And this has been critically assessed and justifiably rejected as insufficient. — S
I don't think you understand how "secular-scientific views" work. — NKBJ
the reason such "theories" are rejected is not a priori, unless you think that it is a priori the case that they cannot be rigorously tested. — Janus
Perhaps.There has been attempted research into some paranormal "phenomena" and it seems the conclusion has been reached that they are not amenable to the scientific method as it is currently understood — Janus
I think you are misunderstanding the problem. — Janus
How could we know, for example, whether the testifying children were or were not schooled by their elders? — Janus
But if I may ask, have you considered that they are amenable, and they are being discredited for other reasons? Just like how alternating currents were? — Shamshir
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa
Of course it is logically and epistemologically possible that there are sentient beings on other planets. But if the conditions for the advent of sentient beings were extremely stringent to the degree that only Earth out of the whole vast universe provided just those conditions, then it would not be physically possible that sentient beings could arise and exist on other planets.
Now that only Earth could provide such conditions seems very unlikely, but is itself not impossible, from a logical and epistemological perspective, although it too may be impossible from an ontological perspective. The point is, we just don't know.
You're testing my patience and I had decided to stop responding to your nonsensical unargued assertions, so stop being a fuckwit and asking me to concede a point when it has not been demonstrated to be incorrect. You don't even seem to have understood what I have been saying, much less to have refuted it. — Janus
I think you are misunderstanding the problem. — Janus
Please don't condescend to tell me what I do or don't understand. Both are based on individual testimony - on what people say they recall. There can't be any other evidence in such cases. — Wayfarer
I know it's a controversial and even an offensive topic, but I have tried to play it with a straight bat. — Wayfarer
Janus
7.2k
We aren't in disagreement. — Frank Apisa
Then why are you continuing to disagree?
2 minutes ago
Reply
Options — Janus
Sounds to me that if I asserted that 2 + 2 = 4 in base ten...you would disagree in some way...albeit subtle. — Frank Apisa
Surely, neither would I, if I didn't extensively look in to it.there could be an overabundance of such evidence, but I have no reason to think there is. — Janus
Of course I do. — Wayfarer
Pointing this out, however, is evidence of bias and prejudice, and of not understanding science. — Wayfarer
As I'm not wedded to a secular~scientific philosophy, then I don't have the same underlying inhibitions about the subject that are quite understandable in those who do (as, for them, it's a threat to the underlying worldview.) — Wayfarer
I mean that commitment to a secular~scientific view rules out such beliefs and prevents consideration of them. — Wayfarer
Isn't he just saying that secular-scientific thought is denying scientific progress, by limiting itself?On the one hand you want to reject science and a scientific worldview on the basis that it cannot encompass all of your voodoo. On the other you wish to maintain that dismissing supernatural phenomena is not scientific. You're not being consistent or clear about your position. — NKBJ
As I'm not wedded to a secular~scientific philosophy, then I don't have the same underlying inhibitions — Wayfarer
Seems pretty straightforward.I mean that commitment to a secular~scientific view rules out such beliefs — Wayfarer
In the case of the first we can say that we know something is impossible if it defies laws of the excluded middle — Janus
In logic, the law of excluded middle (or the principle of excluded middle) states that for any proposition, either that proposition is true or its negation is true. — Wikipedia
In the case of the first we can say that we know something is impossible if it defies laws of the excluded middle — Janus
In logic, the law of excluded middle (or the principle of excluded middle) states that for any proposition, either that proposition is true or its negation is true. — Wikipedia
So, for any issue where other answers are possible - such as "maybe" as well as "yes" or "no", offering just one of many possible examples - you have no answer. Binary thinking - "Answer yes or no!" - doesn't help here, I suspect? — Pattern-chaser
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