Let me first see if I understand you correctly. You seem to say that validity of an observation only depends on its repeatability and predictability and not on how "real" or valid the reality you are observing is.Sight Unseen said:Like I said before, science is essentially the process of creating models of our present reality and the only thing it requires is that the world we're studying be consistent and repeatable enough to create our models from (this is confirmable since experiments always have the same results). Models do not NEED to be theoretically derived. I'm in engineering, and MANY of the models that I end up using were actually derived empirically, with no theoretical basis, and they work absolutely fine (although they are generally only applicable for a certain range of conditions and require extensive testing to create) So Schroedinger's model does not need to be based on any theory as long as it can be experimentally shown to be valid for the conditions for which it is claimed to be relevant to.
About the dream thing, if I could spend long enough in a dream, and the laws of the dream world weren't constantly changing arbitrarily, I could use science to model out how my dream world worked (talk about a boring dream though). It doesn't matter if it's really *real* as long as the laws aren't constantly changing, but that is testable.
While I can see your point, and I'm not saying it's wrong, it's not an idea I can accept for myself. For me, observations that are made of a reality that isn't real cannot be used to base science on. This does not mean that observations based on something like an incomplete perspective are invalid, as they can be seen as true within certain boundaries of scale, much like applying flat plane geometry here on earth on scales much smaller than the earth's curvature is perfectly acceptable.