You seem to be missing the point. You can't go from "X is unknowable" to "nothing is knowable". You're suggesting that agnosticism entails global scepticism, but it doesn't. — Michael
As an example, I might say that it is impossible to know whether or not my great grandfather had fish and chips on Jan 1st 1945. There's no self-defeating reasoning here. — Michael
I challenge anyone to prove a metaphysical claim using any means whatsoever: what metaphysical claim has even been "proven"? Philosophers still wrangle over Platonic and Aristotelian metaphysics, with nary a resolution in sight.All those arguments have to start with philosophy as philosophy, unlike empirical sciences, can define God and look at the most basic nature of existence in a most abstract and general way. Empirical sciences focus on different topics. This is off topic, but I challenge anyone to prove that a scientist can answer a metaphysical question using only empirical data and science. Impossible. — Coldlight
I don't even know whether you're an atheist or a theist, but you seem to think that an answer to question of whether God exists is already in hand, and that no reasonable person could believe that God (does/does not) exist. No doubt (atheists/theists) would argue just as vociferously for their position, and would say they have "yet to hear" why the negation of their belief is correct. That's the problem with such a priori metaphysical wrangling: it just goes on and on.To be honest, it seems to me that agnostics try to dodge the bullet and don't want to admit that they're claiming that they've found an absolute truth.
I'd welcome the correct definition if anyone has it :)
Presumptions aside:
1) God is unknown. - I'm yet to hear why God is unknown and why that is not just lack of trying on our side. (God is used just as an example here, same could go for the soul or some other immaterial, empirically improvable existence) And if anyone finds it highly unlikely to be able to answer the questions of such sort, isn't it just a cultural influence? Isn't it just ''okay'' to think that we cannot know such things?
2) God's existence is unknowable. - Somehow it is knowable that it is unknowable, I wonder how that is the case. This is not a claim based on empirical evidence.
Science (here broadly defined to include avenues of empirical investigation which rely upon examining data and generating explanations for phenomena by employing a reasoned analysis of said data) does employ abductive arguments (inferences to the best explanation).I take issue with that. They are more like abductive arguments, i.e. arguments to the most likely cause. But an empirical argument would require that you were able to detect 'the first cause' (or whatever) by scientific apparatus or observation; that it would be a phenomenon whose existence could be demonstrated by some actual observation or experimental outcome. 'Empiricism' means 'experienceable' in that sense - that it shows up some way that can be see either by the naked eye, or detected by instruments.
But take, for example, an argument like this: 'that evolution naturally tends towards creating higher levels of intelligence'. I think that would generally not be accepted by evolutionary biologists; although it has happened on Earth, the general belief is that 'were the tape of evolution replayed', that the outcome might be blue-green algae, or cockroaches, or sharks (as indeed it was for long periods of time). So I don't think that evolutionary theory would agree with the apparent teleological nature of such an argument.
So how would such an argument be settled empirically? I would think it could only be if a large number of other life-bearing planets were discovered - which I'm sure you will agree, seems highly unlikely. But then, if all of them showed the emergence of language- and tool-using beings, no matter what form, then you might have an empirical case that evolution tended towards that outcome.
