On Sunday, February 9, 2014, LizR <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 9 February 2014 17:10, Craig Weinberg 
> <[email protected]<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>
> > wrote:
>
>> On Saturday, February 8, 2014 8:55:43 PM UTC-5, stathisp wrote:
>>
>>> On 8 February 2014 05:03, Craig Weinberg <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> > If there were identical triplets, and one of them grew up on the other
>>> side
>>> > of the world and spoke a different language, while the others grew up
>>> in the
>>> > same state and spoke the same language, do you think that a
>>> neuroscientist
>>> > could figure out with certainty which triplet spoke the other language
>>> (not
>>> > by looking at trace compounds that would identify a geographic region,
>>> etc,
>>> > but strictly by the vast number of different words and phrases that
>>> they
>>> > use)?
>>>
>>> It's an assumption in science that the language difference is due to
>>> brain difference. That's not to say that our techniques are at present
>>> refined enough to see a difference, but there must be one if language
>>> is due to the brain.
>>>
>>
>> I don't think science is supposed to make assumptions.
>>
>> Assumption was the wrong word. He meant hypothesis.
>

Strictly speaking everything is tentative and subject to revision in the
light of new evidence, but some things in science as well as in everyday
life you have to simply assume are true. For example, there is the
assumption that the ground will not disappear from under my feet when I
walk.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

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