• Art48
    488
    Below is a rather long (51 minutes) video of mine that describes in detail how to integrate science and religion. Comments appreciated, here and/or on YouTube!

    108 - Religion 2.0 (Science+Religion)
    https://youtu.be/PvFNc_TuGxs

    Contents:
    1) Welcome!
    a. Alan Watts’ Quote
    b. What is a Worldview?
    2) Religion 1.0
    a. Question: What happens after I die?
    b. Question: Is Jesus God or just a prophet?
    c. Question: According to Christianity, how can I be saved?
    d. Religions diverge and have failed to find truth.
    e. How religions decide what is true
    f. Religion 1.0 and Science
    g. Why believe in God?
    h. What about Faith?
    3) The Perennial Philosophy
    a. Where religions intersect
    b. Aldous Huxley’s “The Perennial Philosophy”
    c. What is mysticism?
    d. Mystics speak the same language
    e. Essential ideas of the perennial philosophy
    4) Religion 2.0
    a. Fundamental idea: The cosmos is the manifestation of a Divine Ground
    b. Fundamental idea: The cosmos is the manifestation of a Divine Ground
    c. Fundamental idea: The cosmos is the manifestation of a Divine Ground
    d. Does calling the ground “Divine” (i.e., God) make sense?
    e. The Divine Ground is God, but not a God who is a Person
    f. Gods who are Persons are personification of the one, universal God
    g. Basic idea: 2. We can experience the Ground by a direct intuition
    h. Direct experience of the Divine Ground
    i. Basic idea: 3. Dual nature: transitory ego and a deeper, more enduring self
    j. Basic idea: 4. Life’s ultimate purpose: to identify with eternal Self, unitive knowledge
    5) Religion 2.0 and Science
    a. Are the four basic ideas testable and repeatable?
    b. Comparing Ontology (What Exists)
    c. Comparing Epistemology (How to determine what is true)
    d. Religion 1.0, Religion 2.0, and Science Compared
    e. Religion 2.0 as a scientific theory
    f. Conclusion: Religion 2.0 is compatible with science
    6) Consequences and Related Topics
    a. Does it matter?
    b. The Contemplative Way
    c. ogis and the Desert Fathers
    d. Morality (Contemplative Morality)
    e. Approaching God from within the world
    f. Eternal Life and Salvation
    g. Religion 1.0’s God are Personifications of the One
    h. Rituals, Ceremonies, Entheogens
    7) Afterword
  • alan1000
    210
    I respect the labour you have evidently put into this question, Art48, but before I invest 51 miinutes of my life in watching a video, I would like to see a summary in advance of how you have resolved the fundamental logical contradictions between the scientific and religious models of knowledge?

    1. In religion, it is the greatest virtue to cling faithfully to your belief, no matter how persuasive, seductive, or conclusive the counter-arguments may seem to be; in science, this is the greatest "sin".

    2. In religion, truth is absolute, incontrovertible, and underwritten by the revelation of a supernatural being; in science, there is no "truth"*, only a collection of approximations which seem to be reasonably applicable most of the time, but which may be overturned by fresh observations or insights at any moment.

    3. In science, a theory or hypothesis is valued according to two fundamental criteria: does it account for the presently-known data? And, does it form a basis for predicting the future? This is important; thanks to this model, we have doctors, government, and aeroplanes. Religious knowledge cannot account for the known data (unless we admit "That's just the way God made it', which is trivial and non-informative); nor can it predict the future, except insofar as this can be guaranteed by thoughts and prayers, or belief in Divine Retribution, or a Judgement Day, or some such concept, none of which can be demonstrated to have a useful predictive value.

    * I am speaking, of course, with regard to theory and hypothesis. Within a closed logical system such as mathematics, for example, it is possible to speak of a propostion as unconditionally true or false.
  • Prajna
    32
    In India science and religion have long been considered to be strongly related. In the West we tend to consider that only those things that can be objectively tested are considered to be subjects for scientific enquiry. In India they have long distinguished two disparate branches of science: the Inner Science and the Outer Science, one is a subjective enquiry and the other objective.

