Positronized said:
I don't know.. I'm a high school physics student and I love the theory bit and I would prefer as few experimental works as possible, but I understand other people do like experiments and "get" the subject better with the practical works. I'm just more of a theorist type..
Positronized: I understand where you are coming from, because I was once in high school and once had a view that is similar to yours. Theory is a very good thing because it causes people to predict physical things (according to their theories) and then prove those theories to be either correct or incorrect by scientific experiment. So, essentially, theories are good because they lead to experimentation.
The Kelvin temperature scale is a good example of theory. The Kelvin temperature scale is based on the pressure of an ideal gas at different temperatures. Because this graph is linear, we can extrapolate the data down to 0 Pascals of pressure and find that the temperature at which gas molecules would
theoretically stop moving is -273.15K, and we call this temperature absolute zero. It is important to note that absolute zero has
never been experimentally observed, so as good as this extrapolation may look, we cannot trust it below the range of experimental temperatures. This does not mean that we dismiss the notion of absolute zero as being false, it just means that we must keep in mind that it is a theory that has not been fully-proven with experimental evidence. In fact, there are things in thermodynamics that suggest that we can come close to absolute zero but can never actually get there, so it is very important that we as scientists
never assume our theories to be true.
I say this respectfully, so please do not take offense Positronized: I think your logic behind loving theory and prefering as few experimental works as possible is actually flawed. If we have no experimental evidence, then we have nothing to think about. How would you know that all objects on the Earth's surface, regardless of weight, fall with the same acceleration? The only way you know is by experimental evidence, you cannot make scientific conclusions based on anything other than experimental evidence. Theory and logical reasoning is a good thing, because it is another tool in the scientist's tool box that he can use to attempt to make predictions, but the scientist can never replace experimental evidence with theory. Without experimental evidence, the theories themselves cannot be accepted as truth.
Physics is not a spectator sport! Physicists do not sit around in easy chairs coming up with theories and then writing those theories down as truth. Experimental evidence is the final judge.
Here's an example. Let's say I told you that objects accelerate upwards when they are thrown away from the Earth towards the sky. Would you disagree with me? If we were merely sitting around discussing the issue and had no scientific evidence
you would have no reason to disagree with my theory that objects accelerate away from the Earth when thrown towards the sky You would probably prove me wrong by finding some nearby object and throwing it upwards. The object would reach a maximum height and then fall back towards the earth, and thus
by experimental evidence, and only by experimental evidence you would have proven my theory (that objects always fall towards the sky) to be incorrect. You could not have fought my theory with another theory, you
had to use experimental evidence to prove my theory wrong Now, Positronized, do you see how dangerous it is to accept theories without requiring them to match up with experimental evidence? Galileo was thrown in prison because his experimental evidence did not match the Pope's theories. Galileo was an experimental Physicist, and the Pope was an armchair "Physicist".