What, if anything, can we learn about astronomy and physics by studying the personality of astronomers and physicists?
Futher still, if an astronomer is deeply religious, does that make astronomical observations she (or he) makes (and/or reports, in published papers) any less (or more) valid, as astronomical observations, than those of a colleague who is not the least bit religious?
Put this another way; if the actual names of the people who made (and published) observations, hypotheses, etc were removed from the primary documents (mostly papers) and replaced by random strings of letters, would the scientific content of those documents be any different?
Futher still, if an astronomer is deeply religious, does that make astronomical observations she (or he) makes (and/or reports, in published papers) any less (or more) valid, as astronomical observations, than those of a colleague who is not the least bit religious?
jjohnson wrote:What are your answers to your own questions
and do you find that you look at the names of people who express ideas about the electric universe and find that their names are a turn-off
and that you filter out their written ideas and concepts as being less valid than those that you are used to seeing (who normally do not get involved in hypothetical scenarios such as the EU)?
Would EU ideas be any more or any less intriguing or plausible or even reprehensible to you if they did not have "names" associated with them?
Jim
jjohnson wrote:I think, from a response I got from someone on Starship Asterisk, after asking a simple question, that it is felt by astronomers that charge separation in cosmic conditions is rare and weak, at best, and therefore of no physical interest to them; it had already been shown to be wrong in a net neutral universe, and that was that. Dismissive end of discussion. That view may be correct, for all I know, but I am not convinced that enough measurements of the right kind and in the right places have yet been made.
tayga wrote:Halton Arp is convinced that raw data that contradict the red shift/distance correlation are deliberately suppressed or statistically buried.
I’m not as convinced as Nereid that human nature doesn’t impinge on science.
Nereid wrote:Thanks for the welcome, Solar!![]()
With respect to physics and astronomy, how could character impact the actual science (post-publication)?
The incomprehensibility of gravitation Newton considered a divine dispensation. The Almighty had denied man ultimate insight into the mystery of His Creation. A Christian must be able to reconcile himself to this fact and Newton was a devout Christian...
With regard to Newton as the role model for the corrupt politics of modern physics, we find on page 185:
In his mid-fifties there came a radical change in Newton's way of life. He was appointed master of the Royal Mint, an office equivalent to what would now be governor of the Bank of England. He exchanged his modest lodgings at Cambridge for a palace in London, entered society, kept horses, carriages, and servants. His income shot abruptly from sixty to five hundred pounds a year, besides various perquisites; he was able to indulge his taste for philanthropy. He was knighted, and became an influential personage at court. Most important of all, he became president of the Royal Society.
This celebrated association of scientists was about the same age as Newton himself. At the time he was given his professorship, the society became "royal," and was provided with special privileges, robes of state, a mace, and a seal bearing the motto: "Let no one's word be law." But the motto went by the board once Newton was elected with absolute regularity to the presidency. His word was sacred. An excellent model for a cannon was unanimously rejected because Newton declared: "This diabolic instrument will only multiply mass killing." In London the Royal Society was generally known as Sir Isaac's Parliament.
This parliament became the platform for Newton's world fame. But it also embittered the closing days of his life by its frenetic partisanship, in connection with his fourth great contribution, the calculus of fluxions, which has become the core of modern mathematics. This time, however, Newton was not the sole discover of the method. It was simultaneously developed, under the name of the differential calculus, by the German philosopher Leibnitz...
Most of the technical terminology of modern mathematics derives from Leibnitz. All of Europe learned the differential calculus from his textbook. He described the new art of reckoning in such lucid terms that a veritable race began among mathematicians, each trying to outdo the other in elegant solutions of hitherto unsolved problems. Mathematicians posed each other riddles, and sent each other the results in code to be sure that no one copied. The period immediately after Leibnitz was an exciting and glorious era in the history of mathematics. And all the newest discoveries were made by means of Leibnitzian differential quotients. No one had ever heard of Newton's counterpart, his fluxions. Newton had created the method for his own private use, and hesitated to publish it because it was so difficult to grasp. For his Principia he therefore invented a less difficult, more geometrical method of proof...
The most remarkable aspect of the whole barren struggle was this: no participant doubted for a moment that Newton had already developed his method of fluxions when Leibnitz began work on the differential calculus. Yet there was no proof, only Newton's word. He had published nothing but a calculation of a tangent, and the note: "This is only a special case of a general method whereby I can calculate curves and determine maxima, minima, and centers of gravity." How this was done he explained to a pupil a full twenty years later, when Leibnitz's textbooks were widely circulated. His own manuscripts came to light only after his death, and then they could no longer be dated.
Though Newton's priority was not provable, it was taken for granted, while Leibnitz was always asked to prove that he had not plagiarized - a charge as humiliating as it was absurd. This grotesque situation demonstrates most vividly the authority Newton enjoyed everywhere. He was truly the monarch of all he surveyed, a unique phenomenon. To Western science he occupied the same place that had been held in classical antiquity by Pythagoras - whose disciples were wont to crush all opponents with the words: "Pythagoras himself has said so."
Goldminer wrote:Brian Wallace's book, The Farce of Physics covers much of Neirid's topics here on the "Future of science" category here at Thunderbolts Forum. It's a good read.
http://www.ekkehard-friebe.de/wallace.htm
This chapter covers Isaac Newton's, and Alert Einstein's transgressions:
http://www.ekkehard-friebe.de/FP_C3_MM.HTM
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