How do I show a skeptic that atoms/molecules actually exist?

In summary, the conversation is about whether science can tell us anything about "reality" and the existence of sub-atomic particles, atoms, and molecules. The expert summarizer highlights that science does not attempt to define reality, but rather create models for prediction. The conversation also touches on the idea that atoms and molecules may not actually exist, but are simply models used in science. The expert summarizer mentions the discovery of atoms using a super powerful microscope, but notes that there is still uncertainty about whether these objects are truly atoms or something else. The purpose of grand unification is also discussed, with the expert summarizer pointing out that it may be seeking a single force that may or may not actually exist.
  • #1
Michael Scott
9
5
This might be a stupid question so please bear with me.

I am having a debate with a friend of mine over the Internet. It is about science. His argument is that although science works (that is the technology part), science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".

He sites for example the famous case where gravity was thought to be a "force". This was the "reality" for over 200 years. People got work (i.e. technology) out of Newtons equations of gravity, thinking that it was a "force".

But Al Einstein showed in 1917 I believe that gravity is not a force, and that the objects fall not because of a force, but due to something called the curvature of space time.

So, likewise he says that although we use electricity, make atom bombs, create drugs and chemicals (i.e. technology), we actually don't know whether atoms or even molecules really exist. He says that we really don't know whether protons, neutrons or electrons really exist. He says that they have not been proved to exist using the "scientific_method".

His argument is that since we thought that gravity was a force (wrongly) but got work done using Newtons equations, likewise we cannot say that sub-atomic particles, atoms or molecules actually exist (i.e. reality)( although we get work (technology) done out of these things (which he says are just models only. That is, an atom is just a model. It does not actually exist.)).

How would YOU guys, the experts answer my friend?

Is there a way to actually see sub-atomic particles, atoms or molecules?? Can we actually see these things with our naked eye through a powerful telescope?? Maybe if I can show a actual picture of an atom or molecule he might be convinced that they do actually exist.

Was the existence of sub-atomic particles, atoms and molecules proved using directly using the scientific method, or they proved to exist indirectly?

I love to hear your thoughts on this.
 
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  • #2
Michael Scott said:
science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".
Science doesn't attempt to do that. All Science attempts to do is to make a model that can be used to predict what will happen to within some accuracy. It's Non-Scientists who demand 'reality'.
 
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  • #3
sophiecentaur said:
Science doesn't attempt to do that. All Science attempts to do is to make a model that can be used to predict what will happen to within some accuracy. It's Non-Scientists who demand 'reality'.
So, are you saying that atoms and molecules actually don't exist? We don't actually know whether they exist or not?

That is very strange. Because I know they exist. How can we create an atom bomb, if atoms did not exist?

Are you saying that scientists are not sure that electrons exist??

So, if a ask a question from scientists whether electrons exist, his answer is "we don't know for sure. We have a model called the electron. But whether it actually exist we are not sure"??

If the answer above is what scientists tell you, then I say it's preposterous. What is the point in science then? People will laugh at scientists if they give an answer like above.
 
  • #4
Michael Scott said:
So, are you saying that atoms and molecules actually don't exist? We don't actually know whether they exist or not?

That is very strange. Because I know they exist. How can we create an atom bomb, if atoms did not exist?
No. All we can say is that certain things can be explained by assuming that those things exist. That's as far as it goes.
I would challenge you that you do not "know" things exist. You have read about them but you have never personally seen an electron - or even measured the presence of a single electron. You have a working knowledge of the system to some level and you can't ask for more than that.
Any more discussion of this is Philosophy and PF doesn't do Philosophy.
 
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  • #5
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  • #6
Michael Scott said:
So, what do you say now?? Do you still say that atoms don't exist.

I'd say that there is no way to tell whether the objects we see using that microscope are actually atoms or whether they are something else which merely appears to be atoms, but has other properties which would distinguish them from atoms but that we just cannot see.

Michael Scott said:
What is the purpose of grand unification?? Isn't it to find the single force that exists?? If it does not exist then why bother trying to find it?

