Why are we so sure that the answers of science are valid — Anna893
And even if we find pretty words to describe science, is it not a believe of how the world is made out of, but more - similar to religion - what we want the world to be made out of? Is this idea of »it is how it is«, not actually how we want it to be — Anna893
We are not. Fallibilism is built into the very idea and method of science. So if your thesis is that science is just like religion because both are dogmatic, then you are missing the mark. And I don't think it's fair to characterize religion as essentially dogmatic either. At least in some religious practices there is a place for searching, doubt, dispute and progress. — SophistiCat
By definition it is clear that religion is the search for a supernatural concept, which explains why certain happenings occur or how to behave ideally. Whereas science is mainly focused on investigating the natural world and everything evolving around it, so that we can adjust our behaviour logically. — Anna893
And even if we find pretty words to describe science, is it not a believe of how the world is made out of, but more - similar to religion - what we want the world to be made out of? Is this idea of »it is how it is«, not actually how we want it to be, because it makes us feel safe and understood or maybe even free? — Anna893
it is clear that religion is the search for a supernatural concept — Anna893
Of course first we might think that with our current knowladge we have made it as far as we could and adapted individuals to society and life, but is it really right to believe this is the one advanced way? Why are we so sure that the answers of science are valid, when validation doesn't last forever? — Anna893
And even if we find pretty words to describe science, is it not a believe of how the world is made out of, but more - similar to religion - what we want the world to be made out of? — Anna893
Sure, science is 'testable hypotheses' and 'falsifiable' and the like but some elements of the scientific worldview are not so easily amenable to that kind of pragmatism - for instance the idea that life arises by chance, that, as Gould said, 'any replay of the tape of life would lead evolution down a pathway radically different from the road actually taken.' We'll never know, of course, but it practically amounts to an article of faith. — Wayfarer
I think there's a valid criticism of the role that science assumes as 'arbiter of what is real'. That used to be assumed by religion — Wayfarer
Well It is a philosphy forum. Philosophers do aspire to something more. — Wayfarer
that appears the two only options, right? — Wayfarer
So in the Old Worlde, it was assumed everything is guided by a divine intelligence. — Wayfarer
But strictly speaking, that doesn't actually rule out that there are factors beyond its scope — Wayfarer
The response that I'm now inclined towards is that naturalism has to exclude consideration of what it considers 'supernatural' as a matter of definition — Wayfarer
There are a host of questions considered signicant in philosophy that fall under that description, around the nature of reason, purpose, meaning, order and chaos, and other such broad and general subjects. — Wayfarer
We don't know" is compatible with both. It could be the case that we don't know and there IS or there ISN'T a guiding force. — khaled
I didn't suggest that the guiding force has to be supernatural, do you think it is? — khaled
Reason, Purpose, and Meaning aren't special incomprehensible entities or powers. — khaled
By definition it is clear that religion is the search for a supernatural concept, which explains why certain happenings occur or how to behave ideally. Whereas science is mainly focused on investigating the natural world and everything evolving around it, so that we can adjust our behaviour logically. — Anna893
That's the million-dollar question, isn't it? How would we find out? — Wayfarer
For instance, the belief that evolution develops towards any particular end, like higher levels of intelligence, is rejected by naturalism on the grounds that it's orthogenetic. — Wayfarer
In so many arguments against physicalists or atheists, the critique is actually about the view's ostensible ugliness, its randomness, emptiness, inadequateness, stuntedness. — Tom Storm
But more properly I don't and can't know. I suspect people often choose their answers for aesthetic reasons. — Tom Storm
Higher levels of intelligence seems to be very evolutionarily advantageous. — khaled
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