Since no one else has commented on this, I think I have to step in here. I'm just really surprised that you would say something like this, Blitz, because it's a complete (but sadly, common) misunderstanding of what a scientific theory is.Originally Posted by Blitzkrieg
Shortly said, a scientific theory is the best thing there is. Period. Whatever you may mean by "higher truth", rest assured that a scientific theory is the "highest" we will ever be able to get, because there is no other reliable way to find out about reality. Here's how the scientific method works:
1. Gather observations, facts, about a phenomena
2. Make a hypothesis to explain that phenomena. The hypothesis must be falsifiable (meaning, if it's false, it must be possible to prove that it is), and you must be able to make predictions based on it.
3. Try extensively to prove the hypothesis wrong. If you can, go back to step 1 or 2. If you can't, continue with step 4.
4. Send the hypothesis into a scientific journal for peer review. Other scientists will then try to disprove it, and improve on it if they can. If anyone manage to disprove it, you go back to step 1 or 2. If no one manage to disprove it, and the hypothesis is still unproven after a long while, and all new evidence that has been found is coherent with it, it will finally get to step 5.
5. Finally, after a very long time, it becomes a theory. Once a hypothesis has reached this stage, it's so firmly supported by evidence that the burden of proof has practically shifted to the one saying it's not true.
By that point, it's not about belief: it's about whether you accept it or not. Prove one wrong, and you've got yourself a Nobel Prize.
As for the actual topic of this thread, I have nothing to add.
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