I only commented on your response, which was disrespectful to Wayfarer and anyone with religious beliefs. I responded snippily. — T Clark
But Tom Storms response doesn't recognise the argument it's responding to. What I am calling out with reference to the quote by Richard Lewontin, — Wayfarer
And an even more important point, is that the materialist view is not more 'proven' than any other worldview. It can't be proven, because it is not a specific, testable claim about a specific thing, or class of things, but a claim about the nature of the world. — Wayfarer
If someone can provide good evidence of just one robust example of a supernatural claim being true, let's hear it. I'd love to be wrong. — Tom Storm
A coconut shy is a traditional game frequently found as a sidestall at funfairs and fêtes. The game consists of throwing wooden balls at a row of coconuts balanced on posts. Typically a player buys three balls and wins when each coconut is successfully dislodged. In some cases other prizes may be won instead of the coconuts. — Wikipedia
I have watched with interest and awe at the passionate exchanges which you have conducted on theoretical and principled grounds, but I feel that you have largely strayed from the original topic. — Gary Enfield
Your debates were intriguing to watch but they were also the reason why I stayed out of the fray until now. — Gary Enfield
Tom Storms response doesn't recognise the argument it's responding to. — Wayfarer
It is indeed the case that for many of the secular intelligentsia, science, and particularly evolutionary science, has become a secular religion. This is undeniable. — Wayfarer
the materialist view is not more 'proven' than any other worldview. It can't be proven, because it is not a specific, testable claim about a specific thing, or class of things, but a claim about the nature of the world. — Wayfarer
The view that the theistic outlook 'lacks evidence' doesn't see what 'evidence' would be required to support such a view. For the religious, the order of nature *is* evidence. — Wayfarer
science itself has no explanation for that order. — Wayfarer
theistic belief necessarily explain the order of nature, but it *is not* a scientific hypothesis. In Christian terms, it is a command 'to love one another as I have loved you', etc. So the idea that this can be at odds with 'science' is actually something like a category mistake. — Wayfarer
I maintain, and this is where I tend towards the religious end of the spectrum, that because all living beings exhibit in some sense intentionality, that this introduces a basic distinction, an ontological distinction, between the living and non-living realms. And where you have an ontological distinction, you have (at least) a duality, which undermines the argument that there is a single substance, namely, matter-energy. — Wayfarer
If someone can provide good evidence of just one robust example of a supernatural claim being true, let's hear it. I'd love to be wrong. — Tom Storm
I could - but from long experience, I bet it would become a 'coconut shy'. — Wayfarer
I'm simply commenting on the declaration that 'we' - presumably all of humanity - doesn't know Capital T truth - is presumptious. — Wayfarer
You're in a philosophy forum and you're seriously just going to outright say that some judgement which you know full-well is highly contested, by intelligent academics, is 'undeniable'? — Isaac
There is professional evolutionary biology: mathematical, experimental, not laden with value statements. But, you are not going to find the answer to the world's mysteries or to societal problems if you open the pages of Evolution or Animal Behaviour. Then, sometimes from the same person, you have evolution as secular religion, generally working from an explicitly materialist background and solving all of the world's major problems, from racism to education to conservation. Consider Edward O. Wilson, rightfully regarded as one of the most outstanding professional evolutionary biologists of our time, and the author of major works of straight science. In his On Human Nature, he calmly assures us that evolution is a myth that is now ready to take over Christianity. And, if this is so, “the final decisive edge enjoyed by scientific naturalism will come from its capacity to explain traditional religion, its chief competition, as a wholly material phenomenon. Theology is not likely to survive as an independent intellectual discipline” — Michael Ruse
Nagel is a dick. — Isaac
If you can find me a single quote from a single materialist claiming that their position is the 'way the world is' I'd be very surprised. — Isaac
Theistic belief (in Christian term) is not a command to "love one another as I have loved you". It's a very specific and detailed set of instructions. — Isaac
Evidence is that which convinces a person of a position they were not convinced of prior to seeing it (either by doubt or by being of an opposing conviction). — Isaac
You were speaking for others, perhaps 'enlightened' parties. — Tom Storm
You're in a philosophy forum and you're seriously just going to outright say that some judgement which you know full-well is highly contested, by intelligent academics, is 'undeniable'? — Isaac
Sure, evolution is like a secular religion. No question. — Wayfarer
Materialism is simply 'the theory or belief that nothing exists except matter and its movements and modifications.' Many people believe it, it is the de facto belief system in secular culture. — Wayfarer
But love is the important point. As it culturally manifests, it is thousands of things including rules and strictures and the like. — Wayfarer
when it comes to the question at hand, what would constitute evidence? — Wayfarer
It's not that materialism is all that anyone thinks. It's that it all we share. — Isaac
f by "question at hand" you mean something like your "why is there order in nature" then what counts as evidence is not yet defined. The question 'why' does not contain within it the definition of what constitutes and answer. It's one of the main tactics of sophistry used by woo merchants like yourself. "Ah, but that doesn't explain why..." as if 'why' had a defined answer. — Isaac
Empirical evidence is not just 'one type of evidence among others' It is the only type of evidence we are compelled to agree on (as a class, not the specific evidence at hand).... — Isaac
How could I answer. There are texts in the corpus of world literature that I think speak legitimately of Capital T Truth. But you’re not going to find the kind of evidence you’re looking for. — Wayfarer
As mentioned in other posts, it is also clearly demonstrated that some of the activities of enzyme molecules undertaking DNA repair, do seem to display the characteristics of awareness without any known chemical or computational mechanism, even in theory, to explain it.
That doesn’t mean that a materialist solution won’t be found, but as things stand after decades of research, the evidence shows that these molecules do seem to break known principles that we apply to Matter/Energy. — Gary Enfield
texts are not evidence, they are claims. Claims need to be examined and tested to determine if they are sound. ....Any particular texts you consider to be profound in this way? — Tom Storm
A soup of self-replicating macromolecules, competing with one another (so to speak) through chemical reactions. The winners are the molecules that become more frequent than others in the soup. — Olivier5
Those scare quotes immediately put us in the territory of metaphysics, like or not. I said Enrique's suggestion seemed like pseudo-science to me, perhaps it's not, but to be convinced I would have to se reference to something published, other than a Forum contributor's opinion as I'm in no position to judge it. — Wayfarer
I have referred to his paper What is Information? — Wayfarer
I don't think you know what I'm getting at, but regrettably having to explain a philosophical position to someone in order to show what is wrong with it never works out. — Wayfarer
Science does not explain the order of nature. — Wayfarer
Empiricism subjects everything to the tribunal of 'what can be sense and quantified'. What cannot be quantified is discounted a priori. — Wayfarer
Nothing in biochemistry breaks the laws of physics, not even DNA repair enzymes. Those critters are not self-aware, they are just very sophisticated molecular machines. — Olivier5
But materialism is a form of monism. To admit that there’s something real other than matter-energy us to reject materialism and open the door to all manner of speculations. — Wayfarer
Our willingness to accept scientific claims that are against common sense is the key to an understanding of the real struggle between science and the supernatural.... — Richard Lewontin
And this single-mindedness is because scientific materialism is a direct descendant of the belief in the 'jealous God'. — Wayfarer
Nobody here is going to solve this problem, but we can discuss the philosophical implications, which is what we're doing. — Wayfarer
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