There's a difference between accepting that science will never be able to say with absolute certainty that our models truly describe reality versus saying that our models do not and cannot describe reality. It's entirely possible that our understanding of gravity is correct and that gravity truly works exactly how we model it. However, there is literally nothing we could do to determine whether this is true or whether there are differences between our models and reality that we just cannot observe. Perhaps the differences are too small, or perhaps there are unobservable forces. We may not be able to be absolutely certain that science describes reality, but that doesn't stop it from being incredibly useful.
 
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  • #7
Are you guys saying that Peter Higgs & François Englert was awarded the Nobel Prize (the GREATEST prize any human can get) just for "Creating a model of a Higgs Boson"?

Because, if you say that particles are just "models", they are not DISCOVERIES ain't It?? They are CREATIONS ain't It?

Are you saying that some alien species in a far away galaxy can model these same things DIFFERENTLY??

So, the LHC actually did not discover any Higgs particle? They just discovered a "model" of a particle you named Higgs?

This is what the Nobel Prize site says about this: https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2013/

The Nobel Prize in Physics 2013 was awarded jointly to François Englert and Peter W. Higgs "for the theoretical discovery of a mechanism that contributes to our understanding of the origin of mass of subatomic particles, and which recently was confirmed through the discovery of the predicted fundamental particle, by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider"

So, are you saying that the LHC at CERN did not actually discover any real particle??

This is completely NUTS!
 
  • #8
Ok ok I got it now.

I went to Wikipedia Science page which says this:
Working scientists usually take for granted a set of basic assumptions that are needed to justify the scientific method: (1) that there is an objective reality shared by all rational observers; (2) that this objective reality is governed by natural laws; (3) that these laws can be discovered by means of systematic observation and experimentation.[10] Philosophy of science seeks a deep understanding of what these underlying assumptions mean and whether they are valid.

The belief that scientific theories should and do represent metaphysical reality is known as realism. It can be contrasted with anti-realism, the view that the success of science does not depend on it being accurate about unobservable entities such as electrons. One form of anti-realism is idealism, the belief that the mind or consciousness is the most basic essence, and that each mind generates its own reality.[m] In an idealistic world view, what is true for one mind need not be true for other minds.


So, there is actually many "schools of thought" about this. You guys are clearly anti-realists, right??
 
  • #9
Michael Scott said:
What is the point in science then?
The point of science is to develop models that accurately predict the outcome of experiments.

Michael Scott said:
He sites for example the famous case where gravity was thought to be a "force". This was the "reality" for over 200 years. People got work (i.e. technology) out of Newtons equations of gravity, thinking that it was a "force".

But Al Einstein showed in 1917 I believe that gravity is not a force, and that the objects fall not because of a force, but due to something called the curvature of space time. ... His argument is that since we thought that gravity was a force (wrongly)
Your friend is wrong to think of the force model as wrong: http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm

The model that treats gravity as a force is an excellent model and even today accurately predicts many real experimental results. The model that treats it as spacetime curvature makes all of those predictions correctly, as well as some additional ones. The subsequent development of the spacetime curvature model did not diminish the force model’s accuracy in any of its experimentally validated predictions. The force model remains an accurate and valid model of reality within its domain of applicability.
 
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  • #10
Dale said:
The point of science is to develop models that accurately predict the outcome of experiments.

The model that treats gravity as a force is an excellent model and accurately predicts many experimental results. The model that treats it as spacetime curvature makes all of those predictions correctly, as well as some additional ones
Well, I have to disagree. Developing models that accurately predict outcomes is only the MEANS to the END. It is only ONE aspect of SCIENCE.

The END result or the POINT OF science is this (I got this from Google btw which I also agree with):
Science aims to explain and understand. Science as a collective institution aims to produce more and more accurate natural explanations of how the natural world works, what its components are, and how the world got to be the way it is now.

So, the POINT of science is to find HOW THE NATURAL WORLD WORK and WHAT IT'S COMPONENTS ARE. Also to find how the universe began and what is beyond the universe, what is time and does it have any beginning and things like that. Components are the electrons, protons, neutrons, atoms and molecules and also things like quarks.