    The philosophy of Vedanta bridges both.

    In Vedanta everything is considered to consist of one consciousness--a great ocean of nothing but a single, unique, all encompassing consciousness that somehow can experience itself as individual consciousnesses communicating with each other.

    So, if we imagine an ocean, you and I are merely waves on that ocean. This is something Alan Watts spoke about. Rather than our being in any real way separate from each other we are, in fact, not objects that can be regarded as separate but functions, processes of the one consciousness in the way that a wave is in no way (except conceptually) separate from the ocean, it is the ocean doing something.

    I am afraid I have not found time to view your video yet but I hope my observations may offer you an alternative lens through which you may consider your proposition.

    Love, peace, happiness and grace,
    Swami Prajna Pranab
  • I like sushi
    5.2k
    I will 100% watch thsi video. My intial response to the proposal is NO and ABSOLUTELY NO!

    Let's see if there is anything you state that alters my view :)

    Edit: "Video no longer available" :(
  • Pieter R van Wyk
    160
    Comments appreciatedArt48

    You claim it is possible to integrate science and religion. This implies, I think, that you know, exactly, what is science and what is religion. Please share your definitions else comments will not be valid.
  • Astorre
    246


    My apologies to the author of this thread, but my comment is somewhat off-topic.

    Your earlier thread about defining the concept of "system" certainly contributed to my own understanding. In this thread, you ask about the definitions of "science" and "religion." Separately, I'd like to ask: have you ever found the most precise definition of any word? If so, please share.
  • Pieter R van Wyk
    160
    Your earlier thread about defining the concept of "system" certainly contributed to my own understanding.Astorre

    If my little contribution on the concept of system contributed to your understanding, then, surely, my effort is not in vain. And, this gives me hope.

    In this thread, you ask about the definitions of "science" and "religion." Separately, I'd like to ask: have you ever found the most precise definition of any word? If so, please share.Astorre

    In my understanding, there is not such a thing as a precise definition of any word. There is my understanding and there is your understanding. So if we want to have a useful conversation or debate on something (for example the possibility of integrating science and religion), we first need to agree on some definitions of words (for example an agreement on what is science and what is religion).

    If not, such a conversation or debate would quickly degenerate into a useless play with words.

    Hence my request to share definitions.
  • Astorre
    246


    I get your point and find it constructive.

    As for the topic itself, the author posted a short version of his video, which I watched and found too speculative. I informed him about this in the previous topic. My questions did not change as a result of the increased time limit. I did not understand what the author meant by the definitions of the concepts.
  • Pieter R van Wyk
    160
    To my understanding:

    "Religion := The acceptance of something without the necessity of proof and claiming authority based on this premise." p180 How I Understand Things. The Logic of Existence

    Since science does require some proof (and we could certainly argue some more on what, exactly constitute such a 'proof'), it would seem that the two concepts, science and religion, is incompatible.
  • Gnomon
    4.2k
    You claim it is possible to integrate science and religion. This implies, I think, that you know, exactly, what is science and what is religion. Please share your definitions else comments will not be valid.Pieter R van Wyk
    Your challenge to define the terms of this thread sparked an idea in my own head.

    The etymology of Religion is "to link back to the past", which I take to mean Tradition. And "blind faith" is typically associated with almost all religious traditions. But another interpretation might be Loyalty to a social group. Which may explain why the average member of a faith community*1 has only a vague notion of theological doctrine, but nevertheless feels emotionally bound to their own social group, sharing norms & values, but not necessarily dogma.

    The etymology of Science is "to know", which I take to mean Rational Information instead of emotional bondage. But Catholic Theology was an attempt to integrate Greek Science with Jewish Religion. Unfortunately, it was a marriage of convenience --- serving the imperial secular government --- that fell apart repeatedly over the years, as disparate social groups developed different interpretations of the "facts" of their received doctrine. That divergence of Faith led to heresies & excommunication & sectarian conflict & physical punishment, not unity & integration.

