Utsikt
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
My (limited) understanding is that the majority of the uncertainty in science lies in how accurately the evidence is able to capture the underlying reality, and not in how the evidence is interpreted.It isn't a matter of brute fact, the conclusion one draws depends entirely on how the evidence is intrepretated. Evidence is not some objective entity that points towards one true conclusion, evidence means something because a mind interprets it as changing a point of view. If these disagreements were matters of brute fact there would be no need for evidence and no need for debate.
So the caveat is mostly «if A is correct, B must be true», and B is just given by logic.
The problem we’re discussing here is that for the studies mentioned by MW, if A is true, any one of B to Z could be true. Yet MW claims that A definitely means that G is true, and ignores the various other meanings that are equally supported or made possible by evidence A.
There is also the issue of how we might not be able to imagine all of the possible explanations for A, and therefore wrongly believe that A supports B, and only B. Essentially an issue of unknown unknowns.
As for your last point - you can’t assume that all people are perfectly rational. And you’d still need evidence to establish something as a fact, regardless, otherwise it would be an opinion.