Do you think scientists just work in labs to develop models and do experiments just for the sake of it?? NO. They model what they think ACTUALLY EXIST. When Peter Higgs hypothesized the Higgs Boson in the 60s he actually THOUGHT THAT IT HAS TO EXIST.

They want to know what there is really and that is why they do it, not just to be some kind of an modeler or experimenter all their life.

I am shocked that Physics Forum Mentor don't get this.
 
  • #11
Michael Scott said:
That is CRAZY.
Michael Scott said:
This is completely NUTS!

These aren't terribly convincing arguments. And the capitalization doesn't help.

Sophiecentaur, Dale and Drakkith are right. Science is about finding models that work, and all of these models are tentative and subject to replacement as more is learned. There was a time when we thought atoms were indivisible. Now we don't.

It is, however, the case that some models have undergone such thorough testing that disbelieving them is not rational. However, this doesn't mean the models cannot be superseded. It means that the model that supersedes them needs to make every prediction of the old model and then some. As in Dale's example.
 
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  • #12
Not exactly what this thread was intended to be about, but here's more on why the example of Newton's laws being "wrong" is, well, wrong:
http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm

Also, while I agree with others, I don't know that they are directly/strongly responding to this point for what it is:
His argument is that although science works (that is the technology part), science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".
The way that is written - separated by a comma - implies those are two separate things. They aren't. Experiments are things that happen in "reality". I drop a rock, it accelerates and falls to the ground. That really happens. That's "reality". The theories/models accurately describe what happens in the experiments, so that means they tell us how "reality" works.

People who don't like science and want there to be something "deeper" or define "reality" as being an exact result find excuses for why there must always be something "more". There can always be another "why" or another experiment that gives us more information to enable the model to be refined a little more. That tells us more about "reality" than was previously known, but that doesn't mean what was known before wasn't about "reality". It was. There may be an equation that describes something exactly and we may never know it, but that doesn't mean the equation that gets us close doesn't describe "reality". It does. You don't have to know everything to know a lot.

It's a bit like demanding that a digital photo must have an infinite resolution in order to describe "reality". That's just silly: a low resolution photo is still a description of "reality" and it is precise/accurate up to a certain point. That level of precision/accuracy is how well we know "reality".
 
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  • #13
I was going to just reply:
Michael Scott said:
How would YOU guys, the experts answer my friend?

Is there a way to actually see sub-atomic particles, atoms or molecules?? Can we actually see these things with our naked eye through a powerful telescope?? Maybe if I can show a actual picture of an atom or molecule he might be convinced that they do actually exist.
Yes, and I've seen them, and I believe them.

However, these are Epistemological questions, and Skeptics tend to like them and to invoke them all the time. However, at the same time, on the same line of thoughts, skeptics can question Everything/Anything!, including the things that they see with naked eye! ... Even questioning Objective Reality. (In Epistemology, it's a matter of jystifying our beliefs etc. ...)
But that's not Physics! So I wouldn't worry about them, and I wouldn't waste time with them! ...
[Because they will tell you that what we "see" can be just a sensation in our brain etc. etc. ... (and perhaps they will also tell you that we could just be "brains in vats ..." ! ...)]
Like I said. Don't worry about them. (IMO)

P.S. You can use these arguments to your skeptic friend, and see how he reacts.

P.S.2
Michael Scott said:
Ok ok I got it now.

I went to Wikipedia Science page which says this:
Working scientists usually take for granted a set of basic assumptions that are needed to justify the scientific method: (1) that there is an objective reality shared by all rational observers; (2) that this objective reality is governed by natural laws; (3) that these laws can be discovered by means of systematic observation and experimentation.[10] Philosophy of science seeks a deep understanding of what these underlying assumptions mean and whether they are valid.
Skeptics will even question those. Also, it doesn't really matter if they are realists or idealists etc. . Once they get into those epistemological questions (of justification) they will get stuck! Don't waste time with them! [... because you could get stuck too! ...]

P.S.3: Welcome to PF!
 
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  • #14
Michael Scott said:
Well, I have to disagree.
You are certainly free to disagree. However, I would point this out to you:

Science is not the only pursuit which “aims to explain and understand”. Philosophy, religion, and even myths all have the same goal. What makes science unique is the tool employed in that pursuit: the scientific method.

