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By Douglas Blane | February 22nd 2007 06:40 PM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Douglas Blane

Research physicist originally, working on nuclear reactors, autonomous underwater vehicles, smart materials etc. Now journalist, writer and teacher. Maintain website of Full Bio

 
String theory is a leading candidate for a "theory of everything", but there is not a scrap of experimental evidence for it and no obvious way of getting any, either now or in the foreseeable future.

The whole awe-inspiring edifice has got "caught up in its own mathematical beauty", according to a review of Lee Smolin’s new book in the latest issue of Physics World.

Some string scientists have even begun to justify their evidence-free efforts, writes Michael Riordan, by offering a new philosophy of science "in which hypotheses no longer require observable evidence in order to be accepted as valid theories."

To a hardened experimentalist like himself, he says, "this is blasphemy".

It’s an unfortunate choice of word, since it seems to concede the relativist position that science is no better than any other story we tell ourselves, or read in ancient texts, while trying to make exactly the opposite point - that unlike other belief-systems science is firmly based on solid evidence.

What's more, it is not only experimentalists who would reject this new philosophy of science: You’d have a hard job finding anyone active in science who would agree with it – or disagree with Riordan’s telling comparison with another piece of non-science:

"If we accept string theory as valid while it evades observational tests, how can we legitimately rebut arguments about the ‘intelligent design’ of the universe? The honest answer is that we cannot. For these arguments too are not falsifiable; they do not allow testing by measurements."

And yet and yet… What is and isn’t science is not always clear-cut. The scientific method police can get a little too keen.

Scientists from Texas A&M and UC at Berkeley have just set up a "high-tech sentinel" in the Arkansas bayou, to hunt for the ivory-billed woodpecker. The bird was believed to be extinct, but recent sightings suggest reports of its demise have been greatly exaggerated.

But the evidence is inconclusive. So the scientists have designed an intelligent video camera and image filtering system, which they are prepared to leave searching the woods for the elusive woodpecker for years and years and years.

Is that science?

Well patient search by people who call themselves scientists is a common activity, whether the objects sought are woodpeckers, gravitational waves, Higgs bosons or the Loch Ness Monster. But it’s not an activity that fits easily into the scientific method slot.

The scientific method was best described by Richard Feynman in a 1960s lecture to a classful of awestruck students: "In general we look for a new law by the following process. First we guess it. Then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what, if this law we’ve guessed is right, that this would imply.

"Then we compare the computation results to nature ... compare it directly with observation to see if it works. If it disagrees with experiment it’s wrong. In that simple statement is the key to science.

"It doesn’t make any difference how beautiful your guess is. It doesn’t make any difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is – if it disagrees with experiment it’s wrong."

What the woodpecker watchers are doing bears little resemblance to that model. Their hypothesis that the ivory-billed woodpecker survives somewhere in the bayou is not falsifiable. No real-world test could prove it wrong. So are their efforts not science?

It is not an accusation that has been made, as far as I know, against the woodpecker scientists. But it was levelled rather strongly against SETI, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, whose scientists have been conducting an almost identical activity for decades. (Except of course that they’re not looking for radio signals from distant woodpeckers.)

"I take the hard view that science involves the creation of testable hypotheses," says Michael Crichton. "The Drake equation cannot be tested and therefore SETI is not science. SETI is unquestionably a religion."

But SETI pioneer Frank Drake is equally robust: "There is no way by our search that we can prove there are not intelligent creatures in space. Even if we made the most extensive possible radio search and found nothing, perhaps there are civilisations out there which don’t transmit radio.

"So we cannot prove the negative. And some people say that means SETI is not science. Well, I think that’s just playing games with words."

I agree with Drake*. And not just because Crichton is better at science fiction than fact - being the best-selling author of Jurassic Park and a prominent climate-change denier

But it does leave you wondering exactly what is science and what isn’t. And who decides.

If we insist on the scientific method, that consigns intelligent design and string theory to the fairy-stories file, but it also takes out SETI and the woodpecker watchers, among a host of other honest endeavours.

If we relax the criterion too much, we open the door to the cargo cults, a supernatural designer with a strange fondness for hairless monkeys, and far more parallel universes than there are particles in the one we are just beginning to know.

Going back to my previous post, it's easy to figure out what art is. Art is what artists do and call - or sometimes don't call - art.

So is science whatever scientists do and call science?


