Indeed.I bet most religious folks I know would be unacquainted with that, too. — Terrapin Station
I have been trying to advocate a middle-path approach which is neither fundamentalist nor materialistic, apparently without success. — Wayfarer
Science cannot solve the ultimate mystery of nature. And that is because, in the last analysis, we ourselves are a part of the mystery that we are trying to solve. — Max Planck
I'm not an atheist. The problem involved is too vast for our limited minds. We are in the position of a little child entering a huge library filled with books in many languages. The child knows someone must have written these books. It does not know how. It does not understand the languages in which they are written. The child dimly suspects a mysterious order in the arrangement of the books but doesn't know what it is. That, it seems to me, is the attitude of even the most intelligent human being toward God. We see the universe marvelously arranged and obeying certain laws but only dimly understand these laws. — Albert Einstein
It's also very important to understand that far more Americans believe in God, than in the literal account of evolution. And I think this is a real problem - it is one of the indicators of the general decline in general critical thinking ability. But that is at least partially because the evangelical atheists - and you can't deny they exist - use the arguments we are discussing here to 'prove' that God doesn't exist. — Wayfarer
That summary is very misleading. From the article (bolding mine):Except for this current article (31 Oct 2016) on how Richard Dawkins Misrepresents Science, according to British scientists. — Wayfarer
No, I'm not blaming dogmatic atheists. — Wayfarer
It's also very important to understand that far more Americans believe in God, than in the literal account of evolution. And I think this is a real problem - it is one of the indicators of the general decline in general critical thinking ability. But that is at least partially because the evangelical atheists - and you can't deny they exist - use the arguments we are discussing here to 'prove' that God doesn't exist. — Wayfarer
But it is a fact that many Americans don't believe in evolution, and so arguing that 'science proves that God doesn't exist' is only going to be pouring fuel on the fire. — Wayfarer
Go back and read that citation I provided from Michael Ruse - he is an academic phillosopher and an articulate advocate for naturalism. It was Ruse who pointed it out. — Wayfarer
The OP referenced both 'conviction on the basis of religious experience' and 'Richard Dawkins'. So how is that 'a straw man'? — Wayfarer
But this is what Dawkins believes. What should he do: lie in order not to scare the rubes away? He's a scientist (or at least a science writer), not a politician. (By the way, you continually misrepresent Dawkins's view by saying he believes that science "proves" that God doesn't exist: for someone who's seemingly obsessed with his misrepresenting the notion of God and religious practice, you're notably sloppy in summarizing his positions.)But it is a fact that many Americans don't believe in evolution, and so arguing that 'science proves that God doesn't exist' is only going to be pouring fuel on the fire. — Wayfarer
Talk about taking things out of context! — Sapientia
But they think that religious belief does cause harm (Hitchens rather stridently thought that "religion poisoned everything")."People believe what you want, so long as you're not doing XYZ harm," let alone advocate the respect and prominence that people like Wayfarer want to give to religious belief. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Are you saying that science can or cannot prove whether a divine intelligence exists? Do you think if you pointed the Hubble Telescope in the right direction, you might find it? What would constitute 'evidence' in such a case? What, in fact, is at issue? — Wayfarer
"Talk about taking things out of context!"
— Sapientia
I am not saying 'dogmatic atheists are responsible for the non-acceptance of evolution by many Americans'. But I am saying, the Dawkins/Dennett/Coyne style of argument contributes to that, by making false claims that the empirical evidence proves the case one way or the other. — Wayfarer
The only thing that the fossil evidence proves is that biblical creationism can't be true. But if you've never believed biblical creationism to be true, then the fact that it's not true has no bearing on whether God exists or not. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer, I am with you all the way on this topic. I left a philosophy forum on fb because I grew very tired of the convoluted one way streets of many of the posts..the simplistic dogma's got so tedious..I got off fb altogether at the same time.. — David J
I am not saying 'dogmatic atheists are responsible for the non-acceptance of evolution by many Americans'. But I am saying, the Dawkins/Dennett/Coyne style of argument contributes to that, by making false claims that the empirical evidence proves the case one way or the other. — Wayfarer
The only thing that the fossil evidence proves is that biblical creationism can't be true. But if you've never believed biblical creationism to be true, then the fact that it's not true has no bearing on whether God exists or not.
if anything significant differentiates perception and hallucination, then it must be the perceived — Searle (paraphrased)
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