Pointed ears.
Fascinating.
Pointed ears.
I think the problem is, in order to understand what a scientist is, you have to understand what a scientist does. And your attempts at distinguishing what a scientist does doesn't seem to be entirely based in reality. Scientists are not people unconstrained by other theories while the great mass of people doing "science" follow blindly. There are scientists who are theoretical and look to expand our theories and there are those who are practical and look to make use of the theories. But neither is constrained by the rules. After all, if the rules aren't accurate, it would be less than helpful to follow them.
^ I resent you last statement. My hair is reasonably combed.
1. Have a crazy hair style or long hair in order to make people think you are cool when you really arent.
3. Mock the Bible because "science" has disproved it
This is all true, except that not all scientists think that the knowledge they gain will ever have any practical value; some people are just passionately curious about reality.I asked my boyfriend, the scientist, what he thought and this is his paraphrased response:
A scientist is someone who investigates the world around them, through biology, chemistry, geology, or physics, but they don't have to be wearing a lab coat. They can be a child trying to understand what rocks are made out of. Sometimes people become scientists to advance technology for profit or sometimes just because of their desire to understand how something works. It may seem like useless knowledge to other people but the scientist recognizes that one day it may be important. Unfortunately the more advanced research today takes a lot of money, and the only people who are going to provide that money are those who expect to receive a return on it, which accounts for the unwillingness to invest in things like warp drive that the investors may think is a little too out there to make them any profit.
Well, I had greying temples when I was in college: right now the greying is waging a glorious campaign of conquest all over my scalp which by the look of it would finally be victorious in a few years...Do you at least have graying temples? And a Tesla Coil? Real Scientists always have one of those things buzzing in the background.^ I resent you last statement. My hair is reasonably combed.
I have a Spock action figure. New anthropomorphic personification, same old divine spark.That reminds me: I need to buy a bust of Pallas.
I have a Spock action figure. New anthropomorphic personification, same old divine spark.That reminds me: I need to buy a bust of Pallas.![]()
I see your thinkgeek and I raise you a SCIENCE!This shirt, courtesy of thinkgeek.com.
Well played sir, well playedI see your thinkgeek and I raise you a SCIENCE!This shirt, courtesy of thinkgeek.com.
This is all true, except that not all scientists think that the knowledge they gain will ever have any practical value; some people are just passionately curious about reality.I asked my boyfriend, the scientist, what he thought and this is his paraphrased response:
A scientist is someone who investigates the world around them, through biology, chemistry, geology, or physics, but they don't have to be wearing a lab coat. They can be a child trying to understand what rocks are made out of. Sometimes people become scientists to advance technology for profit or sometimes just because of their desire to understand how something works. It may seem like useless knowledge to other people but the scientist recognizes that one day it may be important. Unfortunately the more advanced research today takes a lot of money, and the only people who are going to provide that money are those who expect to receive a return on it, which accounts for the unwillingness to invest in things like warp drive that the investors may think is a little too out there to make them any profit.
1. Have a crazy hair style or long hair in order to make people think you are cool when you really arent.
2. Have an insane look in your eyes
3. Mock the Bible because "science" has disproved it
4. Try to talk like Carl Sagan
5. Get excited about concepts and theories that nobody else cares about
6. Talk down to non-scientist about a subject you know alot about but can't prove either therefore making you no better than the uninformed.
-- LindleyMock the Bible because "science" has disproved it No self-respecting scientist would claim the Bible had been entirely disproven. They may try and test certain specific aspects of it where enough evidence exists for a meaningful investigation, but by and large the Bible is neither provable nor disprovable----and therefore of little interest to scientists.
I'm starting to go gray at the temples. Well, I did want to look like Reed Richards when I was a kid....Well, I had greying temples when I was in college: right now the greying is waging a glorious campaign of conquest all over my scalp which by the look of it would finally be victorious in a few years...
"The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'"Something Thomas Kuhn wrote in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions may throw an interesting light on this topic.
Kuhn argued that there are two types of science: normal science, and extraordinary science.
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