If you agree with the logic of the argument I've presented then yes. If not, why not? — Wayfarer
Perhaps we do perpetually inhabit the present, but we arguably only experience the past, given that our sensory organs and brain require a nonzero amount of time in which to receive and process information from our environment. We experience the world not as it is, but as it was.We perpetually inhabit the present - the past is unobservable. — dukkha
Perhaps you're thinking of Laboratory Life by Latour and Woolgar.There was also a super awesome book that I forget the title and author of now (herhaps someone will know?), but it was written by a journalist, about the history of scientists themselves, what quirky crazy fucks most of them were, and how much infighting posturing, and tribalism is present among scientists, for some reason I remember the author being on a plain... or something... but anyway, it was a sweet counter-balance to the distancing/denotative/former language scientists like to use by focusing on the people themselves. — Wosret
I doubt that Behe and company also look to ID to "validate" their belief in God. They likely believed in God long before the ID movement began. They probably believe in God for the same reason(s) that most anyone else believes in it. They use irreducible complexity and the other accoutrements of ID to try to convince others, including (presumably) nonbelievers.So, believers believe. But unlike intelligent design proponents, Catholics don't look to science to validate that belief. — Wayfarer
But when someone deploys the cosmological argument for God's existence (or really any argument whatsoever), they do so with the intent to prove (deductively) or make probable (inductively or abductively) the conclusion of their argument, i.e. the existence of God. That's what arguments are for: they're intended to convert. Whether Thomists believe that God can be "known" through faith alone, they also believe that God's existence can be demonstrated by appeals to observable features of the universe. They thereby appeal to empiricism, in other words, something you've claimed that "real" believers don't do.Aquinas's theological proofs of God's existence were not intended as polemical devices to convert unbelievers, but as theological exercises for the faithful. Aquinas would always say that one must have faith at the outset.
Well, this is part of the problem with these families of arguments (the argument from design, the cosmological argument, etc), as pointed out by Hume and others: we have no experience with a range of universes, some of which are created and some which are uncreated, in order to calibrate our notions of designedness vs. lack of design. We have to muddle through with resort to analogies with manmade artifacts (clocks, watches, and the like).I personally find the cosmological argument philosophically persuasive, but I would never suggest it amounts to an empirical hypothesis. How could it? How could you empirically validate such an idea?
Then you and I have a different notion of empiricism and rationalism.The argument from design, including the ID incarnation, and the cosmological argument allege to explain empirically observable phenomena, but do not themselves entail any empirical consequences or predictions. They are, therefore, quintessentially rationalist--not empirical--arguments. — Brainglitch
Then you and I have a different notion of empiricism and rationalism. — Arkady
Because the arguments appeal to observable aspects of nature in order to bolster their case for the existence of God (as opposed to relying upon revelation or pure logic-chopping as with the ontological argument and its ilk), something Wayfarer claimed that "real" believers don't do.
