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Thank's to all the contributors to this thread. I've read your views with no less interest and thought as that which the article has apparently provoked in us all. Perhaps it's only fair I share my views as well, but either way . . . here they are -
Alarms go off for me, as well I think they should for us all, when any field of inquiry purports to have all the answers. It is at that point that we have left the realms of philosophy and science far behind in exchange for the false comfort that religion seems to provide for those unwilling to acknowledge that they don't have legitimate answers to their most crucial questions while denying the possibility that such answers might exist or to consider the possibility that many of them already do if they remained willing to seek them out.
Specifically physics and science in general stem from a branch of philosophy which asks and attempts to answer questions regarding the physical nature of the reality we are confronted with and observe, metaphysics; and the internal means and process by which we obtain and consciously integrate and confirm what we know; epistemology. Having such knowledge is an invaluable resource serving an essential need to know what we can do, what is possible, and what we should do, and why.
Ethics is an attempt to integrate ourselves as potentially rational entities to the wider world we find ourselves and each other living in. Those who do science owe it to themselves and others to remember the reason for doing science, to sustain and promote the well-being of those capable of doing science for the potential benefits we all stand to derive from the process. It worries me that minds with the capacity to grasp the essential nature of the universe might be blind to the reason for doing so and the valuable contribution philosophy makes to that understanding.