    That may be why there are approximately 4200 different Christian denominations in the world today. Which is evidence that Science & Religion mix like oil & water. :smile:


    *1. Faith Community :
    ". . . to them that have obtained like precious faith"
    2 Peter 1:1-8
  • 180 Proof
    16.1k
    I agree with SJ Gould, Wittgenstein, Spinoza et al that 'religion & science' are non-overlapping magisteria (NOMA), or in other words ...
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/553997

    Religion denotes ritually following / reenacting myths based on magical thinking and superstition (i.e. merely subjective).

    Science denotes collective pursuit of testable models which best explain possible transformations of aspects of nature based on defeasible thinking and abduction (i.e. more-than-inter/subjective).
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k
    Pavel Florensky, a priest, mathematician, scientist, and electrical engineer (sometimes called the "Russian Da Vinci") approached this in a Christian frame through Sophiology. Come to think of it, I think Bulgakov, probably the biggest figure in Sophiology, started in political economy. Michael Martin's The Submerged Reality: Sophiology and the Turn to a Poetic Metaphysics is a pretty neat book on this (it also looks at Jacob Boheme, German romanticism, and Valentin Tomberg).
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k
    I forgot about a good quote I like on this topic:

    There if anywhere should a person live his life, beholding that Beauty.

    Plato, Symposium 211d

    The Platonic philosophical theology unifies us with ourselves, with each other, with the world, and with God, by explaining that a higher reality or God is present in this world and in us inasmuch as it inspires our efforts toward inner freedom, love, beauty, truth, and other ideals. These efforts give us a unity, as “ourselves,” that we can’t have insofar as we’re the slaves of our genes, hormones, opinions, self-importance, and so forth. For in contrast to our genes and so forth, which are implanted in us or are reactions to what surrounds us, efforts toward ideals like inner freedom, love, beauty, and truth are more likely to reflect our own choice. So that if anything reflects “us,” ourselves, and not just our surroundings, they do.

    So through ideals like inner freedom, love, beauty, and truth, something that’s “higher,” because it’s free and fully “us,” is in us. Since we often fall short of it and lapse into merely reactive or merely bodily functioning, we can call this higher self-determination, by contrast, “divine.” And there’s nothing that we know better or more directly than we know this inner choice that we make, to be either automatic and reactive or free. and self-determining. So we have every reason to regard the choice as real, and our awareness of it as knowledge. And since “mysticism” is the name for the doctrine that we have direct knowledge of a higher reality or God, and this Platonic train of thought shows how we have such knowledge through awareness of our inner choices, it shows how mysticism in this sense is entirely rational.1 Since we often fall short of inner freedom, love, beauty, and truth, they have the “transcendence” that we expect of religion. They are inspiring as well as rational, “above” us as well as “in” us. But what’s remarkable is that because this transcendence is rational, it’s a feature not only of the higher reality that mysticism and religion celebrate but also of science. In fact, because science is one of the ways in which we choose to pursue truth and thus transcend our genes, hormones, favorite opinions, and self-importance, science is a part or an aspect of the higher reality that mysticism and religion celebrate...

    So rather than inherently conflicting with mysticism and religion, science is a part of the higher reality that mysticism and religion celebrate. Religion and science both transcend by seeking inner freedom and truth. It’s just that science, being restricted to what we can know by scientific methods, is narrower. It’s only one aspect of the transcendent freedom, love, beauty, and truth, the higher reality, that religion or religion in the making celebrates. This unusual way of understanding the relation between science and religion can free us from a good deal of mental fog and fruitless disputation.

