Objectivity of Science

Objectivity of Science

Spirituality

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S

Joined
08 Oct 06
Moves
290
01 May 07

If science is defined as discovering the laws of nature from observation alone, then it is true that science is objective. However, isn’t it true that humans always view the world through subjective eyes? If this is the case, our scientific observations will always be from a subjective view. Perhaps our quest for discovering objective truth is what spurs us on towards greater scientific discovery?

a
Andrew Mannion

Melbourne, Australia

Joined
17 Feb 04
Moves
53734
01 May 07

Originally posted by SharpeMother
If science is defined as discovering the laws of nature from observation alone, then it is true that science is objective. However, isn’t it true that humans always view the world through subjective eyes? If this is the case, our scientific observations will always be from a subjective view. Perhaps our quest for discovering objective truth is what spurs us on towards greater scientific discovery?
There can be no doubt that what any one person sees is a subjective view of the world - whether they're a scientist or not. Science tries to offset this I guess through peer review of work - so that anyone view is scrutinised and scrutinised and scrutinised until others either agree that it represents something true about the world or else reject it.

s
Kichigai!

Osaka

Joined
27 Apr 05
Moves
8592
01 May 07

Originally posted by SharpeMother
If science is defined as discovering the laws of nature from observation alone, then it is true that science is objective. However, isn’t it true that humans always view the world through subjective eyes? If this is the case, our scientific observations will always be from a subjective view. Perhaps our quest for discovering objective truth is what spurs us on towards greater scientific discovery?
This is why we use statistics and good experimental design to break things down to "yes" "no" questions, which can be statistically tested, as much as possible.