Talk:History of scientific method: Difference between revisions
MiszaBot I (talk | contribs) m Robot: Archiving 2 threads (older than 90d) to Talk:History of scientific method/Archive 2. |
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:::[[WP:PRIMARY|Wikipedia policy]] urges caution in the use of primary sources, "because it is easy to misuse them", adding the note that "Any exceptional claim would require exceptional sources". Since the claim for scientific method in the Book of Daniel is an exceptional claim, we should go beyond interpretation of primary sources to reliable secondary sources. |
:::[[WP:PRIMARY|Wikipedia policy]] urges caution in the use of primary sources, "because it is easy to misuse them", adding the note that "Any exceptional claim would require exceptional sources". Since the claim for scientific method in the Book of Daniel is an exceptional claim, we should go beyond interpretation of primary sources to reliable secondary sources. |
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:::A medical doctor is qualified to evaluate modern medical researdh; he is not, however, trained to evaluate historical texts. That kind of historical expertise is what is called for here. --[[User:SteveMcCluskey|SteveMcCluskey]] ([[User talk:SteveMcCluskey|talk]]) 22:50, 22 February 2013 (UTC) |
:::A medical doctor is qualified to evaluate modern medical researdh; he is not, however, trained to evaluate historical texts. That kind of historical expertise is what is called for here. --[[User:SteveMcCluskey|SteveMcCluskey]] ([[User talk:SteveMcCluskey|talk]]) 22:50, 22 February 2013 (UTC) |
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**1) Auró, thanks for trying to be reasonable. The Bible is the primary source here and it is all that matters. We can see the steps of the scientific method easily in Daniel 1. I can list them in detail if needed. Do you know of any use of the modern scientific method before Daniel? If not, then it is fully legitimate to call it "the first recorded use". That is a modest claim already. You can't get a more reliable secondary source than someone who has been working in public health for ~30 years and has the qualifications of Dr. Grimes. See the link given above. |
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"Experts have suggested a 32-point structured format for reporting randomized trials, to improve the quality of this type of research. To demonstrate the usefulness of this format, I used it to evaluate the earliest known report of a clinical trial." |
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http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf |
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**2) A doctor with credentials in public health is by far the most important relevant expert here. It's just bias to say that this isn't the relevant expert. If I had listed a biblical expert (which I can easily do), biased people would say, oh, that isn't relevant, you need a scientist in public health. the fact is I have many of BOTH. There is no shoehorning of any type being done. This is most definitely about as neutral a point of view as is possible (I could easily make it FAR more subjective). There is nothing fringe about this. It's a documented historical fact. There is no exceptional claim here and I've already provided 2 exceptional sources (the Bible which has no rival in ancient history in terms of accuracy and a modern peer reviewed journal (and I can list MANY more theologians and some more doctors on this as well). The critics are using only bias here. |
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**3)Every human being on the planet has bias. If you're alive you have bias. Do I need to list peer reviewed books and articles on this? It is common knowledge. The wrong thing is when biased is used to misrepresent facts/evidence or worse censor/erase/disappear them. THAT is a significant problem and it is unfortunately what is happening here. Daniel of course has bias. But, there was also extreme bias AGAINST Daniel by the assessor of the results, which was not mentioned. The independent assessor of the results who was not even Jewish and heavily biased against Daniel's idea. |
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"The trial was a secret, because discovery might have led to the death of Ashpenaz (the Babylonian in charge and the assessor of the outcome). Ashpenaz considered the vegetarian diet potentially dangerous to the trial participants and, hence, indirectly to himself. |
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http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf |
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And the results were actually a result of following God's wisdom, not God's intervention of any kind. I've done a similar experiment to Daniel's with many students from many backgrounds and religions, and many students report that they have quite significantly improved health in just 1-2 weeks. |
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**4) A few more quotes from Dr. Grimes: |
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"Daniel's trial anticipated the essence of the scientific method: an experimental group exposed to the factor of interest compared with contemporaneous unexposed controls...In his famous 1747 study, Lind followed Daniel's precedent of a small dietary trial in preventing scurvy among British sailors. Despite six different treatment arms and a total of only 12 participants, citrus fruit supplementation was strikingly effective. The trial led to effective prophylaxis and the nickname "limeys" for British seamen.2" |
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Later |
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"...by contemporary standards, Daniel's trial had numerous deficiencies. However, many of these weaknesses persist in clinical research today. Indeed, some modern investigators have drawn causal inferences without the use of appropriate controls." |
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http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf |
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== Page title == |
== Page title == |
Revision as of 13:15, 28 February 2013
History of Science C‑class High‑importance | ||||||||||
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- Notice: Interested contributors may wish to add to the discussion at Wikipedia talk:Scientific peer review by working scientists.
