Hmm...does that sound like the writings of a man who obsessively applies evolutionary theory to every facet of human life?Let us be clear. It is not "biophobia" to reject the reduction of all human
feelings and actions to evolution. Quite the contrary. It is biophilia; or
at least a proper respect for science. The "choice between ideology and
knowledge" is a real choice; but it is Thornhill and Palmer and the
doctrinaire evolutionary psychologists who choose ideology over knowledge.
They enjoy the advantage that people seem to like scientific explanations
for their behavior, and the certainty that such explanations provide. It is
reassuring to impute our traumas and our misdeeds to our savanna-dwelling
ancestors. It lessens the moral pressure on our lives. And so the
disciplinary hubris of evolutionary psychology and the longing for certainty
of ordinary men and women have combined to create a kind of scientistic
cargo cult, with everyone waiting in vain for evolutionary psychology to
deliver the goods that it doesn't have. — Coyne
Quibbling over terminology aside, the fact remains that it was an appeal to consequences: Dennett's "universal acid" leaves no place for philosophy (in your view), and ergo must be false. — Arkady
And again, this "classical tradition" would include secular works? — Arkady
So: the universe is a sign of higher intelligence, but this is not an empirical demonstration of God's existence? — Arkady
Dawkins never says anything of the sort that science disproves God. — Arkady
Thirdly, even if Dawkins et al overreach with the scope of the application of evolutionary theory, why would that lead to a widespread rejection of the core precepts of the theory? After all, one can believe in, say, the common descent of all life on Earth as it developed over 4 billion years, and yet reject the contention that evolution explains, for instance, the human moral sense, or that art has an adaptive explanation. (I will point out for the umpteenth time that Coyne himself has written about some of the more dubious overreaches of evolutionary theory as it pertains to evolutionary psychology, an inconvenient fact which you continue to assiduously ignore so that you can refer back to Coyne as a bogeyman emblematic of all you despise.) — Arkady
Actually, Faith vs. Fact serves as a splendid specimen of scientism. Mr. Coyne disparages not only religion but also other human ways of engaging with reality. The arts, he argues, “cannot ascertain truth or knowledge,” and the humanities do so only to the extent that they emulate the sciences. This sort of arrogance and certitude is the essence of scientism — John Horgan
I have no beef with entomology or evolution, but I refuse to admit that they teach me much about ethics. Consider the fact that human action ranges to the extremes. People can perform extraordinary acts of altruism, including kindness toward other species — or they can utterly fail to be altruistic, even toward their own children. So whatever tendencies we may have inherited leave ample room for variation; our choices will determine which end of the spectrum we approach. This is where ethical discourse comes in — not in explaining how we’re “built,” but in deliberating on our own future acts. Should I cheat on this test? Should I give this stranger a ride? Knowing how my selfish and altruistic feelings evolved doesn’t help me decide at all. Most, though not all, moral codes advise me to cultivate altruism. But since the human race has evolved to be capable of a wide range of both selfish and altruistic behavior, there is no reason to say that altruism is superior to selfishness in any biological sense.
The premise of The God Delusion is that God probably doesn't exist. The fact you are speaking of "disproof" shows that you don't even understand the nature of empiricism. He believes that the balance of the evidence demonstrates that God probably doesn't exist, not that it "disproves," God. This is not due to to any "vague" understanding on Dawkins's part, but rather is the nature of empirical investigation (unlike religionists, scientists don't speak of "Truth" - note the capital "T" which so many Christians are fond of appending to the word - but only of "evidence" which either confirms or disconfirms hypotheses which can be used to make useful predictions or retrodictions in the service of explaining nature).The whole book, The God Delusion, is based on the premise that scientific method supersedes religious belief. The only reason he says it doesn't disprove it, is because he understands vaguely that it's not an empirical question. — Wayfarer
In all honesty, you link to quite a bit, so I don't recall that particular work (was it in this discussion? We've exchanged a flurry of links, and my memory fails me). Anyway, in giving a quick skim at that article, I didn't see any too objectionable, so perhaps I've softened my view on it. I can view it in more detail a bit later.With respect to the evolutionary explanations of such faculties as conscience, rationality, and the like, one can certainly explore the biological roots of h. sapiens without conceding thereby that the nature of such faculties can be explained in purely biological terms. I posted what I consider a very able review of that very issue, Anything But Human, by a humanistic scholar, and you dismissed it as rubbish, so no use raking over it again. Question has been asked and answered.
