“All observational claims made about the object are made in some perspective or other. Before the seventeenth century, the Milky Way, as part of a commonsense perspective on the world, was perceived using human eyes simply as a broad band of light extending across the night sky. From the perspective…”Tagged: Milky Way, Scientific Perspectivism, Seeing Seeing, Against Objectivity, Perspectivism
“The word planet derives from a Greek word meaning wanderer.”Tagged: Etymology, What Words Means, Word Origins
“But if one imagines a world in which humans never appeared with their contingently evolved visual system, then there is no basis for assigning colors to any object. Why should a surface with a given surface spectral reflectance be called 'yellow'? Without reference to the particular characteristics…”Tagged: Color, Relativism, Scientific Perspectivism
“Humans are trichromats, which is to say, their retinas contain three different types of receptors (called cones for their shape when viewed through a microscope) with three different pigments sensitive to three different ranges of the visible spectrum. These three pigments, conventionally labeled…”Tagged: Color, Seeing Seeing, Three Is The Number
“For a perspectival realist, the strongest claims a scientist can legitimately make are of a qualified, conditional form: 'According to this highly confirmed theory (or reliable instrument), the world seems to be roughly such and such.' There is no way legitimately to take the further objectivist…”Tagged: Epistemology, Perspectivism, Science, Importance of Multiple Database Entries
“The notion of a law of nature did not arise out of the practice of science itself. Sometime in the seventeenth century, it was imported into discourse about science from Christian theology, both directly, and indirectly through mathematics. Originally, laws of nature were understood as God's laws…”Tagged: Natural Law, Objectivity, Secularization, Theology, Truth
“The nature of the knowledge itself was rarely questioned. It was taken for granted that scientists were discovering the objectively real inner workings of nature. These workings are there to be discovered. It only takes effort, sometimes requiring huge expenditures of resources, to uncover them.…”Tagged: Epistemology, Objectivity, Science