Talk:History of scientific method/Archive 1
Russell as a source
Russell's history is notoriously sloppy. Kiefer.Wolfowitz (talk) 00:19, 7 February 2010 (UTC
Reporting bias
I just discovered that the reporting bias article lists 6 red links in a list of seven; can any editor steer us toward more sources? --Ancheta Wis (talk) 10:10, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
experimental method
Where are Archimedes or Hero ?
Who does not know the scientific experiments of Archimedes or Hero? Example: Buoyancy, incompressibility and density of metals: as you can see that gold is real gold.
Galileo cites Archimedes as ispirator of the experimental method as opposed to Aristotle that is experiential. Galileo claims to use the method of Archimedes. The "Eureka" story about Archimedes and the bath tub was as well known in Galileo's day as it is in ours. Galileo, who was a great admirer of Archimedes and adopted many of his methods, probably read it in one of the editions of Vitruvius's The Ten Books on Architecture,which was very popular in Renaissance Europe. I remember the Leonardo edition with notes of Vitruvius's book. A bible of applied science.... with the the excellent summary of the Greek and Renaissance anatomical analysis: The Vitruvian's Man that is Logo of The Science that we use also today. A few thin stripes of text would not hurt .... --Andriolo (talk) 17:58, 30 May 2011 (UTC)
Archimedes tried to reproduce the phenomenon in laboratory simulating the conditions as Galileo, instead Aristotle who, like many others, observed the phenomenon in nature.
--Andriolo (talk) 21:38, 30 May 2011 (UTC)
- Andriolo, thank you for your commentary; I personally hold Archimedes & Eratosthenes to be the Alpha & Beta of Hellenist science, and agree that the Hellenes merit more mention in the article. One of the omissions of the article is the role of the engineers and workmen in both Archimedes' and Galileo's time. For example when Archimedes was aiding the defense of Syracuse against the ships of the Roman Republic, he must have been leading workmen to direct mirrors upon the Roman ships with authority delegated to him by the king. Similarly, when Galileo was timing the motion of a bronze ball rolling down a molding, a craftsman must have created that molding, and it must have been expensive and probably adhered to the standards of Vitruvius. Both Archimedes and Galileo must have been working with teams. Perhaps they merely purchased items from a marketplace. Galileo specifically mentions his observations of workers in Two New Sciences. Does Archimedes? In any event, it took resources-- time, money, equipment, materials, processes, and the expertise of people. --Ancheta Wis (talk) 08:25, 31 May 2011 (UTC)
Behind every artist there is a “bottega artigiana” o “scuola” the same was true for the big names of Science in Renaissance as in Antiquity. We know that existed in Rodi a school specialized on “automata” as behind Archimedes in Syracusa. In Renaissance the European scientists knew each other and knew the fragments of ancient works through the Latin translations of Greek and Arabic texts. Many Greek texts had came in Europe with the fall of Constantinople 1453 see Biblioteca Marciana (founder Bessarion). Example Copernicus knew Aristarchus from Ptolemy indeed Ptolemy to support his idea must criticize Aristarchus. Also Tycho Brahe has formulated a similar idea of Heraclides Ponticus. And the Galileo and Giordano Bruno idea of infinity universe is similar Seleuco of Seleucia on Tigris. The idea of Giordano Bruno on the infinity of inhabited worlds, we can find in Anaxagoras. After all, today with the dark energy teory we have in part taken older Ether theory indeed It seems that the theory of cosmic vacuum has several cracks. In Renaissance, often without paved Roman road, the ideas circulating at an incredible speed, a few month after the first telescope was built in Netherlands, it was used in Venice or Padua. However, very often these teams, especially in classic epoch were anonymous we know of them only from some fragment and archeology. Until the Renaissance and for some aspects until XVIII century, in Italy thought to be inferior to the Romans. A classic example is the Roman hydraulic technology, not inferior to ours. I live in Italy and I see it. Not only aqueducts, bridges (that today we across with cars) and pipelines. The Ancient Mediterreneans had the taps in the house .... public toilets, public bath ecc. also for common people. Indeed today, in Italy the public toilets, are called “Vespasiani” from the name of Vespasianus that very attentive to public hygiene ;-) put a tax on public toilets. Is it possible this tecnology without experimental method ? Sincerely I don’t know. Unfortunately, we have only fragments. We are all agree that the scientific method is born in Renaissance, but when I see roman ruins, temples, acqueducts, complex granite manufact, areas of hundreds of square miles artificially altered, the impressive statuary that we were able to copy only with Michelangelo and in some aspects only with Canova. .... I remain perplex. Surely our great revolution is the abolition of slavery and the individual rights no more based on census. About the rest, we hope that our technique makes our civilization eternal.
