Ok. Once again: you said that Dawkins et al claim that life is an "accident," when in fact he has said exactly the opposite. You have said the evolutionary biology is unique among the sciences in allowing for "chance" to enter into explanations, which is grossly false. You have admittedly never even read The God Delusion, and yet carp about it endlessly. So, again I submit that you are as ignorant about the target your criticisms as you purport Dawkins to be about religion.I stand by all of them. Again, my criticism of Dawkins, Dennett, and their ilk is purely on the grounds of their scientific materialism for which they are known public advocates. — Wayfarer
Once again: you said that Dawkins et al claim that life is an "accident," when in fact he has said exactly the opposite. — Arkady
You have said the evolutionary biology is unique among the sciences in allowing for "chance" to enter into explanations, which is grossly false. — Arkady
You have admittedly never even read The God Delusion, and yet carp about it endlessly. — Arkady
Yes, there is a gap in scientific knowledge concerning the origin of DNA (you may be aware that some models - referred to as the "RNA world" - posit RNA as the first molecule of heredity, rather than DNA).No, he doesn't say the opposite at all. In The God Delusion, he presents an elaborate argument along the lines that 'life only had to start once' and that there are billions of planets on which this might have occurred. He admits that science really has no account of how DNA came into existence, but also claims that this is not really important.
What Dawkins objects to, is the assertion that evolution progresses 'by chance alone', i.e. random and unguided chance gives rise to new species. He says that there are many factors involved, meaning that 'chance' is only one facet of the whole process.
I accept that, but I still consider the above criticism to stand. — Wayfarer
I suppose it would depend on what street. The majority of Americans, for instance, profess belief in God (or a "spirit" of some sort...), so it's questionable as to whether they would indeed say that "life's a cosmic crap-shoot." Indeed, popular discourse is rife with narcissistic statements (masquerading as pious humility) along the lines that "God sent me here to [X]..."What I have said, is that the belief that 'life began for no reason', as argued by, for example, Jacques Monod, in his book, Chance and Necessity, does not amount to an hypothesis. Ask the proverbial man-in-the-street why they came to exist, and they will generally say that life's a cosmic crap-shoot, it's a fluke.
Perhaps you'd like a return to the European Middle Ages: the "Age of Faith"? Ah, those were the days.Overall, 'popular Darwinism' has had a degenerative effect on modern culture IMO.
Sure...but that has nothing to do with his views on The New Atheists, his criticism of whom you've repeatedly said you still agree with. That's what at issue in the little sidebar you and I have going here.If my posts about it bother you, you have the option of ignoring them.
The reason I started this thread, if you read the OP, was to acknowledge a negative review of one of the authors I have frequently referred to about this matter.
Somehow I doubt that. >:OBut - you're right. This is the very last post, ever, I will write about Dawkins and Dennett.
But why wedge God or Purpose or Design or anything into that gap? A creationist offering a "God of the gaps" strategy has set himself upon an ever-shrinking landscape, with fewer and fewer places to provide refuge every year against the advance of science (yes - materialistic science) — Arkady
This would seem an argument by assertion. As we've gone over many times at this point, some disciplines (e.g. natural theology - for which you yourself have expressed some sympathy - and intelligent design creationism) have purported to detect the workings of God, gods, or a "Designer" based on an examination of nature. To simply state that these questions are out of bounds of science doesn't cut it: the onus is on you to demonstrate or argue for this point.But it’s just not true., The nature or existence of purpose, design, intention - none of these are scientific questions at al. Certainly naturalism puts those matters aside for its purposes, but then declaring that ‘science has shown’ that the Universe/world is devoid of purpose is a metaphysical; conclusion based on a naturalist assumption. — Wayfarer
I largely agree with this. Writer Matt Ridley once had a nice line about scientific progress sometimes clearing a space in the forest of questions which gives scientists a clearer view of multitude of trees still before them.Second - the gaps are getting bigger, not smaller. We are told that science can detect only 4% of the totality of the cosmos. Galaxies are held together by some unknown force - let’s call that ‘dark matter’ as matter is all we’ll consider. The Universe is expanded by some unknown energy - let’s call that ‘dark energy’ as energy is all we’ll consider. And so on. Then there’s ‘the multiverse’ - respected scientists are on the record saying they favour the idea, because it presents a solution to the annoying problem of why the universe seems fine-tuned for life. And other respected scientists question whether the multiverse and ‘string theory’ are even scientific theories at all.
First of all, the question of the place of science in human life is a scientific question because you use evidence, observations and falsification in order to determine the answer to that question.Over the years I have referred on many occasions to a 2006 review by Leon Wieseltier, then Literary Editor of the New Republic, of Daniel Dennett’s book Breaking the Spell, in the New York Times, under the headline The God Genome.
THE question of the place of science in human life is not a scientific question. It is a philosophical question. Scientism, the view that science can explain all human conditions and expressions, mental as well as physical, is a superstition, one of the dominant superstitions of our day; and it is not an insult to science to say so. For a sorry instance of present-day scientism, it would be hard to improve on Daniel C. Dennett's book. "Breaking the Spell" is a work of considerable historical interest, because it is a merry anthology of contemporary superstitions.