The scientific method starts with a model, uses the model to make a prediction, performs an experiment, compares the experimental result to the prediction, and improves the model. That is how the tool works.

The output of scientific method is experimentally validated models. The use of the scientific method is what distinguishes science from other pursuits. So it certainly seems to me that the point of science is indeed to produce models as I described above. Otherwise you may as well use myths, which are much easier to do than science.

I would be interested to hear

1) why you find that unsatisfactory
2) how you think the scientific method can be used to accomplish anything else
 
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  • #15
russ_watters said:
It's a bit like demanding that a digital photo must have an infinite resolution in order to describe "reality". That's just silly: a low resolution photo is still a description of "reality" and it is precise/accurate up to a certain point. That level of precision/accuracy is how well we know "reality".
Perfect example and perfect analogy!
However, here's a faster way to get rid of skeptics:
russ_watters said:
The way that is written - separated by a comma - implies those are two separate things. They aren't. Experiments are things that happen in "reality". I drop a rock, it accelerates and falls to the ground. That really happens. That's "reality". The theories/models accurately describe what happens in the experiments, so that means they tell us how "reality" works.
Skeptics can even question the results of experiments and tests of models. They could simply say that it's all part of our senses, the data can be nothing but "a description of "reality" perceived by our common senses [and perhaps not reality itself or anything related to it]", and that it's possible that we all share a common illusion ... [even perceiving possibly the false data ...].
Yeah, right! Give me a break!

So there is only one way (IMO):
Don't worry about them, and keep studying Reality. (cf. post #13)

P.S. A way to convince them though can sometimes be the following:
Tell them to re-think of their questioning of reality (even after seeing photos of molecules, atoms etc.) when they are in real pain! ... :wink:
If they don't abide ... tell them: well you said "it doesn't exist!" :biggrin:
 
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  • #16
Stavros Kiri said:
Skeptics can even question the results of experiments and tests of models. They could simply say that it's all part of our senses, the data can be nothing but "a description of "reality" perceived by our common senses [and perhaps not reality itself or anything related to it]", and that it's possible that we all share a common illusion ... [even perceiving possibly the false data ...].
Yeah, right! Give me a break!
Sure, that happens; and at that point they are demanding something they believe doesn't even exist: If reality doesn't exist, then science can't describe it. That's just argumentative.
 
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  • #17
Michael Scott said:
His argument is that although science works (that is the technology part), science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".

Isn't this, by itself, a "model" or conjecture about our world, and thus by its own rule, may not reflect reality?

The ugly beast has managed to turn around and consumes itself.

Zz.
 
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  • #18
ZapperZ said:
Isn't this, by itself, a "model" or conjecture about our world, and thus by its own rule, may not reflect reality?

The ugly beast has managed to turn around and consumes itself.

Zz.
Good point. Also
Michael Scott said:
His argument is that although science works (that is the technology part), science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".
doesn't it at least tell us that "science works"!? That's certainly something! ...
[not to mention the fact that technology is certainly reality ...]
 
  • #19
Dale said:
The point of science is to develop models that accurately predict the outcome of experiments.

Your friend is wrong to think of the force model as wrong: http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm

The model that treats gravity as a force is an excellent model and even today accurately predicts many real experimental results. The model that treats it as spacetime curvature makes all of those predictions correctly, as well as some additional ones. The subsequent development of the spacetime curvature model did not diminish the force model’s accuracy in any of its experimentally validated predictions. The force model remains an accurate and valid model of reality within its domain of applicability.
I find this problematic. I am not interested in applicability, which is like the technology. I am interested in "reality" part.

Because "reality" cannot have 2 descriptions right?? There can be only 1 description of reality, right??

So, the reason why objects fall to the ground (i.e. reality) cannot be due to both, a force or space-time curvature, right?

Only one of them has to be correct. That is my understanding.

PS: Think about this this way. What if a someone asks you why a apple falls to the ground. Surely, you can't say that "it is sometimes due a force, or sometimes due to space-time curvature". You have to say one of the 2 right??
 
