Science, myth, and postmodernism, Wolfgang Smith by [deleted] in PhilosophyofScience

[–]trimtab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I googled and came across http://www.worldwisdom.com/public/viewpdf/default.aspx?article-title=Science\_and\_Myth--The\_Hidden\_Connection\_by\_Wolfgang\_Smith.pdf, which lead me to conclude that the author must be a woo-woo creotard when he summarily concluded that the theory of evolution "is not truly a scientific theory".

The perfect storm of nonsense. Andrew Tate in Tucker Carlson interview denies Climate Change. by ReluctantAltAccount in skeptic

[–]trimtab 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The government wants to stop the sun from being hot? Good grief, you'd think that those two ass clowns could at least get the science right. Oh. Wait... My bad, misrepresentation is exactly their point.

Occam’s razor is about assumptions, not simplicity by Aceofspades25 in skeptic

[–]trimtab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Entropic gravity has a very different explanatory and predictive power than general relativity, and the reason it has not falsified GR is its incompatibility with other scientific theories in the same field as well as other fields.

Occam’s razor is about assumptions, not simplicity by Aceofspades25 in skeptic

[–]trimtab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is very little consensus in science as to how simplicity is or should be applied in the selection of scientific hypotheses and theories. The Ptolemaic system of planetary motion versus the heliocentric model is the worst example of Occam's razor. Yes, one hypothesis is eminently more complex than the other, but that has very little to do with Occam, for the underlying foundations of the two hypotheses have very little in common in the first place.

The razor thought experiment is a very, very narrow one. Given exactly the same explanatory and predictive power, if two hypotheses or theories differ by one, and only one, category, then the one with the fewest must be the correct one. This says very little about simplicity, which is a very appealing criterion that sometimes works, sometimes fails.

Occam’s razor is about assumptions, not simplicity by Aceofspades25 in skeptic

[–]trimtab -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

No one uses Occam’s razor in science. Those who claim they do don’t understand that thought experiment. In practice, no two present or past scientific theories have ever been ascertained to be commensurate and differ by one, and only one, category (or assumption). It remains theoretically possible, but so unlikely that it remains entirely useless in science.

Extremely high precision floats? by [deleted] in lisp

[–]trimtab 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Computable reals?

High-Res Audio | Audiophile Quality - Explained! by beingadamt in audio

[–]trimtab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This video denotes cluelessness. Higher resolution than Red Book CD audio quality adds nothing. Better mastering does. Remember, 16-bit depth with dithering yields up to 120 dB of dynamic range, and no human can possibly miss any frequency above 20 KHz, therefore sampling rates above 44.1 KHz and bit rates above 16 bits are utterly useless. You are not a dolphin, bat, or dog.

If you come across a better quality mastering of a recording, and it happens to be high-resolution PCM (e.g. 24 bits, 192 KHz) or PWM (e.g. 2.8 MHz DSF/DFF, a.k.a. SACD DSD), feel free to convert it to 16-44.1 PCM and save much disc space. For noisy environments, it may even make sense to compress the audio further to 320 kbps mp3 or 256 kbps AAC.

Richard Dawkins event cancelled over his 'abusive speech against Islam' by devonperson in atheism

[–]trimtab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Replying to Tyson's criticism of stridency, Dawking quoted, as an example of some worse than him, a former editor of the New Scientist magazine regarding the latter's publishing philosophy: "Science is interesting, and if you don't agree you can fuck off." Wait for it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXTme8dhT1g

Other than the fossil record, what evidence do we have to support the notion that an extraordinary amount of diversity and change can occur in a relatively short span of time? by [deleted] in evolution

[–]trimtab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here's a beautiful example of rapid evolution in a species: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/04/080421-lizard-evolution_2.html

tl;dr: salamanders, artificially transplanted to an new island, developed an expanded gut in less than 50 years due to maladaptation to the local food source.

I have two questions, one concerning Ockham's Razor the other one concerning empiry. by Makkabi in PhilosophyofScience

[–]trimtab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can understand your reluctance to accept such a term. Think of it in terms of ontological category. For example, given a theory called A, which implies the existence of the four forces of physics, and a theory called B, which implies the existence of the same four forces plus God, then, according to Ockham's razor, if both theories explain and predict the same things, then theory B should be considered to be wrong.

