jedcstuff

2008-09-10

Embrace newly formed sub-branches of science

As I wrote yesterday, Science attempts to knit new knowledge with the old, providing connectiveness between the bits of knowledge. Then this framework is available for application to improve the human experience. However, science also historically has been of several branches whose spheres of focus slowly grew toward knitting with the other branches of science, such as physics, chemistry, biology, physiology, medical, sociology, psychology and political science. Each branch of science has its own terminology which helps form the concepts of the branch; such as physics has F=M*A but that is not normally used in the science of sociology; although analog parallels may be inspirational. Anyway, the point am trying to lead to, is that science is not one fully knitted cohesive whole at this point; and so it is conceivable that new sets of observations that do not seem to immediately tie in fully with existing science knowledge, may nevertheless form valid useful sub-branches of science; for example, the many protocols developed by Hulda Clark, Ph.D. In such an endeavor, it needs to form its own cohesive whole and produce repeatable results, and also reach out toward the current edges of more conventional science to begin the knit together process with the larger body of knowledge. For those of science to ridicule such sub-branches of science, simply because it was not taught to them in school, has some new terminology it uses to grasp special component concepts, and seems unconventional, is to blind themselves to potentially new and useful knowledge. When science paths are directed by the financial requirements of particular businesses, the urge to "blind" may even be stronger, especially if the new sub-science suggests protocols that would appear to rival your business base. Yet scientific knowledge surely ought to strive for the fullest reality; and thus needs to embrace newly formed sub-branches of science in the tentative manner of all scientific experiments' endless testing of the widest possible reality.

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