Newton, meet Einstein. Your point is...what, exactly? Unless I've missed something flagrant, Droscher-Heim doesn't suggest to throw anything out, but rather look at it in an utterly new way. "Einstein shall be proven wrong!" is not even remotely what I'm suggesting. Newton was 'wrong' but we still use his work all the time.Darth Wong wrote:The volume of existing data is not going to abruptly change, so any new theories would have to incorporate all of that data and thus produce predictions very similar in most situations to existing theories.
See above, case dismissed.You are echoing the idiocy of "intelligent design" fucktards by confusing the body of scientific observations with scientific theories and assuming that one is just as subject to revision as the other. Any new scientific theory can only live in the small spaces of uncertainty and inaccuracy left by the existing data.
This theory may be one of those cases; it is not actually ruled out by anyone.
I agree. Re-read the quote. "Never" is not a word used therein.But the blanket statement that scientists should never say something is impossible is utterly retarded.
For fuck's sake, it's an Arthur C. Clarke anecdotal quote, and you want to manipulate the conversation to the point where you're pretending I'm using it as some kind of formula to prove something. Let it be what it was meant to be.