Yes, and creationism entails a rejection of evolution to at least some degree, ergo your claim that the New Atheists are responsible for fomenting rejection of evolution in the U.S. to any significant degree is rather tendentious.Creationism hails from around the 1920s in the US. Theistic evolution is another matter entirely, and, were I to choose sides, I would choose that, over Dawkin's and Dennett's materialism any day.
Firstly, I will say that Horgan (yet another quote!) is hardly unbiased himself. He has, for instance, made ill-informed and unsupported comments about particular fields which he simply doesn't like, such as behavioral genetics (the book Born That Way,about just such that topic, describes the author's rather frustrating encounter with Horgan on this matter).That quote from Coyne is interesting, and I have read some of his criticisms of evolutionary psychology elsewhere. I don't see anything to object to there. What I object to his strident 'ideological scientism'. Coyne's latest book is called Faith Vs Fact, of which science blogger John Horgan's review was titled 'Book by Biologist Jerry Coyne Goes Too Far in Denouncing Religion, Defending Science'. The subtitle of Coyne's book is 'Why Religion and Science are Incompatible':
Actually, Faith vs. Fact serves as a splendid specimen of scientism. Mr. Coyne disparages not only religion but also other human ways of engaging with reality. The arts, he argues, “cannot ascertain truth or knowledge,” and the humanities do so only to the extent that they emulate the sciences. This sort of arrogance and certitude is the essence of scientism — John Horgan
If you haven't read Faith vs. Fact, I'd encourage you to do so — Arkady
unlike religionists, scientists don't speak of "Truth" - note the capital "T" which so many Christians are fond of appending to the word — Arkady
And yes, Coyne (as well as I) do reject "other ways of knowing." This is not to say that he (or I) believes that all questions fall under the ambit of the natural sciences, but rather that claims must have some rational warrant in order to be accepted. — Arkady
creationism entails a rejection of evolution to at least some degree, ergo your claim that the New Atheists are responsible for fomenting rejection of evolution in the U.S. to any significant degree is rather tendentious. — Arkady
What would lead you choose theistic evolution over a purely materialistic conception of evolution? — Arkady
As for the arts, Coyne does allow that the arts can be "ways of knowing" in certain ways, in that the arts can, for instance, tell us what certain historical figures looked like via their portraits. But for the most part, why should the arts be regarded as a truth-seeking or knowledge-generating endeavor? This is clearly a case of humanitiesism: the encroachment of the humanities on the domain of the natural and social sciences. — Arkady
Everything is subjective to some degree. Even when scientists verify each others' observations, they do so by means of experiencing the requisite qualia (if one finds this term contentious, please feel free to substitute its closest synonym with which you agree) for themselves. However, one of the cornerstones of the scientific method is the replicability of results, which lends science its objective force. Given appropriate circumstances, one should (at least in principle) be able to replicate an experiment and obtain similar results.But an artist is inclined to face a problem with the attitude of "the way those people dealt with that problem is not the way that I am going to deal with it". And this is the benefit of the subjectivity, which we find in the artist's "way of knowing". The artist has to know in one's own way, not the way of another, so the artist is always seeking more accuracy, more efficiency, just overall "better" ways of knowing the same thing. Just take a look at the "What Colour are the Strawberries?" thread, to see a discussion on the importance of subjectivity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Non-sequitur. The scientific process requires creativity, sure (one must be creative in conjecturing hypotheses, devising empirical tests of said hypotheses, etc), but it doesn't follow that all creative endeavors are artistic in nature. The aims and goals of science and art are completely different.Creativity is the means by which we advance from the unknown, expanding the realm of knowledge. Therefore artistry is the true knowledge generating endeavor.
I see. So you will happily quote scathing reviews of a book when said reviews comport with your views on religion and the "New Atheists," but you decline to read the actual book before opining on it? That sounds a bit, dare I say...close-minded. Coyne touches on a number of other issues, including demolishing Gould's "NOMA" arguments. Might be worth checking out, since you are so interested in this sort of thing.I don't need to read atheist polemics not to trust faith healers and those who reject blood transfusions. — Wayfarer
Well, we're no longer in days of yore, and every encounter I've seem to have had with the word "Truth" has come from a religious person (probably generally of the evangelical Christian variety). Once again, I'd ask who is the arrogant party here? Atheists and scientific rationalists must at least honestly admit that they are ignorant of some of the greatest mysteries of the universe: but it is religionists who have ready answers to these questions.Capital T Truth denotes something like a 'vision of the whole' or at any rate a visionary state or encounter or epiphany. It has a vaguely religious connotation now, but in days of yore was also spoken of in suitably hushed tones by men of science.
