This is why we need to abolish the so called "scientific method" It's designed to lead to leftist conclusions so that even those who are searching for truth will be deceived. We already have the truth with what we can see with our eyes. You can just walk outside and see that climate change is a hoax and that the horizon is flat and not curved. We can see the truth of vaccines and voter fraud just from first hand experience.
I'm starting chapter 5 of the book and thought you would like the opening paragraph. Here it is in quotes. The parentheses are in the book (not added by me):
"In previous chapters, we discuss how science tipped from open-mindedness to dogma and blind conviction (chapter 1), how its practical applications isolate people from one another and from nature (chapter 2), how its utopian pursuit of an artificial and rationally controllable universe equates to the destruction of the essence of life (chapter 3), and how its belief in objectivity and measurability of the world leads to absurd arbitrariness and subjectivity (chapter 4). In this chapter, we will discuss the fate of another great ambition of science: to liberate man from his anxiety and insecurity and his moral commandments and prohibitions."
Needless to say, chapter 5 goes on to show that science didn't fare any better on those last points.
This is why we need to abolish the so called "scientific method" It's designed to lead to leftist conclusions so that even those who are searching for truth will be deceived. We already have the truth with what we can see with our eyes. You can just walk outside and see that climate change is a hoax and that the horizon is flat and not curved. We can see the truth of vaccines and voter fraud just from first hand experience.
You really made my day! It's so encouraging to know there are like-minded people like you on this!
I'm starting chapter 5 of the book and thought you would like the opening paragraph. Here it is in quotes. The parentheses are in the book (not added by me):
"In previous chapters, we discuss how science tipped from open-mindedness to dogma and blind conviction (chapter 1), how its practical applications isolate people from one another and from nature (chapter 2), how its utopian pursuit of an artificial and rationally controllable universe equates to the destruction of the essence of life (chapter 3), and how its belief in objectivity and measurability of the world leads to absurd arbitrariness and subjectivity (chapter 4). In this chapter, we will discuss the fate of another great ambition of science: to liberate man from his anxiety and insecurity and his moral commandments and prohibitions."
Needless to say, chapter 5 goes on to show that science didn't fare any better on those last points.