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Quote from: Great Moravian on December 31, 2010, 12:54:21 PMBotany is namely a science, its results are therefore ephemeral, subjective and relative. A curious view of science.
Botany is namely a science, its results are therefore ephemeral, subjective and relative.
Quote from: Gerry Webster on December 31, 2010, 06:24:00 PMQuote from: Great Moravian on December 31, 2010, 12:54:21 PMBotany is namely a science, its results are therefore ephemeral, subjective and relative. A curious view of science.I think Great Moravian has a point here. A scientific statement can never be proved but falsified. This is the difference between a religion with its dogmas and science. The result is science evolve and religion does not.What is accepted as a "scientific truth" today may be deficient or wrong in the future.
#1: I still do not understand why the staff of Kew is composed by clerks. By the way, I refuse to believe that clerks are inferior. #2: In my meaning of the words, "generally accepted" means accepted by a majority. I still do not understand why that is impossible or does not exist. It does not mean the eternal and ultimateh truth of anything. (Is this all a semantic misunderstanding??)#3: Anyone who looks at the list will find that it A: gives author and publication for the names B: Adresses the degree of generality.#4: I think that it is a little melodramatic to state that the staff of two of the worlds greatest botanical gardens are mere clerks.Hoy: The fact that a scientific statment may change does not mean that it can not be accepted by most people as correct today. The approach that nothing can be proven is meaningless. If the Great Moravian were true to his belief he could not use a name on any plant because it might be changed in the future. We could also say that it is unproven that Napoleon is dead since this is another statement that can only be falsified.Göte.PSI think that it would be well if we tried to avoid insulting people wholesale - be they clerks or taxonomists.PPSI find the list very useful as a statement of what most people seem to believe today and this belief is sufficiently similar to a truth
There is a discussion going on along similar lines on Alpine-L, here is my initial take on The Plant List:http://mailman.science.uu.nl/pipermail/alpine-l/2011-January/034725.html
Göte,You misunderstands me. I tried to persuade you about correctness of different names for a particular plant,depending on the adopted taxonomic treatment. Different taxonomic treatments can describe realityequally faithfully, and several taxonomic treatments together provide ideal insight.Generally accepted doesn't mean accepted by majority. Scientific results cannot be obtained by voting norby authoritative decision, but merely by subjective perception of available information.The scientific staff in Kew works on other important problems, it is dehonestingto present lists of accepted names as their principal achievement.