Well, logical positivism is itself more or less moribund, wouldn't you say? As for metaphysics (which no doubt at least overlaps with theism), I am at a loss as to what a "verification" of a metaphysical thesis might look like. It seems the most that metaphysicians can do is try to find contradictions in opposing theses while trying to tighten up their own. The fact that debates over the veracity of universals, say, have raged for millennia in some cases does not make me optimistic that metaphysical debates are ever resolved in a timely and definitive matter, if they get resolved at all (through rational means: one can of course forcibly silence one's opponents, or ban their views, etc).But it's also clear that he and you are generally positivist in your orientation, 'positivism' being 'a philosophical system recognizing only that which can be scientifically verified or which is capable of logical or mathematical proof, and therefore rejecting metaphysics and theism'.
Your concern for the cause of "evangelical atheists" is touching, but they are not politicians. They don't soft-peddle their positions for mass appeal.Biblical creationism rejects Darwinian evolution holus bolus. But why I find fault with evolutionary materialism is because of the insistence that evolution 'proves' anything about God. It doesn't prove anything of the kind. Certainly it proves that the Earth wasn't created in 6006 bc. But if you're in a culture where Biblical faith fundamental, and then say 'look here, science shows your religious beliefs are superstitious nonsense', then what do you think a lot of people are going to do? They're going to reject it. That's why I'm saying these 'evangelical atheists' are doing a lot of damage to their own cause. — Wayfarer
We have dissected life down to its constituent atoms, and found no "spirit" to speak of. I know you hate when I call you a "vitalist," but if it quacks like a duck...I remember I asked you once, do you think life is really just a kind of chemical reaction, and you said, what else could it be? Well, it could be 'the manifestation of spirit' - for all we know. Of course, Darwin never thought like that, but Wallace did. Anyway, maybe for all our cleverness, life itself is something we don't really understand very well.
None of this answers why you think that theistic evolution is probably the case, as opposed to purely naturalistic evolution. You have several "very long posts" (not that I'm complaining, mind you: I appreciate the time you put into them), so you will have to be more specific about where you laid out your reasons for believing that theistic evolution comports better with the facts than its naturalistic counterpart.So much of modern evolutionary materialism is shaped by the Enlightenment attitude that religion is a superstitious yoke to be thrown off. I have already explained in a very long post before your last reply, what I think is the matter with that; I'm just about done discussing it.
Just curious: you have read The God Delusion, right? — Arkady
You decline to read the actual book before opining on it? — Arkady
We have dissected life down to its constituent atoms, and found no "spirit" to speak of. — Arkady
Well, logical positivism is itself more or less moribund, wouldn't you say? — Arkady
Comte saw a progression in the development of society from the ‘theological’ to the ‘scientific’ phase, in which data derived from empirical experience, and logical and mathematical treatments of such data, provide the exclusive source of all authentic knowledge. Even though Comte’s influence has waned in the intervening centuries, his conception of the evolution of society from theological to scientific - a model which might be called ‘historical positivism’ - has remained an important component of the modern outlook. In this world-view, the mechanistic model and the idea that the underlying reality of the Universe was matter was, then, the culmination of the idea of Progress.
