@james38
Part 1 of 2
You are inclined to believe one proposition and I am inclined to believe a contradictory one.
It is true that we are both products of our cultures/raising and both suffering from delusion euphemistically referred to as "bias" (and worse). I must reiterate that I endeavor diligently to eschew belief from all knowledge/fact, most especially scientific. I do not believe the things I say, I seek to know instead of merely believe. The claims I make are validated as correct and supported through and by research, and do not rely upon belief. This stands in stark contrast to the vast majority of "educated" which are required as a dogma of their faith to believe the earth is a particular shape (usually "spherical", but increasingly "flat" and other shapes). Whenever someone, including yourself, uses the verbiage of belief - your ears ought perk up. Many, if not most, people are not explicitly aware of the beliefs they have that are masquerading as facts/knowledge/science and this can often be exposed/betrayed to us by their diction.
I would say that we are 2 people with differing views engaged in conversation / rational discourse in the, ideally, mutual and earnest pursuit of truth (and failing that lofty goal, just plain knowledge will suffice).
And the focus of the conversation is which one is more likely true. That's all I mean by "debate" .. no judges, audience, or egos necessary!
Most excellent. I'm game! However, it is important to remember that no amount of discussion (nor assessment of "likelihood") will (or could) ever determine the shape of the world. There is only one way to do that.
Don't associate the word with political debates
I do recognize that there is no debate more farcical and unstructured than political "debate" - perhaps most especially in the US, however all debate is merely a game in my view. It has no purpose beyond pageantry/marketing. It is in no way a part of science or the scientific method, it is a part of marketing it. Debate serves no role in determining what is or is not in manifest physical reality - that is what science is for! I am aware that the egotists in science enjoy the game, and that bohr absolutely destroyed einstein - but this is as meaningless and stupid as any other pageantry - football or any other sport, for instance. It has an impact on science, as does "consensus", but these are clear and obvious corruptions.
We still call them "scientific debates".
True. This distracts from their true purpose - marketing/persuasion/manipulation. Science is not progressed or practiced with debate. Debate is not a step in the scientific method. Rigorous, or perhaps even heated, discussion that leads to meaningful hypothesis that can be experimentally validated on the other hand is not debate. Debate has formal rules, like all games. Scientific discourse, contentious/heated or not, should not be referred to as debate.
The only thing I know is that I know nothing" is a great starting point for us.
I'm glad you brought that up! This subject has a lot to do with the greeks.
This is a mistranslation. I was taught it too (as were many others), and it's wrong. Socrates never said that! For a wise philosopher to declare his wisdom and knowledge as worthless/meaningless would be unthinkable.
What he actually said was, "At least I do not claim to know, that which I know I cannot know". He was speaking to the elites of his day, whom he preferred to commit suicide rather than continue to live in the same world with.
I agree, this is a great place to start.
Faith is belief without evidence.
Faith is also any "fact" supported/underpinned by belief (with or without subjective "evidence"). Most all religious people argue for the evidence of the reality of their stories. They ALL have evidence... So did the greeks that believed zeus was responsible for this and that. Personally I am not so averse to faith as I am to blind faith, however belief has no place in knowledge/fact, least of all scientific.
NASA's pics count as evidence. More on that later.
Possibly, but they come from a demonstrably (and repeatedly) untrustworthy source. The sad truth is they are the ONLY evidence (supposedly that remains).
Space doesn't exist except on tv, and I know how wild that sounds.
Pictures are also a suspect form of evidence, as I have many pictures of the loch ness monster and bigfoot. For this reason, they can never serve as the sole evidence or "proof", as they essentially MUST in the case of "space" writ-large.
Let's call the burden of proof even for now?
If by that you mean that neither RET nor FET (if such a thing there be) has sufficient proof to satisfy the burden of proof as to the claim of the specific, known, and provable shape of the world; then I more or less agree. There exists about as much "proof" that the entire world is spherical as it is flat.
flat earth theory doesn't hold up scientifically as well as spherical earth theory does.
It is quite the opposite! However, I wish you would stop abusing the word "theory". Can we call them posits? Neither is a theory - even colloquially, "Hey man, the earth is totally round/flat" hardly qualifies.
I can't let this one slide, or it will topple my whole argument.
Here we go... So far I don't see any obvious issue with changing "theory" to "posit", but I can tolerate it if you feel it is important.
Let's talk about the scientific method. I'll start a little list here (though it may be incomplete), let me know what you think.
