If there was a reason for posting that wikipedia entry on Lemaître, I'm missing it. — counterpunch
My point in pursuing this is to show that faith is neither exclusive to religion, nor the absence of either doubt nor reason, but certainty. It may be slightly tangential, but how we respond to uncertainty is nevertheless important to understand in this discussion ‘in praise of science’. — Possibility
What one ought do is decided by interacting with other people — Banno
Well, then, if you're such a proponent of the just world hypothesis, then you must never criticize anyone or anything or object to anything. Everything is happening exactly as it sould be happening and everyone gets what they deserve, right?She created the situation, and deserved everything she got. — counterpunch
Meh, it's convenient to think of others as "uncritically accepting everything without question", innit? Makes one feel all warm and fuzzy inside!I can't understand the mindset of people who uncritically accept everything without question. — fishfry
It was a response to your mentioning of the fact that Lemaitre published his thesis in 1927. What was the point you were making with that reference? That it took until 2014 for the Catholic Church to recognise his theory? — Wayfarer
Leaving aside for the moment that the use of hormonal contraceptives (which are generally preferred) makes STI's have a field day 24/7, 365 days/year --Religious groups have restricted the use of contraceptives to control population growth and the spread of disease. There has been opposition to medical research and technologies that make use embryonic stem cells. — Fooloso4
↪counterpunch
I think we're done, Counterpunch - we're plainly just talking past one another.
— Wayfarer — Banno
Introspection? What one ought do is decided by interacting with other people, not by navel-gazing.
You're being misled by your focus on the subjective, again. — Banno
Well, then, if you're such a proponent of the just world hypothesis, — baker
Except that that time never comes.Your time to protest will come later. — counterpunch
I said that? Where? In your mind?She made it hard, she refused to wear a mask, she resisted arrest - and she got tased. You said, she got tased for not wearing a mask. That's not true, is it? She got tased for resisting arrest.
You're passionate about this, but I don't think I properly understand your point. I'm not trying to be a dick, and I am interested in these kinds of arguments, but do you think you could summarise your main argument in some dot points? Forgive me if this is wrong. You seem to be saying that science has been strategically deprived of spirituality (you use the word religion). As a consequence of this, science is robbed of its capacity to integrate our understanding of facts and our understanding of... god? How would science work better in your view? — Tom Storm
How did you come upon these ideas? — Tom Storm
I'm not sure I understand properly the nature of the split between scientific technology and religion. Are you arguing that science is driven by crass material gain and disrespect for nature and this would not have happened if religion had not opposed it? — Tom Storm
Descartes however, wet his pants - and concocted a skeptical argument for subjectivism to flatter the Church's emphasis of the spiritual over the mundane — counterpunch
Descartes' doubt gave him the cover to doubt the authority of the Church. — Fooloso4
If Descartes doubted the authority of the Church, he was very quiet about it, and no-one heard him. — counterpunch
I ran across a video of a woman being tased for refusing to put on a mask. — fishfry
Fauci finally admitted that covid might have a lab origin. — fishfry
This morning The Federalist ran a long piece about how sensible independent thought regarding the origin of covid was systematically suppressed. — fishfry
Most of what comes from our authorities these days is absolute bullshit. I can't understand the mindset of people who uncritically accept everything without question. — fishfry
You misunderstood my point. The Church was the final authority on all matters philosophical and scientific. To challenge this authority was to risk the fate of Galileo. Descartes begins by doubting everything, which means doubting the teachings of the Church. He replaces the authority of the Church with the authority of the thinking self and reason — Fooloso4
because you're wrong, and offer no evidence, or even argument that you're right — counterpunch
Archimedes, in order that he might draw the terrestrial globe out of its place, and transport it elsewhere, demanded only that one point should be fixed and immoveable; in the same way I shall have the right to conceive high hopes if I am happy enough to discover one thing only which is certain
and indubitable.
But how can I know there is not something different from those things that I have just considered, of which one cannot have the slightest doubt? Is there not some God, or some other being by name we call it, who puts these reflections into my mind? That is not necessary, for is it not possible that I am capable of producing them myself?
I myself, am I not at least something?
But what then am I? A thing which thinks.
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