by Wayne » Wed Sep 28, 2005 1:02 am
A cosmologist is often wrong, but never in doubt. It's a famous quote and it makes a cosmologist the opposite to a priest, who is never wrong but often in doubt.
Experimental value is limited by the theory in use. If I use Newtonian dynamics, my error margins for a falling object will be larger than if I were to use relativity, since relativity is a more exact theory. This isn't entirely a good example, but it's the best I can think of.
Ultimately it's the accuracy of equipment built according to those theories and experiments carried out using the theories. We will never get to 100% accuracy on any piece of equipment, as doing so would require the measurement of the infinitely large or the infinitely small.
(Note: "infinitely" here means "Immeasurably". In what terms do you measure the radius a quark, for example? Even a few thousand times larger, at the scale of a molecule, do you use the covalent radius or the Van der Waals radius?)
A cosmologist is often wrong, but never in doubt. It's a famous quote and it makes a cosmologist the opposite to a priest, who is never wrong but often in doubt.
Experimental value is limited by the theory in use. If I use Newtonian dynamics, my error margins for a falling object will be larger than if I were to use relativity, since relativity is a more exact theory. This isn't entirely a good example, but it's the best I can think of.
Ultimately it's the accuracy of equipment built according to those theories and experiments carried out using the theories. We will never get to 100% accuracy on any piece of equipment, as doing so would require the measurement of the infinitely large or the infinitely small.
(Note: "infinitely" here means "Immeasurably". In what terms do you measure the radius a quark, for example? Even a few thousand times larger, at the scale of a molecule, do you use the covalent radius or the Van der Waals radius?)