    But the relation of science to religion isn’t the only familiar issue that the Platonic higher reality transforms. It’s probably evident from what I’ve said that the Platonic higher reality reveals an intimate connection between “fact” and “value.” A world in which there was no pursuit of values like love, beauty, and truth, or (as Plato puts it) “the Good,” would not be self-determining or fully “itself.” If being fully “itself” is the most intensive kind of reality, such a world would lack what’s most real. By directing our attention to the role of value in what’s most real, Platonism shows the limits of the “disenchanted” and “value-free” account of reality that we associate with scientific objectivity. Important though it is, the reality that science identifies is not the ultimate reality. The reality apart from itself that science in its normal activities identifies is not, in fact, the ultimate reality of which science itself, as a pursuit of truth and thus of self-determination, is an aspect. When science becomes aware of this ultimate reality to which it contributes, and which depends on values such as truth as well as freedom, love, and beauty, it becomes evident that the ultimate “fact” or reality is not actually independent of “value.”

    Robert M. Wallace - Philosophical Mysticism in Plato, Hegel, and the Present





    It seems to me that Indian thought avoids a lot of the problems that dominate Western discourse on this issue. As I see it, the West suffers from a sort of self-inflicted metaphysical wound that stems from the Reformation, that results in a truncated world-view and closed off epistemology that has approached solipsism at the limit. Indeed, so much of modern thought has been an attempt to escape this solipsism (or a sort of moral solipsism)—to build a bridge between us and the world—or else to learn to live as self-enclosed, contingent entities. In the midst of such a "crisis" (as it is often called), any bridge beyond the sensible becomes "a bridge too far."
  • L'éléphant
    1.7k
    "Religion := The acceptance of something without the necessity of proof and claiming authority based on this premise." p180 How I Understand Things. The Logic of Existence

    Since science does require some proof (and we could certainly argue some more on what, exactly constitute such a 'proof'), it would seem that the two concepts, science and religion, is incompatible.
    Pieter R van Wyk

    Sorry, but these are both rubbish definitions.

    Science does not require proof of it's findings. It is enough that a systematic process of observation and hypotheses has been followed to be called it science. In fact, if after applying the scientific procedure on a hypothesis, that the expected result did not pan out, then to be scientific is to revisit the observation and maybe conclude that the hypothesis could not be supported.

    Religion, on the other hand, strives to have evidence and proof for its claims. But their point is to spread faith, moral teachings, and belief in the almighty being -- none of which forces acceptance, but asks you to see the truth of life.
  • T Clark
    15.4k
    I agree with SJ Gould, Wittgenstein, Spinoza et al that 'religion & science' are non-overlapping magisteria (NOMA), or in other words ...180 Proof

    I’m a big fan of Stephen Jay Gould, but I always thought his NOMA formulation was baloney. It’s just a way for an atheist to seem respectful towards something he doesn’t really have much respect for. Based on your posting history here that certainly seems true about you.
  • Tom Storm
    10.3k
    It seems to me that Indian thought avoids a lot of the problems that dominate Western discourse on this issue. As I see it, the West suffers from a sort of self-inflicted metaphysical wound that stems from the Reformation, that results in a truncated world-view and closed off epistemology that has approached solipsism at the limit. Indeed, so much of modern thought has been an attempt to escape this solipsism (or a sort of moral solipsism)—to build a bridge between us and the world—or else to learn to live as self-enclosed, contingent entities. In the midst of such a "crisis" (as it is often called), any bridge beyond the sensible becomes "a bridge too far."Count Timothy von Icarus

    Sounds like you have been taking Iain McGilchrist lessons. :razz:

    But seriously, this frame seems especially hot again right now and includes both good and questionable practitioners who are saying similar things — John Vervaeke, Jordan Peterson, David Bentley Hart, Terry Eagleton, and a host of rising Thomists, all of whom, in their own ways, seem to be clamouring for a counter-Reformation to the Enlightenment. Or something like that. It's as if CS Lewis has influenced a new generation.
  • Pieter R van Wyk
    160
    That may be why there are approximately 4200 different Christian denominations in the world today. Which is evidence that Science & Religion mix like oil & water. :smile:Gnomon

    The evidence you presented are most compelling. Thank you.
  • Pieter R van Wyk
    160
    Sorry, but these are both rubbish definitions.L'éléphant

    Thank you for pointing out my lack of understanding so succinctly - please enlighten me some more.

    to be called it scienceL'éléphant
    after applying the scientific procedureL'éléphant

    So, my understanding is that science is the application of the scientific procedure. This seem to me a self referencing exercise, Thus not a definition.