Looks pretty good! Way above average in my experience. There may be some issues with the verbiage however. The sticky wicket is, once again, "theory".
I have no issue with having a theory in step 1 which you wish to test, though it is a little odd/non-standard. Typically the word to use, where you had inserted "theory", is "hypothesis". Experiments only have one function, and they do not test theories, only hypotheses. The rigid linkage between the theory and the hypothesis may be hard if not impossible to guarantee - but so far, mostly so good.
If the null hypothesis is proven true, that means that theory was proven false.
As a stickler, I am compelled to point out that the experiment, in the strictest sense only validates, invalidates (or neither) the hypothesis. If the hypothesis is not solidly connected / comprised in the theory, this deduction may be unsound. But, still so far so good - i think.
If the null hypothesis is disproven, this does not prove the theory 100% true. It only makes it stronger. No theory can ever be proven 100%, but a particular theory can be disproven. Although sometimes, a disproven theory only needs a slight modification in order to be revived as a possibility.
Still good!
It's interesting, if I understand you correctly, that you are not subscribing to the disc theory but rather just very skeptical of the globe theory.
Correct. The posit (theory, if you insist) that the earth is flat, or a flat disc, is merely speculation - however it is supported by historical / mythological sources.
That's great because it's a falsifiable theory that can be tested to confirm or reduce your skepticism!
The posit and conclusion (that the earth most likely cannot be spherical) can be falsified, yes. It can also be demonstrated, historically, that the presumptive posit of a sphere earth is merely an unvalidated assumption over 2 millennia old (or at least was until the 50's/60's, if you believe what you see on tv)
So your claim that is "against the presumptive model", I'd have to disagree with.
The quoted phrase was referencing the "conclusions, analyses, data/observations, experiments" that support the claim (that the earth, most likely, is not and cannot be - spherical)
In my camp, none of us care whatsoever what Plato said.
Newton was known as agelastic (never laughing / hard-ass), however there is one anecdote on the books of an exception. Supposedly a classmate came upon him reading euclid, and asked him why in the world he was reading that old junk - to which he burst into uproarious laughter. In fairness, your answer may have been slightly different had I NOT mistakenly written plato, when I intended to write pythagoras. Would it have made a difference? Anyway, the history of science is critical to understanding it - and I suspect this is one of the reasons it is, largely, so poorly taught. All of philosophy is built on premises/posits/tenets/assumptions, and science / natural philosophy is no exception. Without studying and critically evaluating those foundations, laid in bygone eras, you may be building on sand.
We believe that we have concrete evidence today, and that is all that matters.
There is that verbiage of belief where it does not belong again! It is true, you do believe that - and are required to as a matter of rote / dogma of the faith. If the concrete evidence you believe exists actually does, this could be a short conversation!
But in your camp, and correct me if I'm wrong, you might believe that modern science is built upon twisted assumptions about the worlds shape that goes back all the way to the Greeks. I don't want to put up a strawman though, just thinking out loud.
Kind of? Again, I personally endeavor diligently to leave belief out of it whenever possible! I am not deluded enough to think I am completely successful, however.
You might be surprised how little the world changes when our mere conceptions of it do. If the world is flat, then everything we observe happens on a flat earth. No contradictions, no issues, no stress.
Nothing in science depends on the sphericity of the earth the way it is preached in the mythology. No technology relies on it, etc. Yes the greeks are the first on record to make the mistake, and it kind of got "grandfathered" in because it was largely unimportant scientifically - but there need be no grand conspiracy for humans to constantly be stupid and wrong as they always are. It's a comedy of err's you see.
So in other words, if the sustained convex of the curving of the water's surface was measured physically (I'm curious what tool does this) and was non-zero, this would disprove the flat-earth model.
Not really, however it would suggest against it. Establishing this measurement would allow for spherical to be a possible shape of the world. Without that measurement, there is nothing empirical or scientific about the globe posit.
Are we on the same page here? This is exactly what I mean by falsifiable. And I like how straightforward it is as a hypothesis.
More or less, yes - I think so! I also like how straightforward and innocuous this entire subject appears at first glance - this "hypothesis" included.
I'm definitely following you.
Good! That's more than half the battle.
A global elitist conspiracy is technically possible.
And yet nothing so fantastic or grandiose is in any way necessitated. The wiki here does a good job describing how the "conspiracy" need not be very large, nor specifically pertaining to the shape of the world. The MIC is quite real in any case, and is not a trustworthy source.