But soon I will have free time I'll add something about the roman-hellenistic precursors of the scientific method, help me.
--Andriolo (talk) 23:00, 5 June 2011 (UTC)
Archimedes wrote a work that came us only fragments and rediscovered in 1900 entitled "Method," which seems to criticize the deduction. Especially relativized the initial axioms. The work is an analysis of Eratosthenes. For Archimedes mathematics is an essential instrument for induction. In this argument he overcomes both Plato and Aristotle. With the fall of Constantinople in 1454, arrived in western Europe a numerous number of inedit ancient greek fragments, text and especially people who were able to read greek direcly and traslate into latin. Before this date, paradoxically, what was known of Greek texts came from Arab world. A big part of Proclo Liber de Causis is traslated from Arabic. In medieval West Europe existed only texts accepted by the church, as Ptolomy and Aristotle. For example numerous Neoplatonic text (very important for modern world) arrived only in XV century. Many scientists attending Neoplatonic or Neo-Pythagorean circles as Descarts, Newton, Boyle, Galileo ecc ecc. The influence of Archimede it is possible to see also in Galileo Theoremata circa centrum gravitatis solidorum, 1638 that influenced Newton and in Discorsi e dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nuove scienze. Into the second book Galileo say “I read Archimedes with amazement...” About Descartes « Archimède, pour tirer le globe terrestre de sa place et le transporter en un autre lieu, ne demanderait rien qu’un point qui fût fixe et assuré. Ainsi, j’aurai droit de concevoir de hautes espérances si je suis assez heureux pour trouver seulement une chose qui soit certaine et indubitable. », Méditations, 1641.
For scientists of the sixteenth he was indubetely the father of experimental scientific method with mathematical base and they gave him more importance than Aristotle.
To say that Archimedes was a modern scientist, I should mention Galileo or Descartes .... My difficulty is to summarize and find a simple reference and my bibliography is all in italian language. As Galileo and Descartes, we all know that they are scientists, but it is hard to find a book that says explicitly that they are scientists. The same problem is for Archimedes.
--Andriolo (talk) 22:48, 17 June 2011 (UTC)
I could mention Geymonat or Canfora. To many italian scholars he is considered an Scientist in the modern sense as Galileo, indeed he uses a experimental and inductive method. See Method (document discovered in 1906).
If we accept this view we must say that the scientific method was already present in the ancient world, even if limited to a branch of Pythagorean school. It is sufficienly to see also in google books (Archimedes) this view is widespread. Have you an opinion ?
