Okay, time to enter the fray. I'll try to keep the snarkiness locked up tight where it can't hurt anyone.
Random question: Is it universal for atheists to accept science or is it just conventional?
Is it universal for forum users to completely disregard the intent of a thread and just post whatever they feel like?
Woops looks like some snark got out, lets try it again...
Science isn't something that is really accepted or rejected.That's not how it works, which means your question doesn't make sense. If it did make sense, the answer would be "no" because practically nothing is universal.
Well it is no wonder it feels like I am giving an answer to the wrong question, I am. Well in that case, the question itself is non-explicit. Science is science though. But if you look at the question "What is Science" you'd expect the actual interpretation.
I don't know about that. I intended the question to be more of a poll, that is, the point of the question was not find out an answer, but to see how different people responded. Personally, I would agree with HahiHa's answer: science is a process. It is a way of generating data, and then deriving concepts and conclusions from the data. And as such, it involves all the things HahiHa mentioned.
Even the question "Where do you think science comes from?" can't refer to the scientific community. The correct question referring to such would be "What do you think science does for people?" or "How does the scientific community effect the world?".
Both your questions are very good, and if this thread continues to survive I wouldn't mind if you asked them again at a latter point (not right now, if I may ask, as I think there is more to get out of the topic at hand). My original question wasn't worded very well, though the idea behind it is somewhat different from the two you proposed. But, we've more or less moved passed the original topics I came up with, and are now discussing the role of replication/reproduction (in the scientific methods sense, not the biological sense).
Okay, back to the good stuff.
First of all, Mage's article was really really good and everybody should read it. Clearly the author was after my own heart. Indeed when I was writing my previous post I used both replicatebility and reproducibility, and it felt wrong somehow.
For those who lack the time to read the article, the gist of it was basically that
the results of a study should be reproducible, but it is not as important that the actual experiment can be replicated. The author actually makes a stronger claim, saying that more evidence is generated when results are replicated from a dissimilar study, as this shows that the results are independent of the study methods.
Are we going to reach a point where hardcore physics is simply theoretical and unable to be supported by experimental physicists? If so, what would this say about the conversation so far regarding reproducibility?
Interestingly, Mage's article also introduces an historical example that deals with the measuring of the speed of light. By using some very clever methods, researchers back in the day were able to determine that light was not infinitely fast, even though they lacked the instruments necessary to measure light speed. I would say that science is more limited by human cleverness than technological advances. Just because it may be impossible to conduct a direct experiment involving strings, it may be possible to indirectly study them. By attempting to reproduce results from a variety of indirect studies, you could kind of "triangulate" the actual result.