Agreed with every word of this savage review which triggered a fierce response from Dennett. — Wayfarer
As I've pointed out to you long ago, to say that design, purpose, and intentionality in nature is not a matter for science is to posit that a designed universe is empirically indistinguishable from an undesigned one — Arkady
However, my point is that since the advent of modern science, every question posed about organisms and their workings has yielded to a physicalistic, naturalistic, and mechanistic analysis. — Arkady
The same applies to cosmological mysteries such as dark matter and dark energy. Yes, they are as-yet poorly understood: but there is no inkling that it is anything other than yet another scientific problem. — Arkady
Better, said Dennett, if the public were told that “for general purposes” the self and free will and objective morality do indeed exist—that colors and sounds exist, too—“just not in the way they think.” They “exist in a special way" - which is to say, ultimately, not at all.
It is instructive, however, that as far as his critics are concerned, if he criticizes materialism, then he must be religious, as this demonstrates the sense in which their own views amount to a religious commitment. — Wayfarer
Can you cite any statement from any of Nagels' critics where it is explicitly claimed, or even implied, that Nagel "must be religious"? — Janus
Nagel is a teleologist, and although not an explicit creationist, his views are pretty much anti-science and not worth highlighting. — Jerry Coyne
One wonders if Nagel is losing his critical abilities, or simply is plagued by a nagging desire to go to church. — Jerry Coyne
I have myself argued that it is a serious mistake to allow fear of creationists and other obscurantists to discourage discussion of the weaknesses and unanswered questions in evolutionary theory. Nagel has no fear of such people and expresses a considerable sympathy with intelligent design. On the basis of his understanding of evolution, he considers that the rejection of their criticisms of evolution is 'manifestly unfair' (p. 10). (This may, of course, reflect on either the understanding or the unfairness.) He just personally feels an aversion to the theistic perspective. The title of the book, however, all too readily interpreted as announcing the falsity of Darwinism, will certainly lend comfort (and sell a lot of copies) to the religious enemies of Darwinism.
I regret the appearance of this book. It will only bring comfort to creationists and fans of “intelligent design”, who will not be too bothered about the difference between their divine architect and Nagel’s natural providence. It will give ammunition to those triumphalist scientists who pronounce that philosophy is best pensioned off. If there were a philosophical Vatican, the book would be a good candidate for going on to the Index. — Simon Blackburn
You generally seem to suggest that Dennett is somehow dishonest for holding to the ( from your point of view, it seems, somehow monstrous) philosophy that he does. And yet I doubt you have read his actual works, and you never seem to produce any cogent critique of anything he has actually written — Janus
I am of the view that Dennett's work is so preposterously mistaken that it ought not to warrant serious consideration. But that's also why I've said, above, that I am finished with commenting on Dennett, and I certainly am -this is the last thing I will ever say on a public forum about Dennett. — Wayfarer
Some of the problems posed by mental phenomena Dennett simply dismisses without adequate reason; others he ignores. Most, however, he attempts to prove are mere “user-illusions” generated by evolutionary history, even though this sometimes involves claims so preposterous as to verge on the deranged.
I am reminded of the Marx Brothers line: “Who are you going to believe, me or your own eyes?” Dennett asks us to turn our backs on what is glaringly obvious—that in consciousness we are immediately aware of real subjective experiences of color, flavor, sound, touch, etc. that cannot be fully described in neural terms even though they have a neural cause (or perhaps have neural as well as experiential aspects). And he asks us to do this because the reality of such phenomena is incompatible with the scientific materialism that in his view sets the outer bounds of reality.
They’re from reputable sources, including Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. If it’s sensational, it’s because a respected member of the academy has come out against the mainstream consensus. It would be like a medieval Bishop preaching the Death of God.Most of those quotes and links seem somewhat sensationailzed, — Janus
If that were the case do you believe it would necessarily (I mean apart from some individual's emotional reactions to the very idea) detract any value from human life? — Janus
illusions can occur in brains; — Janus
I see no contradiction in saying that meaning something and neurological activity are the very same activity seen from two different perspectives — Janus
Do you understand that, or do believe there can only be one approach? — Janus
You acknowledge that neuronal activity may be the origin of cognitive errors? — Janus
I’m sure the point a materialist would make is that perspectives are also part of the illusion that the brain generates; ‘a perspective’ as such can’t have any real meaning. Materialism is strictly monistic — Wayfarer
It’s not about what I believe. — Wayfarer
Obviously. But that doesn’t undermine the fact that illusions amount to errors of judgement. — Wayfarer
That's what it's all about; what each of us believes. What else? — Janus
That's a truly pointless objection — Janus
it is certainly possible that we are just physical beings and that the ideas we have of minds and qualia are just illusions caused by our inability to perceive our brain activity. — Janus
How can anything at all be said from a "point beyond human experience and understanding" that makes absolutely no sense. — Janus
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