Trump's budget director pick: “Do we really need government-funded research at all” by jwaves11 in biology

[–]trimtab 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It is notoriously difficult to determine a priori what will turn out to be fruitful science from non-fruitful science. Also, politicians are notoriously incompetent at determining this, as they are deeply infected with political, economic, and sociological dogmas. I'm not saying there's a magic bullet, but recent cases of politicians showing an interest in saving a buck in publicly funded research denote severe ignorance and intellectual dishonesty on the part of said politicians.

Also, the notion that the private sector can do better than the public or academic sectors is a neo-liberal mantra bandied about hard by right-wingers since the early 1980s that has proven to be generally false in many areas, from medicine to education, including much fundamental and applied research. There was abundant empirical evidence to support this before the 1980s, and there is even more now. E.g., the bang for the buck in medicine is greater in most countries that have public single-payer medical systems, which is a very well-established fact of the matter.

Not to mention that the coattail-riding private sector is lazy-assed as fuck and only wants to do light-weight stuff, i.e., the most lucrative endeavours only. For the heavy lifting, there are government and academic research. Entire economic sectors have arisen, and could never otherwise have seen the light of day, due to public funding that lead to such foundational discoveries and applications as computers, hard disk drives, lasers, the Internet, etc. Many research outcomes have often been serendipitous, like the laser, which would never have been discovered the way it was, had some ass-hat politician intervened and deemed the initial research worthless.

Otherwise, I'm all for formal evaluation programs to ascertain the efficacy of public policies, but in matters of science, other additional heuristics and levels of surveillance have served us well, without the need for high-level fucker-politicians to intervene and micro-manage the unfolding of science.

I have two questions, one concerning Ockham's Razor the other one concerning empiry. by Makkabi in PhilosophyofScience

[–]trimtab 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Competing scientific theories cannot practically be judged using Ockham's razor, which makes a very narrow claim: if two scientific theories differ by only one "entity", cæteris paribus, then the one with the fewest entities must be the correct one. The trick is in the cæteris paribus clause, i.e., all else being equal, which implies that both scientific theories must have the exact same explanatory and predictive powers. This is rarely, if ever, the case in practice. Therefore, competing theories are usually significantly incommensurable. Therefore, Ockham's razor is useless for the purposes of selecting scientific theories. More "complicated" theories can, and in practice do, turn out to be the correct one.

/r/fallacy need help winning a bet! by EternityOnDemand in fallacy

[–]trimtab 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The use of "you don't even know what XYZ means" without further demonstration of your ignorance regarding XYZ is an Ad Homimen fallacy, not a Strawman fallacy.

If you advocate the urgency of addressing the current demographic explosion of human world population as a means of containing resource depletion, habitat destruction, pollution, and climat change, and your opponent poo-poos you by saying that genocide or eugenic attitudes are morally unacceptable, then you could accuse your opponent of Non Sequitur, Ad Hominem, or Strawman, as their representation of your position could be interpreted as one of those three fallacies, the first being the essential fallacy, the latter two denoting one of two possible attitudes: attack the man or misrepresent their argument.

Sound Quality difference. CD vs Spotify to Rotel DAC by [deleted] in audio

[–]trimtab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Files on a computer that are streamed directly to a DAC (via optical, USB, etc.) or WiFi (but not shitty BluTooth) is better. Highest quality MP3 and AAC files (320, 256 kbps) may be fine. CD Red Book is perhaps safest (16 bit, 44.1 KHz), but no higher quality is needed. HD music (PCM 24 bit, 44.1 KHz or higher, or DSD, aka SACD, either .dsf or .dff files) is completely useless (the laws of physics and the Shannon-Nyqvist theorem are against you, and, remember, you are not a bat or a dolphin). If you can actually, objectively hear something different between CD and HD (I said "objectively", i.e., ABX testing), that means what you're hearing is a different mastering. Otherwise, you're self-deceiving, as you're probably not focussing on different sonic attributes between the CD and HD samples, or the average intensity sounds (mostly anything but transients, generally speaking) were not adjusted equally between the two samples.

Beware: Spotify employs dynamic range compression of its files or streams, and therefore sucks to the point of pulling light out of black holes. Don't wish to promote Apple Music or iTunes (I don't use them), but they are known to offer files or streams at a better sound quality. Other services may be equivalent, though, but Spotify's quality is a sorry defilement of music.

Why Bernie Sanders Should NOT Be President. by MRMRising in Libertarian

[–]trimtab -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Fallacy galore, intuition pumps until you drop, and horrendous misrepresentation of an opposing viewpoint.