But absent that, many of the 'arguments from design' or teleological arguments of various kinds, could never be settled empirically, even in principle. They're simply based on what seems a likely kind of explanation. — Wayfarer
Therefore agnostic about God must mean that God's existence is improvable and that proposition has to be proved. — Coldlight
At certain time, someone had access to the fact of what your great grandfather ate on Jan 1st 1945, or whether he ate at all that day. That is empirically provable. Someone knew it at some time, even if it was just the great grandfather himself. Same does not apply to metaphysics. It can't be said that someone had more access to the question of God at certain time and space. Such questions are not answered in the same way as the question of whether your great grandfather had a fish on that day or not. — Coldlight
The question of knowledge is from Michael's perspective, not some hypothetical person who has access to the empirical evidence. Yes, someone really did know what his great grandfather ate that day, but they are not us. The question is one about us. Michael cannot know what his great grandfather had for lunch if there is no evidence or way of knowing. So, short of a dated photograph or a journal showing what Michael's great grandfather had for lunch on a particular day, Michael is rationally required to suspend judgement and say he does not know. — Chany
You see as people who study philosophy we are often skeptics are faced with the fallibility of the world more than perhaps people who do not study it. — dclements
To be honest, there is no simple way for me to explain things enough so you can see the world from my eyes — dclements
If you figure out what this means it might help answer your question. — dclements
Well, who knows what man may understand one day, but that is not the issue at hand nor is it one I even have to bother addressing as it isn't really relevant to this issue. — dclements
It is funny but to be honest thinking about this question, I find it kind of hard to address it the right way since I'm unsure of the right um.."paradigm" you might view the world from which would make you ask such a question in philosophy forum. — dclements
I challenge anyone to prove a metaphysical claim using any means whatsoever: what metaphysical claim has even been "proven"? Philosophers still wrangle over Platonic and Aristotelian metaphysics, with nary a resolution in sight. — Arkady
You have simply asserted that empirical investigation cannot, in principle, provide evidence for the existence of God because they are "different topics." But from the fact that philosophy and empirical investigation are distinct areas of inquiry it does not follow that there is no overlap between them — Arkady
I don't even know whether you're an atheist or a theist, but you seem to think that an answer to question of whether God exists is already in hand, and that no reasonable person could believe that God (does/does not) exist. No doubt (atheists/theists) would argue just as vociferously for their position, and would say they have "yet to hear" why the negation of their belief is correct. That's the problem with such a priori metaphysical wrangling: it just goes on and on. — Arkady
But I didn't make that statement, I saidThe statement - ''God's existence can never be proven by logic'' is a logical conclusion. — Coldlight
that it certainly seems to be impossible in principle, that God's existence could ever be proven by logic — John
Perhaps you could do me the courtesy of giving a sample of metaphysical theses or postulates which have been proven?That's because of the nature of philosophy itself. The fact that there is still discussion to this day about Ancient Greek philosophical concepts does not mean that those claims cannot be proven. It's not the same as with empirical sciences. Evolution of philosophy is in improving arguments. And metaphysical claims are to be argued for/against only by philosophers as those are by nature philosophical question. — Coldlight
I'm not talking about defining God (or defining anything, really). I'm talking about empirical detection of the effects God is purported to have wrought. Particular religions make particular claims about what their God (or gods) has done (or continues to do), claims which can be empirically investigated.I haven't merely asserted that. It is truth in principle. Example question:
''What is human? What is the nature of human being?'' To elaborate a bit more on this question: ''What is the definition of a human being that defines it in its most broad and principal sense?''
I'm not going to suggest any answers to this question as this serves only as an example. So, who is the most competent to answer this question? A scientist? No, because a scientist does not define human nature and does not in fact ask any questions about human nature. That is all down to philosophy. Even if scientists came up with a claim about human nature, they would have to use philosophy. In the end, philosophers are the ones to argue for or against the validity of the argument presented.
Back to the question of God. Only philosophy is capable to look at God as a concept and define it in its broadest sense. Physicians cannot ''discover'' God without knowing before hand what the God is and even after ''discovery'' they would need a validation from philosophers in order to see whether it really is God or not.
Philosophy is therefore competent of answering metaphysical questions completely without empirical sciences as those cannot grasp metaphysical concepts in its broadest and most abstract sense.
So, agnostics (qua agnostics) are lazy?I'm implying, on a personal level, that to say that we don't know answer to such questions is more laziness than a real thing. Whether I am a theist or an atheist does not matter.
