Science cannot explain everything, thus paranormal activity.
Science cannot currently explain everything, thus we currently have insufficient science.
Science cannot explain everything, thus paranormal activity.
Science cannot currently explain everything, thus we currently have insufficient science.
Plus, the OP specified Star Trek. Until this season of DISCO, that limited us to 23rd and 24th centuries. Did they learn everything there was to learn by then? Now we are 1,000 years later. Has science learned all there is left to learn in that 1,000 years? Is there nothing left that is not unknown?
Plus, the OP specified Star Trek. Until this season of DISCO, that limited us to 23rd and 24th centuries.
There are several ways of interpreting "Science can't explain everything." If you interpret it to mean that science will never get around to explaining everything because the universe is infinite and there will always be new questions to answer once you're done answering the current ones, then that's entirely true. But I think what proponents of supernatural belief mean by it is "There are certain specific categories of thing that science will forever be incapable of explaining no matter how hard it tries" -- which is a meaningless assertion, because you can't prove a negative. Or else they mean "Science can't explain everything because it refuses to consider anything beyond what it already accepts" -- which is a profound, fundamental misconception of what science is and how it operates.
Or more simply, what they mean is, "Magic exists." Which is of course nonsense.
I think what proponents of supernatural belief mean by it is "There are certain specific categories of thing that science will forever be incapable of explaining no matter how hard it tries" -- which is a meaningless assertion, because you can't prove a negative.
Understood. But the storytelling can be interesting. How the double-slit “knows” it is being watched means the universe is less mechanistic than some imagine.
That's a distinct premise, though. There are fantasy universes where magic exists and is studied as a science, or where it functions as an integral facet of physics, e.g. Diane Duane's Young Wizards series. Then there's the Doctor Who approach that "Magic is just science we don't understand yet." So saying that magic exists is not automatically the same thing as saying that it's forever beyond science.
Except that the people who think magic is real do usually mean that it is a supernatural phenomenon forever beyond the ability of science to comprehend.
Indeed, quantum theory is extremely deterministic. It basically says that every event that ever happened or ever will happen anywhere in the universe (or multiverse) is already encoded in the Schroedinger wave equation of the universe. The only reason things are mysterious to us is because we'll never have complete, comprehensive information about everything in the universe, so there will always be a degree of uncertainty in our predictions. But even that uncertainty can be codified, explained, and understood.
The woo woo can be fun to play with in fiction, though.
I actually liked Chronicles better than Pitch Black, for instance (boo hiss, I know). It had that pulp feel along with Sky Captain.
I had no idea about Pitch Black before seeing an ad for Chronicles. And, largely, I still don't care. Chronicles of Riddick is one of those guilty pleasures that I love. The world is intriguing, largely because it feels very open. Not everything is well defined because our protagonist doesn't care. His interests are purely self-serving, and it's through that journey, cliché as it is, that he becomes a little less of a self-serving ass.I actually liked Chronicles better than Pitch Black, for instance (boo hiss, I know).
I've been in a haunted house all night nothing happened. Either the ghosts were having a day off or they just don't exist.
a ghost inhabiting a human host
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