Hypotheses or theories, not arguments make (or entail) testable predictions. Arguments simply purport to derive a conclusion from one or more premises, which is what those propounding the cosmological argument and the others attempt to do. — Arkady
The dispute in this thread is not about people's experiences, it's about the propositional claims--such as the existence and action of a supernatural agent source--of their experiences. — Brainglitch
The epistemic criteria for scientific claims typically require independently observable empirical corroboration, specifically rule out intervention by supernatural agents, and entail independently observable predictions. — "Brainglitch
Sure, we take the person's word for it that he had what he believes to have been a religious experience.One would first accept some sort of validity to the religious experiences described, as a premiss to a claim, if that were the basis of the dispute. — mcdoodle
Perhaps idealized, but I think the vast majority of established scientific claims satisfy those criteria. That's how they got to be "established."Isn't this an idealised version of scientific claims? I'm just studying a module on metaphysics of mind, for instance, where the claims for 'physicalism' and 'causal closure of the physical' are extrapolations from metaphysical claims arising from studies other than the one in hand. This is not to knock extrapolation as such: i we weren't often using extrapolation, in biology for instance, we'd never get things done. — mcdoodle
Sure, we take the person's word for it that he had what he believes to have been a religious experience. — Brainglitch
If science has 'no jurisdiction' when it comes to religion, then why is it okay for religion to stick it's oar in on science? — Sapientia
Then perhaps what you should do is realise that evolutionary biology, palaeontology, and other branches of science, are not a matter for religion. — Sapientia
Yet you, on the other hand, accept the conflict thesis. Trying to have it both ways? — Sapientia
it's nice to see you concede, rather than evade. — Sapientia
How does one validate any idea except empirically? — Harry Hindu
Like the "Complex Design" argument that says that complex designs require a designer, it creates an infinite regress — Harry Hindu
written by a journalist, about the history of scientists themselves... — Wosret
I'm a hardline atheist but mostly in Wayfarer's corner. — McDoodle
we have no experience with a range of universes, some of which are created and some which are uncreated, in order to calibrate our notions of designedness vs. lack of design. — Arkady
A remarkable fact about our universe is that physical constants have just the right values needed to allow for complex structures, including living things. Steven Weinberg, Martin Rees, Leonard Susskind and others contend that an exotic multiverse provides a tidy explanation for this apparent coincidence: if all possible values occur in a large enough collection of universes, then viable ones for life will surely be found somewhere. This reasoning has been applied, in particular, to explaining the density of the dark energy that is speeding up the expansion of the universe today. I agree that the multiverse is a possible valid explanation for the value of this density; arguably, it is the only scientifically based option we have right now. But we have no hope of testing it observationally. Additionally, most analyses of the issue assume the basic equations of physics are the same everywhere, with only the constants differing--but if one takes the multiverse seriously, this need not be so [see "Looking for Life in the Multiverse," by Alejandro Jenkins and Gilad Perez; SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, January 2010].
In order to be epistemically consistent, a scientist's religious beliefs would have to satisfy the same criteria he requires his science claims to satisfy. — Brainglitch
(Wikipedia).Vera Rubin is an American astronomer who pioneered work on galaxy rotation rates. She uncovered the discrepancy between the predicted angular motion of galaxies and the observed motion, by studying galactic rotation curves. This phenomenon became known as the galaxy rotation problem. Although initially met with skepticism, Rubin's results have been confirmed over the subsequent decades. Attempts to explain the galaxy rotation problem led to the theory of dark matter.
...
Rubin is an observant Jew, and sees no conflict between science and religion. In an interview, she stated: "In my own life, my science and my religion are separate. I'm Jewish, and so religion to me is a kind of moral code and a kind of history. I try to do my science in a moral way, and, I believe that, ideally, science should be looked upon as something that helps us understand our role in the universe.
It isn't but it can point out the ways that moral judgements made on ostensibly scientific grounds have overstepped the mark. — Wayfarer
They're not, but when they are used to define human identity, then again, they're no longer simply scientific judgements. To say that they are, would be rather like saying that your medical records constitute your biography. — Wayfarer
I don't accept a necessary conflict between religion and science. I think there's an obvious conflict between scientific materialism and religious fundamentalism. — Wayfarer
I haven't been 'evading' anything, although my meaning often seems to be misunderstood. — Wayfarer
Dawkins’ narrowmindedness, his unshakeable belief that the entire history of human intellectual achievement was just a prelude to the codification of scientific inquiry, leads him to dismiss the insights offered not only by theology, but philosophy, history and art as well.
To him, the humanities are expendable window-dressing, and the consciousness and emotions of his fellow human beings are byproducts of natural selection that frequently hobble his pursuit and dissemination of cold, hard facts. His orientation toward the world is the product of a classic category mistake, but because he’s nestled inside it so snugly he perceives complex concepts outside of his understanding as meaningless dribble. If he can’t see it, then it doesn’t exist, and anyone trying to describe it to him is delusional and possibly dangerous.
