Perhaps. But, since this is a philosophical forum, I'm referring to the position defined in the quote below. So, there's not much distinction between them. :smile:-Two issues. Naturalism is not one thing. Science is based on Methodological Naturalism..not Philosophical Naturalism. — Nickolasgaspar
I have been surprised at how many prominent scientists have referred to the BB as a "creation event". You can Google some of their quotes. :smile:Now, In science the big bang event is not labeled as "creation"
(since it would imply extra agencies) but as "formation" so there was no real shock caused by that observation. — Nickolasgaspar
I assume your comment got [1] & [2] backward. :wink:- [1] Anthropic principles and [2] statistical probabilities are not even in the same ball park. The first is a conclusion based on available facts and the second presupposes teleology and purpose behind a creation.(fallacy). — Nickolasgaspar
-Well the definition is wrong or vague at best. First of all there isn't such a thing as A scientific method. There are many methodologies in science and the limits and standards are defined by Methodological Naturalism. Secondly it doesn't distinguishes the two main types of Naturalism. (ontological as a worldview vs methodological as an acknowledgement of our epistemic limitations)Perhaps. But, since this is a philosophical forum, I'm referring to the position defined in the quote below. So, there's not much distinction between them. :smile: — Gnomon
The quote referred to "scientific method[s}" to contrast with "philosophical methods". Note, I added the "s" to improve the parallel, and to make you feel better. :joke:-Well the definition is wrong or vague at best. First of all there isn't such a thing as A scientific method. — Nickolasgaspar
On what basis do you make that factual claim?The fact is that the formation of the universe was not a creation act...at least we can not make that claim. — Nickolasgaspar
Yes, But I also see the acknowledgement that the BB could be construed as a creation event. Which is why Einstein, among others, resisted the idea. He had assumed that the universe was self-existent. But was forced to change his mind. Some scientists quibbled that the BB was not an "explosion in space" but an "expansion of space'. But even that clarification avoided the issue of how space came to be. Had it always existed somewhere in the Great Beyond, or was it "created" from nothing? Since I know nothing about the Great Before, like most non-specialists, I accept the BB philosophically & metaphorically as a "creation event". Besides, all other pre-BB explanations, such as Multiverses, are also Creation Myths. :smile:-Cherry picking on Stephen's poetic irony? You do see the irony in his words.....don't you??? — Nickolasgaspar
Apparently, you are going to place everything in this topic backwards. Are you just being contrarian? :cool:indeed, I placed them backwards. — Nickolasgaspar
The quote referred to "scientific method[s}" to contrast with "philosophical methods". Note, I added the "s" to improve the parallel, and to make you feel better. — Gnomon
“The basic laws of the universe are simple, but because our senses are limited, we can't grasp them. There is a pattern in creation.”
___A. Einstein
https://www.azquotes.com/author/4399-Albert_Einstein/tag/creation
"The Big Bang Is Hard Science. It Is Also a Creation Story."
___Barry Powell
indeed, I placed them backwards. — Nickolasgaspar — Gnomon
concept of God — Jack Cummins
Richard Dawkins: Science and religion are incompatible. That's his mantra. Emphasizes Darwin's theory of evolution, and pits it against religious creationism — Agent Smith
New atheism : evangelical :: old atheism : philosophical. — 180 Proof
Identifying the issues religions cause is a philosophical endeavor! — Nickolasgaspar
-because wheels don't work with staircases.....Our reasoning improves along with the available factsOriginality is not something I'm known for. Plus, why reinvent the wheel. Tried and tested theories are preferrable to novel ideas that haven't been vetted by experts/veterans, oui? — Agent Smith
-Atheism and certainty of claim...is like like saying the best way to cook burgers is with your freezer.As for atheism, the certainty of the claim makes me cringe, it doesn't sit well with the skeptic in me. — Agent Smith
I never could wrap my head around the claim that atheism is a lack of belief and therefore, these very same atheists go on to say, the onus probandi falls not on 'em. — Agent Smith
What is atheism, how shall we, in one statement, condense their viewpoint? It can't be "God doesn't exist. for the simple reason that that's a knowledge claim and ergo, needs to be proved. — Agent Smith
Null Hypotheses — Nickolasgaspar
What "certainty"? For most atheists, at minimum, it's a probabilistic (i.e. falliblistic) belief warranted by (some or all versions of) theism's lack of corroborating evidence, or sound arguments, in contrast to ubiquitous counter-evidences from comparative philosophies, comparative histories, as well as natural and social sciences. At minimum, theism is a belief consisting of claims about "God", etc the truths of which are highly improbable in the context of all we know (so far) about nature and human existence. "Certainty" is a canard, Smith. One simply says to a theist, in effect, "How do you know there is a God?", which is quintessentially a skeptical question, and the rest follows from her non/answer.As for atheism, the certainty of the claim makes me cringe ... — Agent Smith
-And my position is that both paradigm are pseudo philosophical since none of them can produce wise claims(philosophical) that can bring change in our life and expand our understanding.What I'm saying is that one's paradigm determines if God or the universe seem self evident or not to you. It goes deeper than belief or unbelief. Than proof or lack of proof. — Yohan
As for atheism, the certainty of the claim makes me cringe ...
— Agent Smith
What "certainty"? For most atheists, at minimum, it's a probabilistic (i.e. falliblistic) belief warranted by (some or all versions of) theism's lack of corroborating evidence, or sound arguments in contrast to ubiquitous counter-evidences from comparative philosophies, comparative histories, as well as natural and social sciences. At minimum, theism is a belief consisting of claims about "God", etc the truths of which are highly improbable in the context of all we know (so far) about nature and human existence. "Certainty" is a canard, Smith. One simply says to a theist, in effect, "How do you know there is a God?", which is quintessentially a skeptical question, and thecrest follows from her non/answer. — 180 Proof
I'll just point-out that I'm not making a scientific case. Besides, Atheism is a belief in Absentia. It is not based on scientific facts, but on the absence of physical evidence, which is literally & figuratively immaterial to a metaphysical concept. By "meta-physical" I refer to that which is non-physical (e.g. mental ; cultural), hence immaterial to scientific methods, which specifically eschews subjective phenomenology (personal experience).-Again posting poetic takes on metaphysics by scientists doesn't help your case. — Nickolasgaspar
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