Atheists and scientific rationalists must at least honestly admit that they are ignorant of some of the greatest mysteries of the universe: but it is religionists who have ready answers to these questions. — Arkady
But, here is a broader problem with your position. When you wade into theistic evolution, you are saying something about the causes and forces operative in the world, ones which shape the course of nature and life on Earth. — Arkady
that is, if God is involved in the evolutionary process, then the world looks different than it would had God not gotten involved at all — Arkady
And yet, when asked for evidence to support this claim, — Arkady
And yet, when asked for evidence to support this claim, you retreat behind the wall of crying "scientism", and saying that it's not a matter for empirical investigation. So, you want it both ways. — Arkady
Even when scientists verify each others' observations, they do so by means of experiencing the requisite qualia (if one finds this term contentious, please feel free to substitute its closest synonym with which you agree) for themselves. — Arkady
One might think that, if Coyne’s goal is to increase the acceptance of evolutionary ideas, he would emphasize their compatibility with religion, thereby reassuring religious Americans that evolution poses no threat to their belief systems. However, Coyne, a professor at the University of Chicago, has nothing but disdain for any such “accommodationism,” as he calls it. Rather, he argues not only that certain religious ideas (like “young-earth creationism”) are incompatible with dominant paradigms in biology and geology but that all of religion is incompatible with all of science. This is a rather extraordinary claim, and the arguments Coyne develops to support it are extraordinary mainly for their speciousness. — Austin L. Hughes
Non-sequitur. The scientific process requires creativity, sure (one must be creative in conjecturing hypotheses, devising empirical tests of said hypotheses, etc), but it doesn't follow that all creative endeavors are artistic in nature. The aims and goals of science and art are completely different. — Arkady
However, one of the cornerstones of the scientific method is the replicability of results, which lends science its objective force. Given appropriate circumstances, one should (at least in principle) be able to replicate an experiment and obtain similar results. — Arkady
As for artists striving for accuracy and efficiency, I can only wonder what is the basis for that contention. While accuracy of some work's representation of reality may be a desideratum of some artists, I don't see how accuracy is a goal inherent to the artistic process (except in the fairly trivial manner that artists often seek to realize their mental vision or concept of the art in executing it). How would one gauge the "accuracy" of, for instance, Beethoven's Fifth? — Arkady
I don't know that my definition of art is overly restrictive: in fact I offered no such definition (nor do I plan to, as such a quest can only be doomed to failure). Philosophy by dictionary definition is generally not advisable (nor am I bound to accept the dictates of a dictionary if I believe the definition is at odds with a term's general usage; dictionaries are authoritative sources, to be sure, but no authority is infallible).Here's our difference of opinion right here. My dictionary defines "art" as "human creative skill or its application", and that's how I generally use it. If we maintain this definition, your claim that "it doesn't follow that all creative endeavors are artistic in nature" is false by contradiction to the definition. All human creative endeavors are artistic, by definition. So it appears to me like you are trying to produce a highly restrictive, and contrived definition of "art", to support a claimed separation between science and art. But the fact is that science uses art as much as any other human endeavor, and where it uses art is in its approach to the unknown, conjecturing hypotheses, devising empirical test, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm talking about "using" art: i'm talking about creating art. Beethoven didn't have to worry about producing or replicating a particular note: he worried about writing it. There is no issue of accuracy there, hence the difference between a composer and a musician.Any time that human beings use art, there is always a concern about accuracy. And this is primarily accuracy in relation to pure objective fact. When the musician wants a harmony, that harmony must be as pure as possible. Tuning is critical, and a slight difference in frequency is repugnant to the trained ear. The same is the case in mixing paints, the artist wants to be able to precisely replicate the colour which was produced before and is now desired. This is no different from the art involved in the sciences. The scientist wants accuracy in relation to the pure objective facts. — Metaphysician Undercover
The British biologist Julian Huxley dryly remarked that Bergson’s élan vital is no better an explanation of life than is explaining the operation of a railway engine by its élan locomotif ("locomotive driving force"). The same alleged epistemological fallacy is parodied in Molière's Le Malade imaginaire, where a quack "answers" the question of "Why does opium cause sleep?"
Formal causality secures teleology—the ends or purposes of things follow from what they are and what is in accord with or capable of fulfilling their natures. In the natural world, this realist framework secures an intrinsic connection between efficient causes and their effects—an efficient cause produces its effects by communicating some formality: fire warms by informing objects with its heat.
Thanks to the nominalist rejection of forms, by the time of early modern philosophy the notion of 'formal causality' had become the explicit butt of humanist jokes. In Moliere’s Invalid Imaginaire, for instance, a doctor is mocked for explaining that a drug causes sleep because it has a virtus dormativa, a sleep-causing power.
Non-sequitur. The scientific process requires creativity, sure (one must be creative in conjecturing hypotheses, devising empirical tests of said hypotheses, etc), but it doesn't follow that all creative endeavors are artistic in nature. The aims and goals of science and art are completely different. — Arkady
There is no issue of accuracy there, hence the difference between a composer and a musician. — Arkady
The Enlightenment project gave us the modern world, but it has always had weaknesses. First, Enlightenment figures perpetually tell themselves that religion is dead (it isn’t) and that race is dead (it isn’t), and so they are always surprised by events. Second, it is thin on meaning. It treats people as bland rational egoists and tends to produce governments run by soulless technocrats.