Agnosticism is the view that the existence of God or the supernatural is unknown or unknowable — Coldlight
Not all investigation involves detecting the putative cause of a phenomenon directly: sometimes just its historical traces are examined. For instance, sometimes impactors strike the Earth, and are vaporized completely, meaning their characteristics have to be inferred from the marks they've left behind. — Arkady
For instance, some believers appeal to God to intercede on their behalf and on behalf of others, including with regard to health. It is perfectly valid to investigate whether those who receive prayers for God's intercession in their disease have better health outcomes than those who receive no such prayers. This experiment has been performed, and found no statistically relevant difference. — Arkady
Not necessarily. Yes, natural science generally adheres to methodological naturalism in its day-to-day work: phenomena under study are presumed to have a naturalistic explanation, and this explanation is sought by interrogating nature by means of contrived experiments or natural observations as a means of testing hypotheses (indeed, even the 40% or so of scientists who believe in God usually adhere to MN in their work). This general strategy has been extremely successful since the advent of modern science.But by definition, whatever cause science is concerned with, is not of a different order to the natural order, i.e. is not transcendent to the natural order. In the case of meteors or other types of causal agents which have all but vanished, the cause is still understood to be the kind of cause that, were circumstances different, would have been physically detectable. — Wayfarer
I never said that all theological arguments are empirical: some, such as the ontological argument and first cause argument, don't seem to rely on empiricism at all. I also never said they were "empty of meaning;" this is just more of you poking the corpse of logical positivism.The view that theological arguments are empirical is based on a misrepresentation of what is being claimed. Granted, theology and metaphysics might (as all positivism insists) be empty of meaning, but not on the grounds you have stated.
This sounds rather more like the fine tuning argument, wouldn't you say? Or would you consider that argument to be one type of the argument from design?'Arguments from design', for example, might state that science can't account for the order which is necessary for life to have arisen in the first place.
I'd say that it is more the case that science observes that the universe is orderly. And only in highly circumscribed instances is it orderly enough to predict its behavior for any length of time (which is why we still don't have long-term weather forecasting, despite decades of effort; though things are improving).And that question, again, is not a scientific one, as science presumes that there is an order - otherwise it can't really even get started - but doesn't, and may not be expected to, explain how this order.
Yes. And even if the alleged miracles are not on quite as firm a footing as the Church may suppose (it doesn't help that the Church picks its own supposedly skeptical peer-reviewers in the form of a "Devil's Advocate;" I don't know if that practice has fallen by the wayside), you will note that the Church here at least aspires to employ scientific rigor in its investigations of purportedly supernatural or sacred phenomena, contra those (including perhaps yourself) who might insist that such matters are not for science.That is true, and if I or a loved one were admitted to hospital for a serious illness, I would certainly not wish to rely on prayer for the cure.
However, there is quite a lot of documentation describing various cases of alleged miraculous intervention in the case of serious or life-threatening illnesses, when these cases are considered grounds for canonisation proceedings by the Catholic Church. As the Church has been gathering such cases for centuries, there is quite a lot of documentary evidence, apparently.
even if the alleged miracles are not on quite as firm a footing as the Church may suppose (it doesn't help that the Church picks its own supposedly skeptical peer-reviewers in the form of a "Devil's Advocate;" I don't know if that practice has fallen by the wayside), you will note that the Church here at least aspires to employ scientific rigor in its investigations of purportedly supernatural or sacred phenomena, contra those (including perhaps yourself) who might insist that such matters are not for science. — Arkady
If a sick person recovers through prayer and without medicine, that’s nice, but not a miracle. She had to be sick or dying despite receiving the best of care. The church finds no incompatibility between scientific medicine and religious faith; for believers, medicine is just one more manifestation of God’s work on earth.
Perversely then, this ancient religious process, intended to celebrate exemplary lives, is hostage to the relativistic wisdom and temporal opinions of modern science. Physicians, as nonpartisan witnesses and unaligned third parties, are necessary to corroborate the claims of hopeful postulants. For that reason alone, illness stories top miracle claims. I never expected such reverse skepticism and emphasis on science within the church.
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