Very interesting on the decline and disappearance of scientific mentality in the late antiquity. The reason defeat by faith and fundamentalism. ecc. http://books.google.it/books?id=ddzSELFsHD0C&pg=PA150&dq=archimede+e+la+scienza&hl=it&ei=tub7TZ7SEYnt-gaHpbnZAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=archimede%20&f=false --Andriolo (talk) 23:37, 17 June 2011 (UTC)
On Leonardo
Leonardo is not an isolated genius but is integrated into Renaissance knowledge but I think it isn't a true modern (as today we intend) scientist. I recall in this regard the for example contemporary Fra'Giocondo, Pacioli, Gabriele Falloppio and numerous others (true modern scientists that used scientific method) and only to make some example: the anatomy halls of University of Padua and Bologna, The Botanical Garden of Padua of 1545. I would say compared to others Leonardo is too eclectic to the detriment of quality and precision of the work. He is more similar to the hellenistic scholars. Roman hydraulic engineers excluded indeed they were armed with Abacus.... ;-)
--Andriolo (talk) 22:34, 30 May 2011 (UTC)
Well done on the intro
I've not kept a watch on this page as often as I used to and so it is only now that I notice that the introduction has changed substantially for the better (from, let's say, one or two years ago). Well done to whoever has worked on it. --ChrisSteinbach (talk) 10:09, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
Popkin's contribution to history of scientific method (1979)
There is a thread on Talk:Scientific method which shows how a physician, Francisco Sanches (1551-1623) contributed to the rise of a scientific method. Following Popkin's 1979 contribution in English, Elaine Limbrick 1988 shows the influence of the method of medicine, introduced by Galen of Pergamon (129 AD - c. 200 AD). Galen was the authority for Western medicine for over 1300 years, finally peaking in 1560[1] (at the onset of the scientific revolution). Limbrick establishes that physicians such as Niccolò Leoniceno (late 15th c.), and Thomas Linacre, translator of Galen's Methodus Medendi (1519), and humanists such as Juan Luis Vives (16th c.) were active influences on Sanches' search for a scientific method. In fact, Popkin shows that Sanches first introduces the term, in a title Método universal de las ciencias which was extant at least til 1701. In his Quod Nihil Scitur, which is still available to us, Sanches uses the Latin 'modus sciendi'. Étienne Gilson's critical edition of Descartes' Discourse on Method uses the first 20 lines of Sanches' Quod Nihil Scitur to introduce Descartes.
Sanches was better known to Portugese scholars, as Sanches had Portugese roots before his medical and academic career in Toulouse, France. It was not until Popkin's contributions, which trace the effect of Skepticism on our civilization, that Sanches became better known in English realms.
Would it OK with the editors of this article for us to add this type of material, which transitions scientific method from the contributions from the time of Roger Bacon to the time of Rene Descartes?. I propose that we augment this article to show some contributions of Renaissance medicine and humanism to our modern scientific method. --Ancheta Wis (talk | contribs) 02:12, 25 June 2012 (UTC)
- ^ Richard J. Durling (1961) "A Chronological Census of Renaissance Editions and Translations of Galen", in Journal of the Warburg and Courtald Institutes 24 as cited on p. 300, in a Critical edition by Elaine Limbrick, of Francisco Sanches (1988) That Nothing is Known an English translation, by Douglas F. S. Thomson, of Sanches' Latin Quod Nihil Scitur 1581.
- I think adding earlier philosophical discussions of scientific methods would be a very good move. In that regard, drawing on Popkin's The History of Scepticism from Savanarola to Bayle seems appropriate. SteveMcCluskey (talk) 15:30, 25 June 2012 (UTC)
Ancheta and Steve, here are what I humbly submit are pertinent bits of Popkin (from the 2003 edition which incorporates references to Limbrick):
- ..it is my contention that scepticism plays a special and different role in the period extending from the religious quarrels leading to the Reformation up to the development of modern metaphysical systems in the seventeenth century; a special and different role due to the fact that the intellectual crisis brought on by the Reformation coincided in time with the rediscovery and revival of the arguments of the ancient Greek sceptics. (p.xix-xx)
- …prior to the publication of Sextus Empiricus [in 1562 and ‘69], there does not seem to be very much serious philosophical consideration of scepticism. (p.35)
- Sanches is more interesting than any of the other sceptics of the sixteenth century, except Montaigne, in that his reasons for his doubts are neither the anti-intellectual ones of someone like Agrippa nor the suspicion that knowledge is unattainable just because learned men have disagreed up to now. Rather, his claim that nihil scitur is argued for on philosophical grounds, on a rejection of Aristotelianism, and an epistemological analysis of what the object of knowledge and the knower are like.
