Fringe

From Nordan Symposia
(Redirected from Margins)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Lighterstill.jpg

Fringe.jpg

Origin

Middle English frenge, from Anglo-French, from Vulgar Latin *frimbia, from Latin fimbriae (plural)

Definitions

  • 1: an ornamental border consisting of short straight or twisted threads or strips hanging from cut or raveled edges or from a separate band
  • 2a : something resembling a fringe : edge, periphery —often used in plural <operated on the fringes of the law>
b : one of various light or dark bands produced by the interference or diffraction of light
c : an area bordering a putting green on a golf course with grass trimmed longer than on the green itself
  • 3a : something that is marginal, additional, or secondary to some activity, process, or subject <a fringe sport>
b : a group with marginal or extremist views

Description

Fringe science, also called questionable science, is scientific inquiry in an established field of study that departs significantly from mainstream or orthodox theories, and is classified in the "fringes" of a credible mainstream academic discipline. Mainstream scientists typically regard fringe concepts as highly speculative or even strongly refuted. On the other hand, the history of science contains many instances of the eventual widespread acceptance of fringe sciences. This is because in theory a fringe science will still maintain scientific rigor, plausibility, and integrity, though it is usually highly disputed.

The term fringe science is sometimes loosely used to describe fields that are actually pseudosciences, or fields which are referred to as sciences, but entirely lack scientific rigor or plausibility. Debunkers have coined the terms pathological science, voodoo science, and cargo cult science to suggest inquiry lacking in scientific integrity. Junk science is typically used politically to describe agenda-driven science. The general problem of where to properly draw a boundary between science and non-science, when the objective actually is objectivity, is called the demarcation problem. Unfortunately, the objective of some debunkers is debunking, not encouraging real scientific objectivity. For this purpose, disparaging terms are often useful. They are almost always a clue that objectivity is not the main objective.

It is important to distinguish between a science that has not yet been proven but follows the scientific method and any science which does not follow the scientific method. This is the difference between fringe science and pseudoscience. As above mentioned, some disciplines of fringe science have been or may,in the future, be proven to be actually true. Pseudoscience, however would only be proven true by a coincidence between opinion and fact, as the methods used are not logical proofs.

See also