For one thing, a case could be made that modern science and technology have only corrected problems that they created. And that while some people have lived longer and healthier lives other people have been made worse off.
And it could ultimately be a losing battle. All of the antibiotic use, vaccinations, etc. could result in a superbug that costs more than the sum of the benefits we have accumulated to date. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
.That is, in answer to your initial question, I would argue that what Enlightenment/ Modernity has very clearly resolved is the fact that human reason - however daring and courageous it may be, cannot by itself - alone and unaided - succeed in guiding humanity closer toward (the) truth. Rather, it would seem, as the great "Angelic Doctor", St Thomas Aquinas, taught us so long ago, that the boldness of human reason must always be matched and complemented by a firm foundation in the parhesia of supernatural faith (in the divine knowledge Christian revelation). — John Gould
Nihilism is at the root of the widespread mentality which advises us that a definitive commitment should no longer be made, because everything in human life and the world is fleeting and provisional. — John Gould
I don't care what the source is--a prophet, a coin toss, dumb luck, an accident, carefully designed rigorous empirical science--I want the truth. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I feel Monty Python should re-form specifically to answer this question: What did the Enlightenment ever do for us?
- OK, apart from inaugurating mass literacy.
- Yeh, but as well as showing us how the cosmos works even if there aren't any gods.
- No, but, aside from liberating millions of poor schmucks to enjoy art and culture and everything.
I just don't know how that scene ends. Maybe : 'Yes, but they never resolved a single important question, did they?' — mcdoodle
Well, not a very good case, I think. We're the cause of the problems which afflict us, not science or technology. The Enlightenment can't be blamed for the fact that we're corrupt, stupid, greedy, selfish, cruel, ruthless, ignorant, immoral etc. — Ciceronianus the White
Is it really thought we were "better" people in pre-Enlightenment times? — Ciceronianus the White
Any honest, objective evaluation of the epoch of the last several centuries in the West must consider everything in that epoch, not cherry-picked anecdotes — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I would say that anybody who thinks a human creation like science is some innocent being that has done nothing but good in spite of its creators is really desperate to deny reality and find something to cling to. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
And, almost predictably, discussions of the legacy of the European Enlightenment always seem to include at least one reference to how pre-Enlightenment people were worse or no better. My guess is that they did not see life, society, the world, etc. in terms of moral superiority and inferiority. I don't know if moral superiority was an Enlightenment goal or is just a byproduct of other Enlightenment developments, but it seems to be an irrational obsession among the disciples and heirs of a movement that supposedly epitomizes the appreciation of rationality. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
In other words, please explain for me to what PRECISELY it is that you ( a nihilist) claim to make your "definitive commitment" (?) — John Gould
I am more than happy to quickly demonstrate for you that Buddhism is based on a set of logical contradictions. — John Gould
PS: I am being called right now to high tea, so I shall have to ask you to wait — John Gould
enough of this fringe, quasi-intellectual pulp to see it for what it actually is, that is, nothing more than an elaborate exercise in obscurantist sophistry. It seeks , in short, to inject higher meaning into what is clearly meaningless and in doing so fails dismally. — John Gould
I believe this is the first incidence of the term "high tea" on this forum. — Bitter Crank
You claim "there are no absolutes". I take that you therefore deny the notion of absolute truth ? Is that correct? — John Gould
Now, that would be a shame. "Ignorance is power." As long as you don't know your subject material, you can assert and claim anything.I recommend actually reading Kant and Newton, and additionally Jonathon Israeli's magisterial trilogy on the Enlightenment to cure yourself of your ignorance on the subject. — Maw
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