- …
- Since, as he had shown, nothing can be known, Sanches put forward a procedure, not to gain knowledge but to deal constructively with human experience. This procedure, for which he introduced the term (for the first time) scientific method, “Metodo universal de las ciencias,” consists in patient, careful empirical research and cautious judgment and evaluation of the data we observe. This would not lead, as his contemporary Francis Bacon thought, to a key to knowledge of the world. But it would allow us to obtain the best information available. …In advancing this limited or constructive view of science, Sanches was the first Renaissance sceptic to conceive of science in its modern form, as the fruitful activity about the study of nature that remained after one had given up the search for absolutely certain knowledge of the nature of things. (p.41)
- The experimentalism advocated by Sanches has been taken by some as evidence that he was not a real sceptic but an empiricist breaking new ground and preparing the way for Francis Bacon…. However, I think that Sanches’ own analysis of knowledge casts doubt on this evaluation. Unlike both Bacon and Descartes, who thought they had a means of refuting the sceptical attack, Sanches accepted it as decisive, and then, not in answer to it but in keeping with it, he offered his positive program. This positive program was offered not as a way of obtaining true knowledge but as the only remaining substitute, because nihil scitur, somewhat like the approach Mersenne later developed in his “constructive scepticism.”
- …It appears that only in the last hundred years has [Sanches] risen to being considered “one of the most keen-sighted and advanced thinkers of the seventeenth century” [footnote: Owen, Skeptics of the French Renaissance, p.640] or even superior to Montaigne because, it has been said, “Sanches was the only sceptic who at the same time was a positive thinker” and who, as a result, can be portrayed as a precursor of Descartes [footnote: Coralnik, “Franciscus Sanches,” pp.193 and 195]. (p.42) Pertin1x (talk) 21:59, 26 June 2012 (UTC)
I recommend the BBC podcast of In Our Time this week on Scepticism (http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01kblc3). The contributors don't mention Sanches but do stress the impact of the 1562 publication of Sextus in Latin on the emergence of modern science. They mention the two types of response: scepticism as a difficulty to be overcome (Descartes) and as a wholly new approach (e.g. Gassendi) and say the Royal Society adopted the latter citing Boyle's The Sceptical Chymist. If being first in this line of thinking is a claim to fame then that is Sanches' significance. Even if he wasn't widely influential he predated the RS's father figure Bacon in putting scepticism at the philosophical heart of science. The article is hot on personalities but could be stronger on this epochal shift from mediaeval to modern which, sure, started back with Erasmus and Luther etc but gelled decisively with Sextus' reappearance and the response of Sanches and Montaigne.Pertin1x (talk) 07:28, 7 July 2012 (UTC)
I've risked it and inserted a para to introduce skepticism in a way that reflects its impact and leads into Sanches and Bacon etc. Pertin1x (talk) 11:49, 28 November 2012 (UTC)
- Thank you for your considered contribution. It's good. --Ancheta Wis (talk | contribs) 11:58, 28 November 2012 (UTC)
Rationalism vs Empiricism
This article jumps to incorrect conclusions about what it means to be empiricist or rationalist. Neither emphasis implies a rejection of the other: Rationalists use empiricism and empiricists use rationalism. To describe some sort of conceptual battle between Descartes and Galileo is to misconstrue the fact that they jointly played a vital role in the development of the scientific method. The Descartes→Newton sections of the article are bogged down with misinterpretations; it underplays Descartes' role in favor of emphasizing Bacon and Galileo as if they were anti-rationalist. To someone not familiar with the subject, the article would be confusing as to the influences of these people. The author seems partial to empiricist emphasis and downplays the basis of the scientific method in rationalist philosophy. Boleroinferno (talk) 05:35, 29 October 2012 (UTC)
- See that there is a section whose title is "Integrating deductive and inductive method", and a quotation from Öersted that makes a good synthesis. Nevertheless the article has room for improvement.--Auró (talk) 22:07, 29 October 2012 (UTC)
- @Boleroinferno: I am guilty of producing some of the content in this article and I'm always interested to see how it changes. I look forward to seeing your edits. --ChrisSteinbach (talk) 07:15, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
Expand Aristotle
Aristotle agreed with Plato that the cosmos is rationally designed and that philosophy can come to know absolute truths by studying universal forms. Their ideas diverged, however, in that Aristotle thought that the one finds the universal in particular things, while Plato believed the universal exists apart from particular things, and that material things are only a shadow of true reality, which exists in the realm of ideas and forms. The fundamental difference between the two philosophers is that Plato thought only pure mathematical reasoning was necessary, and therefore focused on metaphysics and mathemtics. Aristotle, on the other hand, thought that in addition to this "first philosophy," it is also necessary to undertake detailed empirical investigations of nature, and thus to study what he called "second philosophy," which includes such subjects as physics, mechanics and biology. Aristotle's philosophy therefore involved both inductive and deductive reasoning, observing the workings of the world around him and then reasoning from the particular to a knowledge of essences and universal laws. In a sense, Aristotle was the first major proponent of the modern scientific method. The Lyceum was an unprecedented school of organized scientific inquiry. There was no comparable scientific enterprise for over 2,000 years after the founding of the Lyceum.[1]
- I am trying to locate more sources for Aristotle and the scientific method the highlighted sentence above was deleted by a now banned user and I would like to expand the section on Aristotle. J8079s (talk) 22:52, 13 December 2012 (UTC)
- I'm not sure if you would find this helpful or not in the area of Aristotle: openi.nlm.nih.gov/detailedresult.php?img=3066836_qhc46557fig1&req=4
Biblical use of the modern scientific method
I've been trying to add the historically documented and peer reviewed fact that quite a bit before Aristotle, Daniel in the Bible used the modern scientific method. I also have historical references to improve Islamic science some. But, if people are going to use bias to suppress historical facts, wikipedia becomes nothing more than an arm of propaganda wherever that is done.
