• wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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    11 hours ago

    You mean the tuna and the house sauce weren’t the two variables this guy tried isolating first?

    He literally tried removing rice and all the vegetables before thinking “hmm, maybe it’s the tuna or the sauce.”

    What a loon. He deserves every one of those awful shits.

      • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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        7 hours ago

        Good science will use previous norms, findings and general trends to provide a more useful starting point tho.

      • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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        10 hours ago

        Good science starts from the body of evidence we already know, creates a plausible hypothesis, and then tests that hypothesis to see whether it can be disproven.

        We don’t say “hey, maybe gravity isn’t real so to be unbiased I need to assume it’s not and test every other possibility before determining what keeps making these bricks fall on my head every time I throw them up in the air”

        No need to reinvent the wheel for every experiment.

        • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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          9 hours ago

          Maybe not the greatest example since we don’t fully understand gravity. ”good" in the sense of being expedient, affordable and conventional. Sometimes approaching unsolved problems without the constraints of prior constructs can lead to better understanding.

          Also, vegetables usually are the culprits anyways.

          • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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            8 hours ago

            Okay, but they can focus on experiments designed to determine whether gravity is caused by quantum mechanics or relativity or something else. They don’t need to drop bricks on their heads just to prove newtonian physics…