Problem is that you know only your own conscious experience and how you interpret that as constituting evidence for any belief, and can only guess at the nature of the conscious experience of others and how they might interpret that as constituting evidence for any belief. — Janus
A believable conscious spiritual experience is when it occurs to many different people throughout the ages. We don’t use induction in this domain. We use abduction. — Noah Te Stroete
Well, I’m not a physicalist. — Noah Te Stroete
I must rely on my conscious experience for some beliefs. This conscious experience may not give rise to predictions about the physical world or discover any laws about itself, but that’s not the same domain. — Noah Te Stroete
Well, as a Hume scholar yourself, you already know that induction, the basis of science, is nothing more than habit. Habit, wishful thinking... pick your poison. — Noah Te Stroete
Furthermore, and I don’t have the statistics to say what percentage of experiments fall into this category, but many experiments are not repeatable. — Noah Te Stroete
I already know that you are, and have been for as long as I have "known" you, "asleep at the wheel", so there's no need for you to declare it. — Janus
The epistemic standard for investigating the physical world is grounded in sense data. Couldn’t the epistemic standard for investigating the spiritual be grounded in conscious experience? If not, please explain. — Noah Te Stroete
Care to back up this analogy with an argument? — Noah Te Stroete
This epistemic standard only deals with the physical world, and almost all of the people who were responsible for the Enlightenment were believers in God. — Noah Te Stroete
And what is “the spirit of the scientific method?” And why should people value it? — Noah Te Stroete
There are many scientists who are religious. — Janus
Science cannot answer everything, and any scientist worth his salt knows this. One can believe anything one wants when it comes to things science cannot deal with. — Noah Te Stroete
Yeah, of course I am wrong because you must be right!
You are responding like someone who thinks there is an objective or absolute law where there is none. You should know by now that I do not have any sympathy for any kind of fundamentalism including the kind of scientism you are espousing. — Janus
It's not a metaphor for "something else", but a metaphor for that which it truly is. — WerMaat
Would you say that I'm lying, that I cannot point to little bits of plastic and say "that's a planet", this is obviously false? — WerMaat
The mythology and the images of the gods - that's my model, the representation. The divine being behind it is more vast and abstract. — WerMaat
There's nothing in the scientific method that says anything about what to believe about subjects which fall outside the purview of science. — Janus
In what respect wrong? It's you who are confused about Christian belief. Make your case or just - you know. Or, more politely, put up or shut up. — tim wood
All that demonstrates is an incompatibility between the mind-set of faith and the mind-set of skepticism when it comes to questions that are not within the purview of science; it indicates no inherent incompatibility between science and religion (or Christianity in this case). — Janus
A subject that is unanswerable by the scientific method, but that brings us to the “hard problem,” and I’m not interested in having that debate here. — Noah Te Stroete
It’s my personal preference which isn’t subject to the scientific method, nor is it inconsistent with science. — Noah Te Stroete
Well, for me whatever causes our conscious experience which made the laws of nature discoverable is what I call “God.” I suppose I don’t need to call it that. I could call it “Sally.” — Noah Te Stroete
If you're a Christian, for example, then that means that you have a set of key beliefs, or things you'd claim to be true.
— S
So, you claim to speak for all Christians? (And take note that the OP is not specifically about the compatibility of science with Christianity). — Janus
The point about metaphor in religion is that religious ideas such as the resurrection of Christ need not be taken literally, and if they are not, then there is no coherent question about their compatibility with science. (Even on a literal interpretation that Christ's resurrection actually took place, and is thus to be considered an empirical event; it is not an event that science could investigate, since it took place 2000 years ago). Same goes for most of history, in fact.
Most religions, whether primitive, ancient or modern, think the existence of spiritual beings. Since the existence of spiritual beings, or the spirituality of empirical beings is not a question science can either ask or answer, there would seem to be no inherent incompatibility between science and religion. — Janus
Most religions, whether primitive, ancient or modern, think the existence of spiritual beings. Since the existence of spiritual beings, or the spirituality of empirical beings is not a question science can either ask or answer, there would seem to be no inherent incompatibility between science and religion. — Janus
You're apparently using Abrahamic religion as your only point of reference.
I don't have any "scripture" at all, as my religion is not a revealed religion.
We have an abundance of religious texts and mythology, but all of these we acknowledge as being written by human beings. There may be bits of divine revelation among those texts, but we have no method nor any desire to hunt for those bits, because this is not the point.
Mythology is meant to be metaphorical, and our conceptions of gods and goddesses are naturally allegorical. The aim of myth is to give us a framework of meaning and reference to understand our place in the world. And myth teaches us useful insights by pointing out certain archetypes and structures. — WerMaat
I personally believe that the gods and goddesses exist, that I can interact with them in meaningful ways and that one of them created our world (ok, more like three of them, but it's complicated :grin: ) Therefore: Theist. (Polytheist, to be precise) — WerMaat
No. In the informal usage of the ignorant it may sometimes seem to, but they misspeak, and in misspeaking their speaking is not the speaking of Christianity. Claims made by Christians are claims as matters of faith and belief - and that is all. No science, no claim of truth, except in misspeaking faith. That is, correctly understood, there is no discussion of merit here. — tim wood
Do you think that consistency has anything to do with coherency? Some do. — Noah Te Stroete
And a belief in a god or the supernatural cannot be justified by the scientific method. That doesn’t mean that belief is inconsistent with science. (Again, using “inconsistent” in the strict epistemological sense.) — Noah Te Stroete
For example, it is not possible to determine if the Battle of Waterloo took place in 1815 using the method of experimental testing. The question is simply part of another epistemic domain, i.e. the historical method, and can only be handled by corroborating witness depositions. — alcontali
Therefore, scientism is an irritating absurdity:
Scientism is an ideology that promotes science as the only objective means by which society should determine normative and epistemological values. The term scientism is generally used critically, pointing to the cosmetic application of science in unwarranted situations not amenable to application of the scientific method or similar scientific standards. — alcontali
Science and religion are different domains, that's all. — Pantagruel
According to science, the scientific method, there is insufficient evidence to support the proposition that there is a god. That is to say, conclusions that there is a god are not scientific.
The two are not compatible.
Its not that complex. Just because someone believes in science and believes in god doesn't mean the two are compatible. Its called cognitive dissonance I believe.
If science is your standard, you cannot believe in god. If you have some other standard, “faith” probably, then have it but it isnt science. Thats it. Simple.
And to those discussing the open mindedness, perhaps some knows who said this (rough paraphrase) “do not have a mind so open that your brain falls out”. Also, the traits you specify scientists possess apply to the wider population. Its a human thing, not a scientist thing. — DingoJones
Descartes is the father of methodological skepticism, of the strictest kind. And he was a devout Catholic. Maybe it just requires exceptional abilities. — Pantagruel
"Core claims in Christianity"
This would be the fallacy of overgeneralization. Christianity is not religion, any more than you are "humanity."
The topic is not "Are science and scripture compatible" or "Are science and Christianity compatible". — Pantagruel
Sure, but there the core claims do not contradict science. — Coben
Hmmm. Your definition is the one I am using. It clearly has nothing to do with scriptures? Are you feeling ok? Dizzy or anything? — Pantagruel
You don't get to make up your own definitions. Theism is what it is. Your definition is convenient to your argument. True Scotsman. — Pantagruel
You are attempting to equivocate scripture and theism. — Pantagruel
Now you are just committing multiple fallacies. Red herring, equivocation.
The definition of theism is belief in the existence of a deity. Scriptures do not even enter into the definition of theism. Is that succinct enough for you?
Sorry to be curt, but this is getting kind of childish. — Pantagruel