This is the section that I've been trying to include. It's just simply stating facts of history.
Biblical use of the modern scientific method
The first recorded use of the modern scientific method or clinical trial in history with a control group was performed by Daniel, a captive Jew in Babylon. In Daniel 1, he proposed a 10 day scientific test comparing the Biblical diet (vegetarian) to the Babylonian diet (highly meat based) using 2 groups of boys to determine which was healthier.
Dr. David Grimes reviews this comparing it to the modern clinical method in detail and writes:
“Around 600 BC, Daniel of Judah conducted…the earliest recorded clinical trial. His trial compared the health effects of a vegetarian diet with those of a royal Babylonian diet over a 10-day period. The strengths of his study include the use of a contemporaneous control group, use of an independent assessor of outcome, and striking brevity in the published report.” Clinical research in ancient Babylon: methodologic insights from the book of Daniel.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7501328
The full paper can also be viewed here:
http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf
The Bible also advocated advocated testing everything (I Thessalonians 5:21), using a number of empirical methods to verify facts and truth.
Much other data here and elsewhere on wikipedia is accepted SOLELY and exclusively based on original documents, primary sources. The Bible is identical to those. And yet people don't want to use the same standards with it. Dotoree (talk) 16:20, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- Peer reviewed by whom? This is written by a gynecologist, not a scientist specializing in archaeology or history and publishing in publications dealing with either. Unless their are others who agree with his hypothesis and therefore help it pass WP:NOTABLE, it wont pass WP:FRINGE and WP:UNDUE to include a gynecologist musings on how he thinks a biblical figure first used the scientific method thousands of years before modern Europeans. And anyway, what does this have to do at all with Aristotle? Or is this just more of you not pushing a Christian biblical worldview? Heiro 23:08, 21 February 2013 (UTC)
- I'm sorry but it was peer reviewed by the JOURNAL and several authorities in the field, NOT just 1 person. Do you know how peer review works? The journal is a medical journal extremely concerned with health issues, clinical trials and that is precisely what Daniel's experiment was about. Yes, there are plenty of other scholars who verify this, but there really is nothing more needed than verifying it by reading Daniel 1, and possibly an expert evaluating that in comparison with the scientific or clinical method as was done. That's all that many claims in Wikipedia need and often less, just a single reference in a historical source and they are accepted. Sometimes just an opinion without any reference. Again, the double standards are rife against the Bible, but not just against religions...against other targets too at times. Dotoree (talk) 16:24, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- Stop re-factoring your posts after others have replied to them. It is seriously frowned upon here. It makes the actual events of a conversation hard to follow. If someone else replies to your post and you realize you should have said something else, add a reply, don't refactor half of what you already said. Also, I have warned you for this before DO NOT REFACTOR MY STATEMENTS. You removed bluelinks in my last comment while you refactored the hell out of your own statements, you removed the links from my signature and you changed the bulleting style, none of which is permissable. Do this again and I will take this to the admin boards for sanctions. You are not permitted to edit anothers response without their consent and you do not have it.
