Your statement here is performative contradiction. Go and ask your bank what it means to have nothing in your account, and they will explain it to you. — unenlightened
Yes, correct! Including all knowledge that humans have yet to discover!So if the supernatural does not exist, it seems to follow that everything is natural. — unenlightened
This just seems like desperation to hold on to your own attraction to or need for the supernatural.Saying 'everything is natural' is equivalent to saying 'everything is', and the term 'natural' adds nothing, because it has no meaning. But you continue to use the term as if you are saying something profound, and as you say, deeply felt. It's not your fault, it's the result of the religious thinking out of which science was born and which it now usurps without much understanding. — unenlightened
This is called 'agnosticism', and allows you to be sceptical of other folk's claims about the supernatural and yet keep the meaning of the natural world coherent. — unenlightened
Therefore you are wrong because you limit supernatural to undiscovered natural without knowing the limits of natural, no? — SpaceDweller
We don't know such is impossible because we can even clearly define what such IS yet.but we know it's impossible to reach the ends of the universe and fathom beyond smallest thing which is singularity. — SpaceDweller
I think i more or less agree. Modern religion is having a hard time trying to prove that any "supernatural" event and/or being isn't anything more than any other natural phenomenon that we currently experience but just beyond how we currently understand them. In other words it is a given that things that we considered to be gods, "God", etc. always have some little man hiding behind a curtain pulling levers masquerading to be something beyond our world yelling at us to not look behind the curtain.I believe I already mentioned this before.
Supernatural, interpreted as something extraordinary, elecits/begs one of two responses:
1. Revision of our theories pertaining to the supernatural event: Science [we could be wrong, back to the basics].
2. Maintaining the theories pertaining to the supernatural event, but hypothesizing an entity/being that caused the supernatural event: Religion [we're right, but now there's something else, god(s)] — Agent Smith
For example the phenomenon of UFOs seems to suggest that there are aerial vehicles that are sometimes in our sky and are produced by technology that we currently can produce. Even if such things are not produced through "supernatural" means, understanding their existence better than what we currently do could create a paradigm shift in how we see the world around us. — dclements
This just seems like desperation to hold on to your own attraction to or need for the supernatural. — universeness
‘Miracles are not against nature, but against what we know of nature’ ~ St Augustine — Wayfarer
I didn't read it that way. The OP states the supernatural is an empty useless term, but the existence of the supernatural isn't necessary for the term to have meaning or use. — Hanover
If the world consists entirely of X and only X and we speak of there being exactly two categories of X, X(a) and X(b — Hanover
Logically, 'nothing,' cannot have a reference to it. — universeness
find this confusing if your X = 'natural' as X(a) and X(b) would then have to be subcategories of natural.
Surely the contest is between x=natural and y=supernatural.
If y doesn't exist, then sure you can still reference it as a nonexistent, just like winged horses, orcs and elves or the word nothing. — universeness
Which is why things which are not caused can't be empirically proved?If "natural" things necessarily have a cause, and a cause is necessarily something other than its effect, then we must allow for a class of things which is other than "natural" — Metaphysician Undercover
“Supernatural” means above and beyond the natural world. — ”Art48”
Thinking of “Supernatural” as an empty, useless term is possible if and when you think that, by natural explanations, you are able to exhaust all that we need to know, essentially, about something. — ”Angelo Cannata”
The fact that we don't know the limits of the natural doesn't matter - supernatural is a provisional term — ”Tom Strom”
But that which manifests in reality and that which are mere manifestations of a curious human imagination regarding that which is currently misunderstood or is currently unknown, should never be conflated. — ”universeness”
Supernatural should refer to super nature, such as Stars and Solstices. — ”Varde”
Science can do without the term and just study phenomena, but then has to replace indistinguishable 'man and nature' with indistinguishable 'subjective and objective', or indistinguishable 'observer and observation'.
Thus if 'supernatural' refers to nothing, 'natural' refers to everything, and both terms lose their meaning.
To deny meaning to "supernatural" is equivalent to claiming that "all is one" (all is natural), which, ironically, is very much the cry of the mystic. — ”unenlightened"
It looks like the supernatural refers to a class of things/phenomena that defies natural (read scientific) explanation. — ”Agent Smith”
Seems to me the word "supernatural" can more or less be replaced with "unknown" without incurring any informative loss. — ”jorndoe”
(COMMENT)‘Miracles are not against nature, but against what we know of nature’
~ St Augustine — ”Wayfarer”
Why do you keep referring to it? — unenlightened
However, there are some who would insist that natural things need not be caused, rejecting the principle of sufficient reason, attributing the existence of all naturally occurring things to some random fluctuation or a similar random event in a chaotic pool of randomness. But this approach stipulates that nature is inherently unintelligible, having no reason or cause for natural existence. Therefore it is counter-productive to the philosophical mind, which has the desire to know, extinguishing the desire to know by designating knowledge of this cause as impossible. I.e., there is no such cause. So such a position is extremely repugnant to a philosopher. And philosophers readily accept the reality of the supernatural as a logically necessary principle. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am trying to convince others that nonexistents don't exist — universeness
Don't read this as a suggestion that because the term supernatural is useful and non-empty that there must be elves. I'm not uttering objects into existence — Hanover
You'll be telling us next that the pope is Catholic and bears shit in the woods — unenlightened
If you see the contents of my posts on this thread as obvious truths then... — universeness
Sadly not — unenlightened
That nonexistents don't exist is fairly obvious, but it is equally obvious that you can refer to them, because you keep doing so — unenlightened
We are both ok with that, yes? — universeness
X = everything. — Hanover
Sadly, it seems you are. I can only leave you to your nonsense at this point — unenlightened
Don't read this as a suggestion that because the term supernatural is useful and non-empty that there must be elves. I'm not uttering objects into existence. — Hanover
https://ashidakim.com/zenkoans/80therealmiracle.htmlWhen Bankei was preaching at Ryumon temple, a Shinshu priest, who believed in salvation through the repitition of the name of the Buddha of Love, was jealous of his large audience and wanted to debate with him.
Bankei was in the midst of a talk when the priest appeared, but the fellow made such a disturbance that bankei stopped his discourse and asked about the noise.
"The founder of our sect," boasted the priest, "had such miraculous powers that he held a brush in his hand on one bank of the river, his attendant held up a paper on the other bank, and the teacher wrote the holy name of Amida through the air. Can you do such a wonderful thing?"
Bankei replied lightly: "Perhaps your fox can perform that trick, but that is not the manner of Zen. My miracle is that when I feel hungry I eat, and when I feel thirsty I drink."
This preserves the old meaning of the term "nature" as excluding the man-made, because humans have 'a higher nature'. — unenlightened
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