• ameancow@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    This meme was circulated about 20 years ago by my reckoning.

    It was clever back then, it’s far less entertaining now in an age when people are discarding science and factual knowledge wholesale.

    We have very, very good models of each of those “things” listed. We have such good models for it, that even since this meme first made rounds, we have created new kinds of telescopes that can see gravity, we have created computers that can calculate using individual particles in superposition, we have built tools to view the edge of space and time and have imaged the event-horizons around black holes and we have created conditions close to beginning of the universe in labs and discovered new particles that validate decades or centuries of theorizing.

    These models only break down in extreme environments or when they intersect in certain conditions. But by “break down” we don’t mean “scientists throw their hands in the air and become flat-earthers” we mean “we are missing some key data” to make different fields of science work together.

    • I_Jedi@lemmy.today
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      16 hours ago

      We still lack verification on right-handed neutrinos and the exact wave function for helium.

      • ameancow@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        There are likely areas we will never have any greater insight on and phenomenon that will never be explained, but my point is just that people use these kinds of short-attention-span quips to go on to say that we don’t know for sure about climate change and vaccines and such.