Your definition would have the absurd upshot than any and all who believe in entities with causal powers are thereby naturalists. — Bartricks
What's wrong with my definition? — Bartricks
To clarify things, here are several definitions of "naturalism."
The philosophical belief that everything arises from natural properties and causes, and supernatural or spiritual explanations are excluded or discounted.
The belief that reality is exhausted by nature, containing nothing “supernatural”, and that the scientific method should be used to investigate all areas of reality
The belief that natural laws are the only rules that govern the structure and behavior of the natural world, and that the changing universe is at every stage a product of these laws
A comprehensive, science-based worldview, premised on the idea that existence in all its dimensions and complexity is a single, natural realm, not split between the natural and the supernatural — T Clark
I think spirit-salamander has come up with a workable definition based on the scope of causal effect that entities are capable of and subject to, which seems to cover all the bases. — Janus
I was just pointing out the circular (and hence pretty much useless) nature of the definitions you sourced is all. — Janus
Straightforwardly circular I would say in regard to the first two. And the second two are based on an invalid inference, as I pointed out. science thinks naturalistically because there is no other way to do it; that is if we don't think naturalistically (with regard to methodology) then we are not doing science, as doing science is currently defined. — Janus
The fact that we may never be able to discover the answer to that question has no bearing on the fact that it is in principle either right or wrong. — Janus
naturalism can be useful. Is it your position that science is not useful? — T Clark
It depends. If a claim hasn't been verified but might be in the future, then it might be right or wrong. If it cannot be verified, even in principle, then is not only not right or wrong, it is meaningless. — T Clark
The selected quote from Oppy does not say as much, though. — Janus
You are conflating methodological naturalism with metaphysical naturalism. As I pointed out there is no other way to do science (that we currently know of) so it is not merely a matter of usefulness, but of necessity, even in regard to methodology. — Janus
Firstly how can you currently decide what may or may not be verified in the future? — Janus
Secondly if metaphysical positions are meaningless then why are we even discussing whether they are right or wrong or useful? — Janus
Metaphysical positions are not meaningless, hypothetical physical phenomena which cannot be verified, even in theory, are meaningless. — T Clark
It depends. If a claim hasn't been verified but might be in the future, then it might be right or wrong. If it cannot be verified, even in principle, then is not only not right or wrong, it is meaningless. — T Clark
Take the claim that there is a God or some entity that created the universe; that claim may not be verifiable in principle (falsificationists say that even scientific claims are not) but do you really want to say that it is neither true nor false that a God or some entity created the universe? — Janus
Oppy at least made a distinction between methodological and ontological naturalism. The latter could also be called naturism. And the former scientism. — spirit-salamander
Methodological naturalists maintain, roughly, that well-established science is our touchstone for identifying the denizens of causal reality: we have no reason to believe in causal entities and causal powers beyond those recognised by science." — spirit-salamander
I understand scientism to be metaphysical naturalism, not methodological naturalism; the latter is just science. Are you wanting to make a distinction between metaphysical and ontological naturalism? — Janus
I understand scientism to be metaphysical naturalism, not methodological naturalism; the latter is just science. Are you wanting to make a distinction between metaphysical and ontological naturalism?
— Janus
Now that I read your distinction and question, I have to think about it again. — spirit-salamander
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