18 MAY 2012 by ideonexus

 Galileo on Empiricism

If experiments are performed thousands of times at all seasons and in every place without once producing the effects mentioned by your philosophers, poets, and historians, this will mean nothing and we must believe their words rather our own eyes? But what if I find for you a state of the air that has all the conditions you say are required, and still the egg is not cooked nor the lead ball destroyed? Alas! I should be wasting my efforts... for all too prudently you have secured your position...
Folksonomies: philosophy empiricism
Folksonomies: philosophy empiricism
  1  notes

Lamenting the fact that if something philosophy asserts cannot be observed in nature, then why not abandon it?