    ReligionL'éléphant
    asks you to see the truth of life.L'éléphant

    Please, this 'truth of life' you are speaking of, what, exactly, is this?
  • 180 Proof
    16.1k
    You claim NOMA is "baloney" but don't even try to make your case.
  • Prajna
    32
    Dear Count, thank you for your reply. I very much like the Wallace quote. The Eastern Inner Science is very much value based rather than fact based and is not religious in itself except that we tend to recognise the practices employed in the process as religious practices and the ultimate truth one arrives at as a result of those practices is the same truth that religion purports to represent. Plato's values are also attained in the process though they might be considered side-effects of the ultimate realisation perhaps rather than the goals of the work.
  • T Clark
    15.4k
    You claim NOMA is "baloney" but don't even try to make your case.180 Proof

    Come on 180—you and I have both stated our positions on this matter many times before.
  • 180 Proof
    16.1k
    Still no argument. – that's telling.
  • Gnomon
    4.2k
    That may be why there are approximately 4200 different Christian denominations in the world today. Which is evidence that Science & Religion mix like oil & water. :smile: — Gnomon
    The evidence you presented are most compelling. Thank you.
    Pieter R van Wyk
    I haven't viewed the video, but I get the impression that the OP is actually proposing the integration of metaphysical Mysticism (not Religion) --- i.e. personal, not social --- with physical Science. Although I'm still skeptical, history records a variety of mystical notions that are considered by adherents as a kind of practical science or technology.

    The most obvious example is Buddhism, conceived as a science of the Mind*1, and indirectly of Matter, via introspection instead of microscopes & telescopes. Since the results are mostly subjective, I can't argue "show me the evidence"*2, without doing the experiential experiments personally.

    Empirical science focuses on external public Reality, while subjective mysticism concentrates on internal private Ideality. Does the video explain how to reconcile those divergent perspectives? :smile:


    *1. "Mystical science" can refer to a quest for truth that goes beyond conventional methods, encompassing fields like Buddhism, Tantra, and Sufism. It can also refer to the historical and sometimes pseudoscientific attempt to blend spiritual and mystical understanding with scientific concepts, such as alchemy or modern attempts to link quantum physics and mysticism. While traditional science is based on observation and experiment, mystical science often involves subjective experience, intuition, and beliefs about realities beyond the physical world.
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=mystical+science

    *2. Mysticism is the pursuit of direct, personal experience of the divine or ultimate reality, often through practices like meditation, prayer, and contemplation. It can be found across many religious traditions, including Sufism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and various forms of Western mysticism. Mystics aim to achieve a state of union or deep connection with a transcendent reality, believing this direct experience provides a form of knowledge that transcends reason and sensory perception.
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=MYSTICISM

    CAN PHILOSOPHY RECONCILE IDEAL and REAL WORLDVIEWS?
    0YWCq3s0dYf5ppn_i.jpeg?resize=828%2C833&ssl=1
  • Gnomon
    4.2k
    Since science does require some proof (and we could certainly argue some more on what, exactly constitute such a 'proof'), it would seem that the two concepts, science and religion, is incompatible.Pieter R van Wyk
    Empirical Science and Emotional Religion are indeed "incompatible", in the sense that information drawn from one domain (public vs private knowledge) does not directly map onto the facts/beliefs of the other. That's why S.J. Gould took the cooperative attitude that Science & Religion are "non-overlapping" systems of thought, hence not in direct competition.

    However, if you look at those doctrinal magisteria as a venn diagram of human wisdom, you may see a small area of overlap, which could be labeled as Philosophy : Rational but not Empirical ; Ideal but not necessarily Real. Plato and Aristotle worked together, but one focused on metaphysical Ideality (abstract & utopian) while the other emphasized physical Reality (practical & pragmatic). Yet their disparate philosophies did overlap in the middle : pursuit of Truth. :smile:


    11191_2015_9781_Fig2_HTML.gif
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.