top | item 36954974 (no title) tdehnel | 2 years ago “That’s funny…” implies you had a pre existing theory about how it was supposed to work. discuss order hn newest SanderNL|2 years ago Ah, I see. You mean we need some (implicit) theory to even detect what is interesting about a result.Let’s say you measure a particle going c*2. Without theory you wouldn’t even notice this.Is that your point? jack_riminton|2 years ago Not really. I don’t have my own theories on how most things work but I can recognise patterns that fall out of the norm tdehnel|2 years ago so your theory is “things have predictable patterns” or “the future will be like the past” overboard2|2 years ago You don't need a preexisting theory though, you just need to lack one that explains the results of an experiment tdehnel|2 years ago Why would someone do an experiment without a theory to test? How would they know that a particular result was interesting without a theory about the expected result? load replies (1)
SanderNL|2 years ago Ah, I see. You mean we need some (implicit) theory to even detect what is interesting about a result.Let’s say you measure a particle going c*2. Without theory you wouldn’t even notice this.Is that your point?
jack_riminton|2 years ago Not really. I don’t have my own theories on how most things work but I can recognise patterns that fall out of the norm tdehnel|2 years ago so your theory is “things have predictable patterns” or “the future will be like the past”
tdehnel|2 years ago so your theory is “things have predictable patterns” or “the future will be like the past”
overboard2|2 years ago You don't need a preexisting theory though, you just need to lack one that explains the results of an experiment tdehnel|2 years ago Why would someone do an experiment without a theory to test? How would they know that a particular result was interesting without a theory about the expected result? load replies (1)
tdehnel|2 years ago Why would someone do an experiment without a theory to test? How would they know that a particular result was interesting without a theory about the expected result? load replies (1)
SanderNL|2 years ago
Let’s say you measure a particle going c*2. Without theory you wouldn’t even notice this.
Is that your point?
jack_riminton|2 years ago
tdehnel|2 years ago
overboard2|2 years ago
tdehnel|2 years ago