PowerEngineer
Diamond Member
- Oct 22, 2001
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The problem is that science has not yet answered everything about the natural world. All it can do is try to predict new observations. It cannot distinguish between two theories which make equal predictions for those observations. The latter is a philosophical exercise, at least until science progresses to the point where it can observe something new wherein the two models offer different predictions.
Science will produce more answers as time goes on but never answer everything about the natural world. I'd have been smarter to acknowledge in my previous post that aspects of the natural world not currently addressed by science can also be an added, shrinking domain of religion/philosophy. Shrinking because religion/philosophy should yield to science as knowledge of our natural world expands.
Science discerns the best (i.e. most likely) theory based on its ability to explain known facts and observations as well as the theory's ability to correctly predict new facts and/or observations. Science can therefore usually distinguish between two theories that are identical only in their predictions. It seems to me that it's in this ability to explain known facts that the theory of evolution beats out all other theories.
That said, I agree it's possible that different theories could seem equally meritorious (in matching facts and predictions), in which case the current theory probably prevails.