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  • #20
Michael Scott said:
I find this problematic. I am not interested in applicability, which is like the technology. I am interested in "reality" part.

Because "reality" cannot have 2 descriptions right?? There can be only 1 description of reality, right??

So, the reason why objects fall to the ground cannot be due to both, a force or space-time curvature, right?

Only one of them has to be correct. That is my understanding.

PS: Think about this this way. What if a someone asks you why a apple falls to the ground. Surely, you can't say that "it is sometimes due a force, or sometimes due to space-time curvature". You have to say one of the 2 right??
Well, it could (virtually) be due to both. E.g. if space-time curvature generated a force, and then the force acted ... (I'm not saying that this is actally the case ...)
 
  • #21
Michael Scott said:
I am shocked that Physics Forum Mentor don't get this.

Prove that a Physics Forum Mentor actually exist and isn't an alien hacking into the internet from thirty lightyears away, a strange ghost who inhabits the web, or a figment of your imagination. You cannot prove that any of these are untrue with absolute certainty. Welcome to science.

Michael Scott said:
Because "reality" cannot have 2 descriptions right?? There can be only 1 description of reality, right??

Regardless of whether that's true or not, consider the following.

Let's assume description 1 makes X prediction (or rather the rules of the theory providing that desription)and that description 2 makes Y prediction. Now, descriptions 1 and 2 are very different in their approach, their concepts, and their terminology, but X and Y end up differing by only one part in 1054. That's such a small difference that there are no observable differences between the two. Any difference is swamped by all of the other things going on, like ambient radiation, thermal motion, the foot traffic outside the building, the uncertainty principle, etc.

Which description is correct and how do you know?

Michael Scott said:
So, the reason why objects fall to the ground cannot be due to both, a force or space-time curvature, right?

If both descriptions make the same predictions with the same accuracy and precision... yes. Both are perfectly acceptable.

This reminds me of the fact that it is entirely possible to set up our fundamental physical laws as if we were in a rotating reference frame instead of an inertial (non-rotating/non-accelerating) reference frame. It is vastly more difficult and complicated to use these laws to do things like build bridges and houses, but they make identical experimental predictions with the exact same accuracy and precision.

So which setup is correct? Which one describes "reality"?
 
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  • #22
Stavros Kiri said:
Well, it could (virtually) be due to both. E.g. if space-time curvature generated a force, and then the force acted ... (I'm not saying that this is actally the case ...)
From my understanding of this stuff as physics enthusiast only, in Einstein's version (which is surely the correct version) falling objects don't experience any "force".

Here is a nice video explaining this:
 
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  • #23
Michael Scott said:
From my understanding of this stuff as physics enthusiast only, in Einstein's version (which is surely the correct version) falling objects don't experience any "force".

Here is a nice video explaining this:

I do not object. I just gave a hypothetical case as a counter-argument.
(+fast edited a typo, which I hope no one saw)
 
  • #24
"Prove that a Physics Forum Mentor actually exist and isn't an alien hacking into the internet from thirty lightyears away, a strange ghost who inhabits the web, or a figment of your imagination. "
......
I find this meaningless.

First, there has to be somebody who makes a positive statement (something exists) and if that person makes that statement, it is up-to HIM to prove it right.

Why should I prove your statement?? You are the one who said it. So, YOU have to prove that "alieans are hacking into the Internet", because nobody can prove a negative.

Like, nobody can prove that God does not exist. Only the people who say that God exists have the burden of proof.

But if you want to, I can prove it's not possible, since it is impossible for information to travel faster than C, it is not possible for an alien to hack our internet from 30 light years.

If you say "it's a strange ghost", then it's up-to YOU to show that a ghost inhabits the web.

I can also ask the same question from you: How do you know that objects fall to the ground NOT because some "ghosts" carry it to the ground? How do you disprove it?
 
  • #25
(emphasis mine)
Michael Scott said:
Why should I prove your statement?? You are the one who said it. So, YOU have to prove that "alieans are hacking into the Internet", because nobody can prove a negative.

Exactly. Which means that we cannot rule out every possibility to converge on the one ultimate truth. It's literally impossible.

