AmadeusD
Esse Quam Videri
Truth Seeker
Esse Quam Videri
Both religious and secular people have caused suffering and death in massive amounts. My thesis is that sacralized authority structures are risky wherever they appear. — Truth Seeker
Ecurb
Truth Seeker
AmadeusD
Methods don’t contradict each other or anything else — they constrain belief-formation. That’s not the same category. — Esse Quam Videri
Calling religious reformers “outliers” just builds the conclusion into the premise. — Esse Quam Videri
Ecurb
Consciousness arises from neurological activities, not supernatural souls.
Therefore, while religious faiths differ irreconcilably in beliefs, scientific cosmology and biology converge on a single evidence-based worldview - one that continues to expand through discovery rather than divine decree. Hence, my worldview is scientific, secular and vegan. What is your worldview? How do you justify your worldview? — Truth Seeker
The problem arises when myth is allowed to dictate ontology or moral authority, rather than being interpreted in light of what we know about sentient beings and suffering. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Esse Quam Videri
haha. It's funny you think this runs for your point - It runs exactly for mine — AmadeusD
Secular view points aren't "incoherent" because they don't all claim metaphysical primacy. — AmadeusD
Calling religious reformers “outliers” just builds the conclusion into the premise.
— Esse Quam Videri
They are. That isn't my opinion. They are outliers. Religions are definitionally (most of them) unopen to revision because they are revelatory. This isn't controversial. — AmadeusD
Ecurb
What kinds of things exist?
How do we know what is true?
What constrains our beliefs?
A scientific worldview holds that:
Claims about reality must be answerable to evidence.
Explanations should be non-arbitrary, publicly testable, and revisable.
Appeals to authority, tradition, or revelation do not override evidence. — Truth Seeker
But once you care about suffering and flourishing, science tells you:
which actions increase harm,
which reduce it,
which beliefs reliably misfire,
which social systems systematically damage lives. — Truth Seeker
Culture is not “supernatural” — and calling it that smuggles theology back in. — Truth Seeker
But again, the Eden myth frames knowledge as forbidden. — Truth Seeker
But moral insight has progressed: — Truth Seeker
Compassion comes from empathy. As a vegan, I insist that moral concern extend to all sentient beings. — Truth Seeker
AmadeusD
Their adherents routinely treat them as ultimate frameworks — Esse Quam Videri
'm pointing out that you are overlooking the simple historical fact that religions do revise—slowly, unevenly, and often under pressure — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
These are not metaphysical positions my guy. My point is still as strong as ever. — AmadeusD
And are almost routinely vilified for such. They are definitionally unopen to review, being revelatory. This is not contentious. — AmadeusD
Truth Seeker
Ecurb
No serious defender of a scientific worldview denies the existence of:
ideas,
ideals,
fiction,
mathematics.
What is denied is something very specific: that these entities have causal or moral authority independent of sentient experience and empirical constraint.
Ideas exist as patterns instantiated in minds.
Fiction exists as structured imagination.
Mathematics exists as an abstract formal system.
None of this contradicts a scientific worldview. It depends on it. — Truth Seeker
Mathematics is formal, not empirical.
Science is empirical, not formal.
They are complementary, not contradictory. — Truth Seeker
Joy, freedom, adventure — all are compatible with this framework. — Truth Seeker
Culture is not “supernatural” in any philosophically useful sense. — Truth Seeker
Perhaps God prefers those who eat from the tree. — Truth Seeker
No worldview is morally serious if it refuses to let facts about suffering, harm, and flourishing constrain its values.
Myth can inspire.
Culture can shape.
Art can console.
But none of them get to excuse avoidable suffering. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Ecurb
But none of them get to sanctify harm — not by age, not by beauty, not by poetry, not by romance. — Truth Seeker
If suffering disappeared tomorrow, we would not mourn the loss of cruelty to give courage meaning. — Truth Seeker
“When beliefs make contact with reality, consequences, or harm, they must answer to evidence.” — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
180 Proof
Again, well said! :clap:A scientific worldview is not a replacement philosophy.
It is a constraint on all branches.
Metaphysics: claims must cohere with what exists.
Epistemology: beliefs must track reliable methods.
Ethics: values must respect consequences for sentient beings.
Logic: reasoning must be valid.
Aesthetics: meaning does not trump harm.
Religion attempts to address all five — yes.
But attempting everything does not equal succeeding at anything.
A worldview that addresses everything but refuses correction is not noble — it is insulated through belief. — Truth Seeker
AmadeusD
Again, missing the point. I'm not denying what you think I'm denying. — Esse Quam Videri
Ecurb
Meaning does not require victims.
Courage does not require cruelty.
And suffering does not become sacred just because humans are good at telling stories about it.
That position is not negative.
It is compassionate, coherent, and fully compatible with depth, adventure, and love.
What it refuses is the one thing you keep trying to smuggle back in:
The idea that suffering deserves reverence simply because it exists. — Truth Seeker
Ecurb
A scientific worldview is not a replacement philosophy.
It is a constraint on all branches. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Ecurb
If by worldview you mean:
a comprehensive source of meaning, value, love, beauty, and guidance for how to live, — Truth Seeker
When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer
By Walt Whitman
When I heard the learn’d astronomer,
When the proofs, the figures, were ranged in columns before me,
When I was shown the charts and diagrams, to add, divide, and measure them,
When I sitting heard the astronomer where he lectured with much applause in the lecture-room,
How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick,
Till rising and gliding out I wander’d off by myself,
In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time,
Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars.
Courage: 1) the ability to do something that frightens one; bravery:
"she called on all her courage to face the ordeal"
2) strength in the face of pain or grief
Truth Seeker
AmadeusD
I worry that romanticizing suffering drains victims of moral standing. — Truth Seeker
Ecurb
You worry that reducing suffering drains the world of meaning. — Truth Seeker
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