how matter could be thought to behave because we know it works (ask any inhabitant of Hiroshima and Nagasaki about that one). Sadly (in relation to this argument), not all scientific theories have such awe-inspiring examples of their validity as the effects are more subtle and unseen by the layman than a nuclear explosion ending a war.
Theory can mean 2 things depending on the reader. Theory can be as in "I think that these things behave such and such" which laymen often use in everyday language. Theory can also mean "scientific theory" which is great step beyond a mere gist'm'guess about the reality of things.
Still, believers have a tendency to equate the latter with the former (which is no foul unless it's on purpose of course, hell, even non-believers do it sometimes), when the correct term for "laymans theory" applied to science would be "scientific hypothesis".
Relativity-theory, for instance, we don't really take as an "opinion" about how matter could be thought to behave because we know it works (ask any inhabitant of Hiroshima and Nagasaki about that one). Sadly (in relation to this argument), not all scientific theories have such awe-inspiring examples of their validity as the effects are more subtle and unseen by the layman than a nuclear explosion ending a war.