For example, we'd have to assume that there has been widespread lying and brainwashing, and somehow no leaks!
No, we wouldn't HAVE to assume that. Humanity requires no help to be constantly stupid and wrong. In any case, in regards to the fabrication of "space" and the "space age" there have been "leaks" - and some bad things happened to them. Regardless, you can have leaks all day long, as long as no one does anything substantive about them - remember edward snowden?
I think it's really sad the way flat earth believers are treated sometimes
I agree, though I have seen irrational intolerance, prejudice, and ad hominem on all sides. Pretty much what you expect from "belief cults" regardless of under the guise of science, known as scientism, or more traditional deities. The trouble is the belief bit - it has no place in science and is across purposes. If people actually KNEW what the shape of the world was, and how they knew, and how to convey it effectively to others - we would not be in this mess right now. It is all a mass failure of "education" in my view. People who believe the world is any shape have faith, not knowledge - and it is a bitter lesson for a lot of them. It is little wonder they are so easily swayed from believing the world is a sphere, to believing it is some other shape - and never recognizing that BELIEF is the thing leading them astray all along. When you know, and you know how you know - you are much more difficult to f about. That is probably a major reason why these skills were not fostered in generations of "students". Abject appeal to authority is much preferred to a learned and critical populous. It has been discovered that the best time to instate tyranny, is in the nursery.
Just look at religion...
I am! And it is being disingenuously/erroneously presented as fact/knowledge and science when it is mythology/religion and/or unvalidated speculation (at absolute best). The myth of scientism is grand, and pernicious - just like most religious mythology. Cognitive dissonance is indeed painless - there is a LOT of confusion on what that is and how it works out there. Denialism is not involved in earnest flat earth research. Though MIC sources like nasa et al are denied/discarded outright by some, the vast majority of times the data is simply reinterpreted - not discarded. It is all too easy to simply deny the reality of some things, and continue in your natural default delusion. We must be ever vigilante not to let that happen, even - and perhaps especially - if it is inevitable.
But when you selectively disbelieve evidence, then that is what makes it unfalsifiable.
Perhaps, but that doesn't mean you/they aren't still objectively wrong while ignoring all the reality and observation that conflicts with your/their worldview (or posit/theory in our diminished context). Consensus is not a part of science, and we can't (and shouldn't) force people to give up their delusions - they have to want to do it themselves, earnestly. We should encourage, and educate, and demonstrate - but never force. Even if you succeeded, from unclean means comes an unclean result. As I said, most all "concrete" evidence is merely reinterpreted - not discarded or denied.
NASA's images are for sure not the only evidence we have in support of globe earth theory, but it is the most important by far because of the scale of the coordinated conspiracy that would be required in order to create the hoax.
We are dipping into the hypothetical here, however a large coordinated conspiracy is not necessitated. Thorough compartmentalization can be employed to keep virtually everyone in the dark, and the key players only with limited access/information and unending surveillance - all speculation of course. No conspiracy is really required at all to take pictures with normal lenses at high altitude and mistake barrel distortion for the "curvature of the earth" you expected to see there due to conditioning through rote from childhood under the guise of education. As I said, people have no trouble being wrong - and it requires no conspiracy.
Questioning the validity of a single researcher and lab is within reason but if you are opening to question the validity of a coordinated effort of physicists as large as NASA, how can you believe anything at all?
Well, you can't really believe anything the MIC says - ever. It's something everyone knows, but few people apply it to nasa for nationalistic pride / hubris reasons. Everyone knows not to trust the government, but nasa is a direct descendant of george washington for some reason.
It is a good and valid question, however. The wonderful thing about science is it requires no faith. Hell, it may even require doubt! Trust is not involved. If it is demonstrable, then there's probably something to it - if not, it is probably fiction. The longer I live the more I side with planck and newton; The only means of knowledge at our disposal is experiment; all else is poetry and imagination.
You KNOW that NASA lied?
Many times, about many things!
Getting a shred of evidence that NASA lied would be impossible
Your faith compels you, and other good citizens/employees and "students", to believe that it is impossible. It's impossible because there is no chance that they lied right? Or is it impossible because they are superhuman gods that can't make mistakes and never lie? There is lots of evidence, going over it will take time - however I highly recommend the wiki here - "the conspiracy" page can provide a pretty comprehensive overview!