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338

>Now, it would be nice if there were a lesson in this list of errors that might help scientists do better in the future. But the whole history of science shows that such errors are actually unavoidable. There is a lesson, though, based on what the mistakes on this list have in common: They’re all on a list of errors now known to be errors. Science, unlike certain political philosophies and personality cults, corrects its mistakes. That’s the lesson, and that’s why respecting science is so important to avoiding errors in other realms of life.

Yes "respect science" experts say... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rimz-PZMjjs

>>Now, it would be nice if there were a lesson in this list of errors that might help scientists do better in the future. But the whole history of science shows that such errors are actually unavoidable. There is a lesson, though, based on what the mistakes on this list have in common: They’re all on a list of errors now known to be errors. Science, unlike certain political philosophies and personality cults, corrects its mistakes. That’s the lesson, and **that’s why respecting science** is so important to avoiding errors in other realms of life. Yes "respect science" experts say... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rimz-PZMjjs

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

humans were randomly putting up structures for centuries, just because we have elevators, air con and underfloor heating now, doesn't make any of it sky pixie magic

if evolution wasn't a thing, life would have stopped evolving around 2000BC, but it doesn't, therefore these processes are eternal and inevitable

[–] 0 pt

Elevators, air con, and underfloor heating, those structures aren't the result of randomness

Now regarding evolution... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulmonoscorpius

>Pulmonoscorpius kirktonensis (from Latin pulmonis scorpius, 'lung scorpion') is an extinct species of scorpion[1] that lived during the Viséan and Serpukhovian ages of the Carboniferous period, around 336.0 – 326.4 million years ago.[2]

Are you ready for a breathtaking picture of that extinct animal? https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/67/20210116_Pulmonoscorpius_kirktonensis.png

Yeah

That's a scorpion

[–] 0 pt

structures aren't the result of randomness

i didn't say there were, the point is that everything evolves

That's a scorpion

"a large, fragmentary specimen is estimated to have been 700 mm (28 inches) long when alive" so, just like a modern one then...

Anomalocaris, it's just a shrimp...

species: a group of living organisms consisting of similar individuals capable of exchanging genes or interbreeding

one of that species died, why is this relevant?

[–] 0 pt

The fact that "everything evolves" (quotes because well, some didn't evolve much, obviously...) doesn't prove that life is simply the end result of sheer randomness

I don't think the scorpion will evolve into something entirely different than what it is and has pretty much always been, maybe it will shrink in size eventually, big deal