Actually, it's that you don't understand that one cannot exist without the other. The rationalist vs. empiricist shouldn't be arguing, they should be working together - just like our senses and our brains.How does one validate any idea except empirically? — Harry Hindu
From what I have read of your posts, you don't understand the distinction between empirical and a priori, which is philosophy 101. — Wayfarer
In other words, you can just make stuff up that can't be falsified or validated and it should be accepted to be as valid as any other idea that has been falsified and validated.Like the "Complex Design" argument that says that complex designs require a designer, it creates an infinite regress — Harry Hindu
Not if the first cause is defined as an 'uncreated creator' - but you had better get your head around the other point first. — Wayfarer
Conflict between science and religious fundamentalism arises over conflicting explanations for certain phenomena--such as species, in the current ID v evolution dispute. But there are other conflicts, and they're not limited to fundamentalism.I don't accept a necessary conflict between religion and science. I think there's an obvious conflict between scientific materialism and religious fundamentalism. — Wayfarer
In other words, you can just make stuff up — Harry Hindu
Conflict arises whenever science proposes naturalistic explanations for phenomena that religion explains via supernatural agency of some kind. — BrainGlitche
~WikipediaThe "conflict thesis" is a historiographical approach in the history of science which maintains that there is an intrinsic intellectual conflict between religion and science and that the relationship between religion and science inevitably leads to public hostility. The thesis retains support among some scientists and in the public, while most historians of science do not support the original strict form of the thesis.
If naturalistic explanations cannot explain something, then what else is there besides (1) it goes unexplained, or (2) we subscribe to some hypothesis that's unverifiable, unfalsifiable, untestable, and offers no independebtly confirmable predictions--and provides no way, even in principle, to resolve dispute with other such unverifiable hypotheses that explain the matter differently?But on purely philosophical grounds it can be argued that 'naturalistic explanations' will never necessarily culminate in discovery of any kind of fundamental ground or first cause for the phenomena we observe. — Wayfarer
Of course science is limited in scope, method and outcome.For instance, above, there was some debate about what 'scientific laws' are. What scientific laws are, is not a scientific question at all! There are some science popularisers around, like Lawrence Krauss, who appear not to realise this, and instead get themselves into a complete muddle attempting to explain how science explains everything (for which read David Albert's review of his book.) But the bottom line is that, science is limited in scope, method and outcome; it has to be, because scientific method operates by exclusion.
Right, science cannot identify, explain, or prove an asdolute good.Hence the deficiency of naturalism as a philosophy: it treats humans as only parts of nature, i.e. basically as a species. And then the only basis for ethical principles becomes one or another form of utilitarianism, what is 'useful' for that species in terms of surviving and getting along. Sam Harris has demonstrated that, in his forays into ethical philosophy (and kudos to him for trying.) But it amounts to declaring that the only real good is 'human floushing' because there is no conception of a higher or absolute good, knowledge of which is salvific, as found in all of the religous cultures; it can't encompass such ideas, for obvious reasons.
Conflict between science and religious fundamentalism arises over conflicting explanations for certain phenomena--such as species, in the current ID v evolution dispute. But there are other conflicts, and they're not limited to fundamentalism.
Conflict arises whenever science proposes naturalistic explanations for phenomena that religion explains via supernatural agency of some kind. — Brainglitch
Right, science cannot identify, explain, or prove an asdolute good.
And neither can you or anybody else. You can just express your opinion, your own value judgement that something is an absolute good. And your defense of your belief can consist in nothing more than reasoned argument--which, by the way, is also part of what science does. — Brainglitch
If naturalistic explanations cannot explain something, then what else is there besides (1) it goes unexplained, or (2) we subscribe to some hypothesis that's unverifiable, unfalsifiable, untestable, and offers no independebtly confirmable predictions--and provides no way, even in principle, to resolve dispute with other such unverifiable hypotheses that explain the matter differently? — BrainGlitch
You can just express your opinion, your own value judgement that something is an absolute good. — BrainGlitch
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