Michael Scott said:
But if you want to, I can prove it's not possible, since it is impossible for information to travel faster than C, it is not possible for an alien to hack our internet from 30 light years.

You cannot prove that information is limited to the speed of light under all possible conditions, you can only provide evidence that, so far, we have never observed information or light traveling faster than c. How do you know that the speed of light is truly the speed limit for the universe and that the physical laws we currently understand are 100% accurate and will remain the same for all time?

Michael Scott said:
I can also ask the same question from you: How do you know that objects fall to the ground NOT because some "ghosts" carry it to the ground? How do you disprove it?

I can't. I don't claim that I can. And science isn't about absolute, infallible proof either. The description of objects accelerating under an applied force works well enough to make useful and accurate predictions, but there is no proof I could give you that forces are real instead of just useful concepts that may not physically exist.
 
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  • #26
Stavros Kiri said:
Good point. Also

doesn't it at least tell us that "science works"!? That's certainly something! ...
[not to mention the fact that technology is certainly reality ...]
@Michael Scott , wouldn't that argument work for your friend?
(The member call name didn't highlight?! [to send alert] - due to new member? Any mentor knows? ...)
 
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  • #27
Stavros Kiri said:
@ Michael Scott , wouldn't that argument work for your friend?
(The member call name didn't highlight?! [to send alert] - due to new member? Any mentor knows? ...)
Lose the space between the @ and the M
Calling @Michael Scott
 
  • #28
Hmmm ... Here is what we can always do (to test your friend and the validity of science, at the same time ...):
If you bring him at PF ... and he manages not to get banned, or most of his posts moderated etc. then may be either science is defeated or he will become addicted to PF and to science, and stay ... (~jk :smile::biggrin:)
That's PF! And it's REAL
(verifying valid science etc. ...)
 
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  • #29
phinds said:
Lose the space between the @ and the M
Calling @Michael Scott
I tried, didn't work before, but now it does! Hmmm
Thanks!
 
  • #30
Michael Scott said:
His argument is that although science works (that is the technology part), science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".

sophiecentaur said:
Science doesn't attempt to do that. All Science attempts to do is to make a model that can be used to predict what will happen to within some accuracy. It's Non-Scientists who demand 'reality'.

This is not entirely true. Science does attempt to tell things about the reality (even the "mere" prediction of things that will happen is a major thing science tells about the reality) and in my opinion if science was all about predicting what will happen within some accuracy not a lot of people would've become scientist. Predicting results of experiments with certain accuracy is an application of science, a very fundamental and important one but still an application. The core of science as I see it is indeed to try and explain the forces governing the universe and the components from which it is made. I think this is what burns at the heart of every scientist when seeking for answers and better explanations of reality (speaking for myself, I aspire to be a physicist and this is what drives me).

However you are right about the fact that science does not pretend to predict reality with a 100% accuracy (since quantum mechanics it has even been proven impossible to do so) it only aspires to find better and better models that will describe reality with a greater degree of accuracy. Relating this to the question whether the models of classical mechanics were proven wrong since Albert Einstein described SR and GR, well, they are not and the problem here is with the question and not the answer. The Newtonian models are not wrong only less accurate than SR's and GR's models which are themselves less accurate than some other model that hasn't been found yet (and it hasn't been proven that a perfect model exists or even can exist so theoretically this can go on to infinity). However, the Newtonian models are still useful since calculations are significantly easier based on them, and unless an object moves at an extremely high speed or is in an extremely strong gravitational field, the differences between the predictions given by the two different models are negligible (depending of course on the level of accuracy required from the prediction).

Lastly, from a rather philosophical perspective, your friend is inherently wrong by contradicting himself since if science does work (as he himself says), and even if he only speaks of technology, this inherently means that science can actually tell things about the reality otherwise those technologies he speaks about could not have been invented (most of them were not invented purely by trial and error). And an even more profound counter-argument to your friend's one is that these technologies were not part of reality before they were invented, but afterwards, they were part of reality, and if your friend agrees that science works with those technologies, it can also explain them and how they work, and therefore, tell things about reality.
 