- The bible is a primary source and acceptable here on Wikipedia as an authority only on its own text. Any and all interpretations of that texts meaning must come from a reliable secondary source. Just because an article got published doesn't mean the scientific community has taken it seriously. Is the gynecologist also an expert on ancient texts? You still haven't explained how that reference passesWP:NOTABLE, WP:FRINGE and WP:UNDUE. Heiro 17:38, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- A gynecologist is not an expert in either biblical studies or the history of science. If it gets published in a relevant journal and gets some attention, then we might use it worded in a way that meets WP:NPOV, in other words making it clear that this is not fact but the opinion of a gynecologist. Dougweller (talk) 17:50, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- I have edited my posts before people responded to them at times because I saw something I missed or something wasn't clear, make it more readable, etc. NEVER to change the history of the conversation. But, I post replies to their comments later. And I did add stars before 1-2 of your posts so it would be easier for people to distinguish and read who was writing. I did NOT change blue links. I did click on them to read and make sure I understood them. I did also move this discussion out of the Aristotle one due to your suggestion. That's it.
- I HAVE provided BOTH a primary source and a secondary source and the Bible is the primary source which contains a record of a scientific experiment being done by Daniel that follows the steps of the modern scientific method. The section on Aristotle has only 1 primary source and 1 secondary source. No difference. Double standard. And yes, I can provide other sources that verify this as well. The main issue in this topic has nothing to do with the issues you are raising. It only has to do with whether a document in history has the steps of the scientific method in it. Daniel's indisputably followed those basic steps and it is the first in history to do so. To deny people from doing this is an act of erasing history. You might as well just erase Aristotle, and the Egyptians and others who have about the same amount of primary sources.
- If you had actually done a simply google, you wouldn't have used straw men about Dr. Grimes and if you had read the article you wouldn't have falsely alleged it was just musings. It is nothing of the sort. Dr. Grimes has a degree in biology from Harvard. He has certification in Public Health and General Preventive Medicine from the American Board of Preventive Medicine. "Dr. Grimes has had a dual career in clinical ob/gyn and in preventive medicine for the past three decades. He served as an epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control for nine years. He has also been a faculty member in four medical schools: Emory University, University of Southern California, University of California-San Francisco, and University of North Carolina. This is PRECISELY the kind of scientific expert, one who has worked at high levels in public health, who would be ideal to evaluate how comparable a scientific experiment in the Bible is to the modern scientific method. You might be able to find a bit better, but not much. See this site for verification. http://davidagrimes.com/ Dotoree (talk) 18:25, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- This is NOT about converting people. It is about being honest and faithful with the historical facts. If muslims have a historical record of achievements, that should be recognized and people should know about it. If atheists do, same. If anarchists do, same. If Christians or Jews have made contributions in history and it can be seen in primary sources, that also must be recognized. To erase historically documented facts is thoroughly immoral and an attack on knowledge and rational thought. There is nothing ethical about it. It only does harm to humanity. Dotoree (talk) 18:33, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
If the description in Daniel is as clear as it appears in Dotoree post, I do not see any need for a secondary source to support it. But Dotoree should scale down the claims. To say that it is "The first recorded use of the modern scientific method or clinical trial in history" sounds too big, and would require a very reliable secondary source. On the other hand, modern scientific method entails the systematic use of testing. So I suggest that Dotoree makes a more modest statement, citing this historical record with the value it has, but not more.--Auró (talk) 22:17, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- The PubMed abstract also says "weaknesses [in Daniel's clinical study] are bias 1, bias 2, and confounding by divine intervention". In other words, Grimes was injecting some humor to bring a smile to the readers. It may help to lighten up on the import of the claims, as Auró states above. --Ancheta Wis (talk | contribs) 22:33, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- (EC) It is not that clear cut. The only source so far supplied supporting the claim is one article written by a gynecologist and published in Obstetrics & Gynecology (journal)[2], not by an expert in biblical studies, ancient texts, or the history of science. While I'm sure the good doctor is outstanding in his field of expertise, him comparing the seeming similarities of modern scientific practices and a few lines of biblical texts are musings and nothing more. They do not pass WP:UNDUE, WP:NOTABLE, or WP:FRINGE. And the editor using it to shoehorn his biblical worldview into an article does not pass WP:NPOV. Heiro 22:38, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- Wikipedia policy urges caution in the use of primary sources, "because it is easy to misuse them", adding the note that "Any exceptional claim would require exceptional sources". Since the claim for scientific method in the Book of Daniel is an exceptional claim, we should go beyond interpretation of primary sources to reliable secondary sources.
