Well no scientific conclusion can be verified - they can just be falsified. I believe reality is rational - thus the scientific conclusion in question has to fit in with everything else we know, just like a specific piece fits in a puzzle. So that is at minimum a condition I expect all scientific hypotheses to meet. If someone brings up the hypothesis that eating grass cures testicular cancer - well then I will dismiss it out of hand, because (1) a mechanism through which such a cure is achieved isn't provided, and (2) it disagrees with all the background knowledge we do have.Could you accept a scientific theory whose conclusions can't be verified experimentally, but which is satisfying by virtue of the number of loose ends it ties up? — Mongrel
Depends on the particular situation, I don't have a set of rules which would always apply, simply because there are too many variables involved. Generally if I disagree with a certain research and its conclusions, I will either disagree in its interpretation, or I will pinpoint some defects that have to do with its methodology. It is quite easy to engineer a result if you need it through your research method.And what about research whose conclusion defies what makes the most sense to you? — Mongrel
No. The universe, for me, consists of physics, and stuff amenable to physical investigation. Existence is larger than just this however. Nothing - no scientific conclusion - has anything to do with religion. All that it has to do with is the physical world. Regardless of what the physical world is like, the other realms of experience are left unchanged - hence meta-physics - valid for all physics.Cool, thanks! This question might seem to be coming out of left field, but it's related to stuff I've been pondering lately. Does God or divinity play a role in your thinking about the universe? — Mongrel
Existence contains non-physical elements (which are objective - they really do exist - contrary to what some are inclined to think) - meaning, love, hope, value, etc (as well as the universe). The universe contains physical objects - chairs, atoms, houses, bodies, etc.Could you expand on this? I'm not quite understanding. — Mongrel
I agree with Aristotle about most things - forms are immanent. But the Neo-Platonists also have a point about Forms which are transcendent - don't have an object in this world.For me, you are performing an incoherent separation here. "Meaning, love, hope, value" are not in things in the sense of "being contained' by them, but in the sense of being inherent in them. — John
Immanent also has connotations of meaning something that can become another object for you. Something is immanent - it can be an object to a subject. God cannot be an object to a subject. Therefore God is not immanent.This is just what it means to say that God is immanent, 'right here with us', as opposed to transcendent ' impossibly distant from us' — John
The end of history is immanent? Where is it? I don't see an end anywhere. That's precisely what is meant by transcendence. The "end" that you speak of never occurs - not in this immanent sense. There will never be an "end of history" or "end of the world" in this sense. The transcendent end - that is a different story, and Voegelin does agree with a largely Augustinian historiography which separates the City of Man from the City of God.So, to refer back to our other discussion it is not a matter of "immanentizing the eschaton"; the eschaton is inherently immanent, and how could it be intelligibly otherwise? — John
Strictly speaking, the sorts of things he is talking about do not exist at all. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I agree with Aristotle about most things - forms are immanent. But the Neo-Platonists also have a point about Forms which are transcendent - don't have an object in this world. — Agustino
Immanent also has connotations of meaning something that can become another object for you. Something is immanent - it can be an object to a subject. God cannot be an object to a subject. Therefore God is not immanent. — Agustino
The end of history is immanent? Where is it? I don't see an end anywhere. That's precisely what is meant by transcendence. The "end" that you speak of never occurs - not in this immanent sense. There will never be an "end of history" or "end of the world" in this sense. The transcendent end - that is a different story, and Voegelin does agree with a largely Augustinian historiography which separates the City of Man from the City of God. — Agustino
Do you easily and naturally believe that the outcome of a thought experiment can tell you something important about the world? If so, you, along with Leibniz, Newton, Spinoza, and Einstein (among others) lean toward rationalism.
Do you tend to squint an eye at grand theories and prefer instead to be guided by good quality studies and experimentation? Then you, along with most doctors, engineers, and John Locke, lean toward empiricism. — Mongrel
I suppose I lean towards empiricism. I'm a simple peasant and I like evidence that can be cut and dried. Rationalism is probably way over my head. — Bitter Crank
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