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  • #31
OfekA said:
This is not entirely true. Science ...
...
...
Lastly, from a rather philosophical perspective, your friend is inherently wrong by contradicting himself since if science does work (as he himself says), and even if he only speaks of technology, this inherently means that science can actually tell things about the reality otherwise those technologies he speaks about could not have been invented (most of them were not invented purely by trial and error). And an even more profound counter-argument to your friend's one is that these technologies were not part of reality before they were invented, but afterwards, they were part of reality, and if your friend agrees that science works with those technologies, it can also explain them and how they work, and therefore, tell things about reality.
See also posts #26 & 18

P.S. Welcome to PF!
 
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  • #32
Michael Scott said:
They want to know what there is really and that is why they do it, not just to be some kind of an modeler or experimenter all their life.

I am shocked that Physics Forum Mentor don't get this.
A) No, the mentors surely realize that reality is the subject and the goal of science, but that doesn't come or happen magically "overnight"; that's what I think they are trying to explain to you. So they are describing to you the scientific method etc.
Or, as also said (emphasis in bold mine):
Vanadium 50 said:
Sophiecentaur, Dale and Drakkith are right. Science is about finding models that work, and all of these models are tentative and subject to replacement as more is learned. There was a time when we thought atoms were indivisible. Now we don't.

It is, however, the case that some models have undergone such thorough testing that disbelieving them is not rational. However, this doesn't mean the models cannot be superseded. It means that the model that supersedes them needs to make every prediction of the old model and then some. As in Dale's example.
B)
Vanadium 50 said:
These aren't terribly convincing arguments. And the capitalization doesn't help.
Lol! ... :smile:
For @Michael Scott : with solid arguments in replying to a discussion, characterizing other people's replies as irrational or something (etc.) is at least redundant, and should (IMO) be avoided, but rather we should just be focussing on secure valid arguments etc. for a healthy, fruitful, productive discussion. Or better yet, [or at the same time] provide valid PF accepted references ...
(But personally I don't think you did too bad for first day here. That's just my own view [about the quality of this discussion here etc.], and I am not a mentor.)
 
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  • #33
Michael Scott said:
His argument is that although science works (that is the technology part), science cannot actually tell anything about "reality".
Your friend is doing a good job of winding you up with this opinion. But he is introducing the word "reality" in order to justify his lack of knowledge about the terms of serious Science. He would rather 'take sides' against Science and argue against it without actually learning the basic ideas that we use to describe the World around us and learning what the aims are of serious Science..
Everything about Science is 'near enough' and we can't expect any more. That doesn't mean that Science is 'wrong' or that the images of atoms that have been produced are not believable. Those fuzzy shapes we say are telling us that something is going on in that place we are looking and that we are justified in identifying them as "atoms".
 
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  • #34
Michael Scott said:
Because "reality" cannot have 2 descriptions right??
Why not? I can be accurately described as a mentor on PF. I can also be accurately described as an employee of my company. I can be described by my physical characteristics. Etc. if there can be multiple correct descriptions of me, why not of reality.

Furthermore, if we use math in our descriptions, then we can provide many different but equivalent descriptions (as with natural language too). For example, Newtonian mechanics, or Lagrangian mechanics, or Hamiltonian mechanics. All can correctly describe the same situation despite being very different descriptions.

Like it or not, the force picture of gravity is still a valid description of much of reality. Many experiments verify it. By choosing to reject it you effectively concede your friends point and then his argument follows. This is the reason you are having trouble in your argument. You accept the premise, and then cannot logically reject the conclusion. I am telling you that his premise is wrong.

Michael Scott said:
So, the reason why objects fall to the ground (i.e. reality) cannot be due to both, a force or space-time curvature, right?

Only one of them has to be correct. That is my understanding.
They certainly can both be correct whenever both accurately predict the outcome of experiments. In fact, in the domain where they both apply, you can actually derive the force model from the spacetime curvature model. The force model is part of the curvature model, so the force cannot be wrong if the curvature is right.

No matter how you approach it, we are essentially guaranteed that there will be multiple correct descriptions of nature.
 
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OfekA said:
The core of science as I see it is indeed to try and explain the forces governing the universe
The core of science is the scientific method
 
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