I don't want to turn this into a philosophic discussion but by definition, natural science does not "explain" anything. It makes restricted models of the world and then produces theories within those restricted models. The theories do not explain reality, they just try to match the measurable scientific aspects of the world - which are applicable to that particular model of reality - as close as possible. The restrictions and explanatory power of sciences are by definition a non-scientific issues, hence the "flim-flam" philosophy.
That being said, my point was not that e.g. biochemistry is garbage science or an "easy" science. My point is that - especially in "nutritional science" (English is not my mother language, so maybe there's a better term) - most of the time, scientific findings about certain scientific aspects (which may in fact be already well established in scientific theories) are ineligibly extrapolated to holistic statements e.g. about health, life-extension, or bodybuilding. What changes every year are those extrapolations. That's why I demand emperical evidence regarding the actual proclaimed outcome of a specific method, rather than statements derived from random combinations of theories about certain aspects.
"I don't want to turn this into a philosophic discussion but by definition, natural science does not "explain" anything. It makes restricted models of the world and then produces theories within those restricted models. The theories do not explain reality, they just try to match the measurable scientific aspects of the world - which are applicable to that particular model of reality - as close as possible. The restrictions and explanatory power of sciences are by definition a non-scientific issues, hence the "flim-flam" philosophy."
wrong, science explains reality, it is our best tool to measure truth. If you base it on some presumptions which in my estimation are correct because i have never seen them falsified. That this is reality, there is no other reality. Science measures how the world works, theories are collections of facts about the world which describe reality. They are reality. Science describes how questions.
"That being said, my point was not that e.g. biochemistry is garbage science or an "easy" science. My point is that - especially in "nutritional science" (English is not my mother language, so maybe there's a better term) - most of the time, scientific findings about certain scientific aspects (which may in fact be already well established in scientific theories) are ineligibly extrapolated to holistic statements e.g. about health, life-extension, or bodybuilding. What changes every year are those extrapolations. That's why I demand emperical evidence regarding the actual proclaimed outcome of a specific method, rather than statements derived from random combinations of theories about certain aspects."
give me some examples,axioms,analogies, anything to support your clearly false statement.
"That's why I demand emperical evidence regarding the actual proclaimed outcome of a specific method, rather than statements derived from random combinations of theories about certain aspects."
its called the double blind methodology. I see its pointless to argue with you just like will brink did, as you are making up false definitions of what you expect, yet you have no knowledge on the matter.