- A medical doctor is qualified to evaluate modern medical researdh; he is not, however, trained to evaluate historical texts. That kind of historical expertise is what is called for here. --SteveMcCluskey (talk) 22:50, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- (EC) It is not that clear cut. The only source so far supplied supporting the claim is one article written by a gynecologist and published in Obstetrics & Gynecology (journal)[2], not by an expert in biblical studies, ancient texts, or the history of science. While I'm sure the good doctor is outstanding in his field of expertise, him comparing the seeming similarities of modern scientific practices and a few lines of biblical texts are musings and nothing more. They do not pass WP:UNDUE, WP:NOTABLE, or WP:FRINGE. And the editor using it to shoehorn his biblical worldview into an article does not pass WP:NPOV. Heiro 22:38, 22 February 2013 (UTC)
- 1) Auró, thanks for trying to be reasonable. The Bible is the primary source here and it is all that matters. We can see the steps of the scientific method easily in Daniel 1. I can list them in detail if needed. Do you know of any use of the modern scientific method before Daniel? If not, then it is fully legitimate to call it "the first recorded use". That is a modest claim already. You can't get a more reliable secondary source than someone who has been working in public health for ~30 years and has the qualifications of Dr. Grimes. See the link given above.
"Experts have suggested a 32-point structured format for reporting randomized trials, to improve the quality of this type of research. To demonstrate the usefulness of this format, I used it to evaluate the earliest known report of a clinical trial." http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf
- 2) A doctor with credentials in public health is by far the most important relevant expert here. It's just bias to say that this isn't the relevant expert. If I had listed a biblical expert (which I can easily do), biased people would say, oh, that isn't relevant, you need a scientist in public health. the fact is I have many of BOTH. There is no shoehorning of any type being done. This is most definitely about as neutral a point of view as is possible (I could easily make it FAR more subjective). There is nothing fringe about this. It's a documented historical fact. There is no exceptional claim here and I've already provided 2 exceptional sources (the Bible which has no rival in ancient history in terms of accuracy and a modern peer reviewed journal (and I can list MANY more theologians and some more doctors on this as well). The critics are using only bias here.
- 3)Every human being on the planet has bias. If you're alive you have bias. Do I need to list peer reviewed books and articles on this? It is common knowledge. The wrong thing is when biased is used to misrepresent facts/evidence or worse censor/erase/disappear them. THAT is a significant problem and it is unfortunately what is happening here. Daniel of course has bias. But, there was also extreme bias AGAINST Daniel by the assessor of the results, which was not mentioned. The independent assessor of the results who was not even Jewish and heavily biased against Daniel's idea.
"The trial was a secret, because discovery might have led to the death of Ashpenaz (the Babylonian in charge and the assessor of the outcome). Ashpenaz considered the vegetarian diet potentially dangerous to the trial participants and, hence, indirectly to himself. http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf
And the results were actually a result of following God's wisdom, not God's intervention of any kind. I've done a similar experiment to Daniel's with many students from many backgrounds and religions, and many students report that they have quite significantly improved health in just 1-2 weeks.
- 4) A few more quotes from Dr. Grimes:
"Daniel's trial anticipated the essence of the scientific method: an experimental group exposed to the factor of interest compared with contemporaneous unexposed controls...In his famous 1747 study, Lind followed Daniel's precedent of a small dietary trial in preventing scurvy among British sailors. Despite six different treatment arms and a total of only 12 participants, citrus fruit supplementation was strikingly effective. The trial led to effective prophylaxis and the nickname "limeys" for British seamen.2"
Later "...by contemporary standards, Daniel's trial had numerous deficiencies. However, many of these weaknesses persist in clinical research today. Indeed, some modern investigators have drawn causal inferences without the use of appropriate controls." http://oldjll.sustainabilityforhealth.org/trial_records/bc/daniel/grimes-commentary.pdf
Page title
Why isn't this at History of the scientific method? Adding "the" would make the title sound much more natural than leaving it off. Nyttend (talk) 00:28, 26 February 2013 (UTC)
- That would assume that the history converges on a single method: the scientific method. --ChrisSteinbach (talk) 18:11, 26 February 2013 (UTC)