I feel much the same about the atheist, that they’ve given up the quest to find a deeper reality. — Art48
The atheist may respond that religions have had millennia to get their act together, and have failed — Art48
BUT had the alchemists given up, we might never have discovered chemistry. — Art48
Of course, atheists may be right in that there is no deeper reality to be found, at least, not a reality that could in any sensible way be called “God.” — Art48
But how to apply science’s epistemological method to religion? — Art48
Perhaps, if religion employed something similar to science’s epistemological method, real progress could be made. — Art48
Science and philosophy run on parallel rails. — Vera Mont
Of course, atheists may be right in that there is no deeper reality to be found, at least, not a reality that could in any sensible way be called “God.” But they may be wrong, too. — Art48
What’s needed is an atheism that overcomes epistemological
method. I recommend Nietzsche, Foucault , Kuhn and Rouse. — Joshs
I feel much the same about the atheist, that they’ve given up the quest to find a deeper reality. — Art48
Of course, atheists may be right in that there is no deeper reality to be found, at least, not a reality that could in any sensible way be called “God.” But they may be wrong, too. — Art48
What if there was a description of a God that satisfies science, evolution, philosophy etc.
You can only be atheist to known religions — Benj96
To be atheist to "all gods" is equivalent to saying I don't believe in any ideas whatsoever. In essence "I believe in nothing, both now and in the future". — Benj96
Most atheists and theists are not metaphysicians. Besides, what difference can "finding a deeper reality" make to one's everyday existence or ethical agency? Btw, I'm (usually) a philosophical naturalist and antitheist – whatever divinity there might be, I'm convinced it is not "supernatural" (à la Epicurus/Spinoza).I feel much the same about the atheist, that they’ve given up the quest to find a deeper reality. — Art48
:100: :up:Being an atheist does not make you a specific thing. — Tom Storm
Yeah, and chemistry is "a remnant of" alchemy, astronomy "a remnant of" astrology, philosophy "a remnant of" mythology – big whup. I don't see the point of this old canard (i.e. genetic fallacy). Anyway. Care to cite an instance of "religious metaphysics" (1) that quantifies the error of predictions, (2) that experimentally tests its explanations, (3) that is institutionally error-correcting – fallibilistic – by a peer-review community, (4) that is free of "revealed" "X-of-the-gaps" dogmas, etc etc? :chin:Science’s epistemological method is itself a remnant of religious metaphysics. — Joshs
Perhaps, if religion employed something similar to science’s epistemological method, real progress could be made. — Art48
Yet many naturalists still implicitly understand science as aiming to take God's place. They interpret science as trying to represent nature from a standpoint outside of nature. — Joshs
Care to cite an instance of "religious metaphysics" (1) that quantifies the error of predictions, (2) that experimentally tests its explanations, (3) that is institutionally error-correcting – fallibilistic – by a peer-review community, (4) that is free of "revealed" "X-of-the-gaps" dogmas, etc etc? :chin: — 180 Proof
Science does not seek a view from nowhere, it seeks explanations that work anywhere.
The claim that science tries to stand outside of nature is no more than rhetoric. — Banno
But how to apply science’s epistemological method to religion? — Art48
Would that not make them agnostic? — Benj96
I think this view is mistaken. Part of the way in which science reaches a consensus is that it frames its assertions so that they are true regardless of one's frame of reference. Scientific principles are the same regardless of where one is standing. In physics this is made clear in the Principle of Relativity.
Science does not seek a view from nowhere, it seeks explanations that work anywhere.
The claim that science tries to "stand outside of nature" is no more than rhetoric. — Banno
A view from everywhere , or sideways on, is a relative of the view from nowhere. — Joshs
I think this fundamentally wrong. First, the stance you describe, "a view from everywhere" is not something that science seeks. Rather science seeks to express its assertions in a way that is acceptable to any observer. Second, the emphasis in scientific method is not objectivity, but agreement. What is commonly called objectivity amounts to an agreed description.What justifies this stance is a view of nature grounded in a set of normative presuppositions concerning objectivity. — Joshs
There must be something universal within ‘nature in itself’ that makes it possible for science to ‘work anywhere’. — Joshs
Perhaps not. It all comes down to a unification of a perfect reasoning and perfect ethics as one undeniable unanimity. — Benj96
One we have yet to approach, either for reasons of our own flawed logic or because it may not exist. — Benj96
Why wee do you think Dennett’s and Dawkin’s doctrinaire atheism comes from? — Joshs
Of course we can. Nobody believes in anybody else's personal interpretation: believers all believe in their own interpretation, which is usually, but not universally, based on some description given to them as dogma, but varies slightly or widely from one believer to the next. I believe you have one, which is fine, as long as you don't bully other people or scare the horses, but I don't believe in any.I woukd ask them if they don't believe in any God, tell me why you don't believe in my personal interpretation. Which of course they cannot, until I describe it. — Benj96
If it gives you comfort to classify them thus, I'm sure most would be tolerant of your label, but would not choose it themselves. Reason: to call oneself agnostic is to suggest - especially to theists, who tend to grab the slightest hint of uncertainty and run amok with it - that one still entertains the god ideas that have been presented in doctrine form - particularly their doctrine, because they tend to be unfamiliar with any other.Would that not make them agnostic? — Benj96
But how to apply science’s epistemological method to religion? — Art48
Why should anyone do that?? Can you explain? — baker
A freethinker's faith:
Both you and I are unbelievers, the only difference being that I'm consistent. The same reason you don't believe in all other gods (except one) is the very same reason I don't believe in your god either. The point is I do not have superstitious or religious commitments. What I trust, or believe in, is public evidence and sound reasoning.
The same might be said of the alchemists: that many of their beliefs were childish fantasies unrelated to reality. BUT had the alchemists given up, we might never have discovered chemistry. I feel much the same about the atheist, that they’ve given up the quest to find a deeper reality.
Of course, atheists may be right in that there is no deeper reality to be found, at least, not a reality that could in any sensible way be called “God.” But they may be wrong, too. — Art48
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