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Science and Unobservable Things

Explore unobservable things in science and their impact on understanding the natural world beyond what we can empirically verify.

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Today's Bloggingheads dialogue features me and writer John Horgan -- I will spare you a screen capture of our faces, but here is a good old-fashioned link. John is the author of The End of Science, in which he argues that much of modern physics has entered an era of "ironic science," where speculation about unobservable things (inflation, other universes, extra dimensions) has replaced the hard-nosed empiricism of an earlier era. Most of our discussion went over that same territory, focusing primarily on inflation but touching on other examples as well. You can judge for yourself whether I was persuasive or not, but the case I tried to make was that attitudes along the lines of "that stuff you're talking about can never be observed, so you're not doing science, it's just theology" are woefully simplistic, and simply don't reflect the way that science works in the real world. Other ...

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