If my understanding is lacking, perhaps it's because my interlocutors' position has not been explained very well. Of course a composer strives to choose "the best possible note," just as a painter strives to choose the best possible combination of colors (which is no doubt part of the reason the great artists go through draft after draft of their work, rather than just tossing something onto a page or a canvas and calling it a day).It seems that you don't understand musical composition very well. There is certainly a critical kind of accuracy in choosing the best possible note at every point in a musical composition, just as there is in choosing the words that make up a poem or the tones and colours in a painting. It is like the accuracy of the archer hitting his mark perfectly. If you don't understand that it just shows your lack of experience. — John
All I can say is, if science qualifies as "art", then virtually any human endeavor so qualifies. A plumber who devises a creative solution to stem a leak has thereby become an artist. Perhaps we should display his work in a modern art museum (it would have the added benefit of constituting a natural experiment as to whether anyone could tell the difference).Insofar as science is creative, it is an art. Of course all creative endeavors are examples of artistry; does that mean they are artistic in nature? I would say so, even if to say so seems to be somewhat out of keeping with common parlance. The aims and goals of architecture and music are completely different, and yet they are both arts. Science is partly art and partly craft as all the various arts also are. Of course I am not arguing that science is "normally" considered to be an art, but to the extent that it is not an art then it must be a craft, which is to say a discipline, and it is most certainly not unique in that. — John
I see. So, in other words, you haven't even read the Book of British Birds.Borrowed it when it came out. Read the first three chapters, skimmed the remainder, read many reviews...
I don't need to read Das Kapital to have a view on Marxism. Jerry Coyne's reputation is terrible, outside anyone who isn't part of the new atheist scene. I could provide hundreds of quotes but I don't want to bore you... — Wayfarer
The aim of art is to create. However, the aim of science is to explain. — Arkady
I'm talking about "using" art: i'm talking about creating art. Beethoven didn't have to worry about producing or replicating a particular note: he worried about writing it. There is no issue of accuracy there, hence the difference between a composer and a musician. — Arkady
But, how is this a matter of "accuracy"? In my mind, "accuracy" denotes a statement or representation's degree of conformity to its object of reference. — Arkady
Well, there you go. Perhaps Dawkins could likewise claim that the "tenets and main arguments of the classical theists can be adequately communicated in a couple of paragraphs," thus absolving him of his failure to read all of that wonderful theology he's supposedly ignored? What's good for the goose is good for the gander, right?The basic tenets and main arguments of the 'new atheists' can be adequately communicated in a couple of paragraphs. If the premises are fatally flawed, then dealing with all of the elaborations is not necessary. — Wayfarer
If pointing out obvious differences between radically different spheres of human activity is "petty," then I'm guilty as charged.This is really quite petty. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then, again, virtually any human activity whatsoever which requires even the slightest creative aspect would qualify as "art." Creativity may be a necessary condition of something's being "art" or "artistic," but it doesn't follow that it's a sufficient condition."Art" is a very general term. Yes, the aim of art is to create, but there is no limit to the number of different things which artists aim to create. If some artists aim to create explanations, how is that creative act, as a creative act, essentially different from the creative act which aims to produce a building, a bridge, a computer, a car, a movie, a piece of music, or a painting? These are all acts of human creativity, artistry.
I think you have a poor ability to read, as I at least twice acknowledged that artists strive for "accuracy" in trying to realize their mental vision of a piece when they actualize it in the creative process (though even this is not a hard-and-fast rule, as it does not allow for spontaneous changes to a piece which the artist hadn't originally conceived of). If that is all that is meant by "accuracy," with regard to the arts, I'm on board. But you and John seem to adhere to some stronger notion of the term.In agreement with John, I think you have a poor understanding of the act of composing music. There is an idea within the composer's mind, and the composer must reproduce that idea in musical notes. The effort is in producing the required musical notes, memorizing it, and building on it. The writing down is an aid to memorizing the parts. Sure, one could compose a piece of music, simply by writing it, according to a mathematical formula or something, but this would be a lifeless piece of music. The real act of composing is to bring an idea from the mind into the realm of musical tones.
What's the "mark"?As I already explained, "accuracy" in the case of the arts consists in 'hitting the mark'. — John
A painting or drawing of the Statue of Liberty which adequately resembles the Statue of Liberty is an "accurate" representation of that object. Saying that J.S. Mill was a utilitarian is an "accurate" description of his position on ethics. Saying that Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in Ford's Theater is an "accurate" statement about history.Perhaps you could provide some concrete examples that show the way you want to use the term. "A statement or representation's degree of conformity to its object of reference" seems impossibly vague except in the most prosaic, mundane or everyday contexts.
Nice try, but we're not going all the way back to the video. I didn't watch the video, but nor did I comment on it, much less condemn it.I notice that none of what you've said on this thread pertains to the video that is about. Can I presume you've already discounted what's likely to be in it, as it is by a minister of religion? — Wayfarer
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