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3 Responses

  1. Simon Halliday
    Simon Halliday September 3, 2010 at 6:32 pm | | Reply

    Jacque, I enjoyed the post. And, though I agree with you to some extent, you don’t confront the problem of demarcation. That is, you’ve basically said we can classify some stuff as science and other stuff as pseudoscience. OK. How? Well, you argue that falsifiability is the criterion. Moreover, if we adhere strictly to falsifiability, do we or do we not not admit the possibility of auxiliary hypotheses? That is of updating theories with auxiliary hypotheses, e.g. beta decay (if I remember correctly). So what if we can’t measure or accurately posit a theory that we currently perceive to be a problem? Do we discard it entirely? Call it pseudoscience until we have the tools to measure it? I still don’t think this provides an escape for astrologists, because I don’t believe that astrology not working is because of some up-to-now (or later) unmeasurable events. But, I also don’t think you can brush the problem under the carpet.

  2. Static on the radio
    Static on the radio February 3, 2011 at 9:23 am |

    [...] course go on in this vein, but the details are tedious, and most likely well-known to most readers. The Forer effect, cold reading techniques (at least for readings done in person), and confirmation bias tell us all [...]

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