Quick quiz. Which are science?
a) Ivory-billed woodpecker watch
b) Search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI)
c) Hunt for the Loch Ness Monster
d) Human-induced climate change
e) String theory
f) Intelligent design

(I go with yes, yes, yes, yes, maybe and no.)

* I’d like to share a few more words from Frank Drake, not because they shed light on what is science and what isn't - but just because they’re great words:

"I often think, as we’re observing and these little blips appear on the screen, that we are very much like people in the forest somewhere, with the wind blowing and the leaves rustling. Perhaps we hear in the distance human shouting, for a brief moment. But we can’t be sure.

"It could well be that that’s exactly what’s happening in our galaxy."


Comments

se7en's picture
Interesting article, it's always tough to satisfy the scutiny of your peers in any type of endeavour, whether you're a ditch digger, a mechanic, a surgeon or a scientist.

http://www.adppolizia.com/pdf/PolNovembre08_mini.pdf
page 4

Current affairs monthly review of culture and trade-union informations
POLICE MAGAZINE 2008
In the witches Land
A trip in the depths of Irpinia ,between legends ,magics and mysterys
Antonio Emanuele PIEDIMONTE
Janare,witches, sorceress,fairy,enchantress,but also archair divinities and
terrible female demons: a contemporary trip about mysterious traces of the past,
between the things that survived the damages of the time and the men.
This book is an excavation between written and oral old stories which have
emersed from testy monys,books.articles and vary materials which antiche
legends,stories,traditions,fairytales,curious chronicle’s and many more,define
themselves x files today. The vademecum is a result to look at Irpinia with
another eye,the most secluded and mysterious place between the district of the
secret Campania.
This volume is a kino of an “initiatory course “ without solutions that
wants to provoke new questions and desires,like when you get in to the car to
discover 119 Irpinia’s villages,between lunar landscapes and mysterious
phenomenons places.
The inexplicable skull in the eye of the statue of holy mary of san pompilio
( the cover’s imagine),
The mummie of “ zi Vicienzo” at Bonito,going through the castle of Prince
Carlo Gesualdo, the vestige of the ancient Gonza, the mefite infernal corner,
the unsustainable look of mamma schiavona
Under beneath there is the secret garden of virgilio mago at montevergine-and
the FAMOUS DRAGON OF VOLTURARA. On the traces of saints,demons,angels,monster,
ghosts,werewolfs,souls in purgatory and many others.
This could be an excuse to go to discover new archaic messages and new
secrets to reveal. The Professionals Journalist and photographer Antonio
Emanuele Piedimonte of Naples has written for the principals dailies and
Italian magazines,at present he is the superintendent of the Redazione Campana
“city” , the freedaily of gruppo Rizzoli-Corriere della Sera.Inside his book
for the “Corriere.quotidiano dell’Irpinia” the editions Intra Moenia stopped
the stamp in November 2007 with the Cangiano graphic S.R.L. of Naples,a book of
215 pages titled:
“NELLA TERRA DELLE JANARE”, a trip in the depths of Irpinia,between legends,
magics and mysterys,at page 183 there is VOLTURARA IRPINA:Il drago e la rosa,
Antonio Emanuele Piedimonte writes………Volturara could have been one of the three
cities of the etrurian dodecapolis in Campania……..after the destruction of
Sabatia,the Romans conquered the antiche city Irpina more than 2000 years ago.
TODAY AT VOLTURARA THERE HAS BEEN FOUND ANINEDITED PAINTING OF THE FAMOUS
ARTIST MAURITS CORNELIS ESCHER,WHICH REPRESENTS THE LEGEND OF A MODERN DRAGON,
WHO LIVES IN A LAKE:THE FAMOUS “LOCH NESS MONSTER”.-
Even the POLICE MAGAZINE has published a lot of articles about the discovery
of the inedited painting of the famous artist Maurits Cornelis ESCHER.
Thanks to this editorial staff there has been a press conference at Avellino
which has given good interests to the mass media.

Anna Paternostro

Presidente Nazionale Associazione

“Amici della Polizia” e componente

Redazione”il Giornale di Polizia”
http://it.youtube.com/watch?v=IYhTzywOYWI
http://it.youtube.com/watch?v=RQrovNERYfU&feature=related
http://www.irpinianews.it/comuni/news/news/?news=19596&comune=118
http://www.napoli.com/stamparticolo.php?articolo=13464
http://www.fimservice.it/pdf/pol_gen07.pdf

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