What are you arguing for here? — Noble Dust
I'll mention again that I need to study the theory of rationalization more, but offhand I'm skeptical of the idea that scientism (or an irrational dependence on science) is responsible for it. — praxis
You (and billions of others) are suffering from a cultural malaise, from the pernicious effects of taking a religious view of science, as others here are saying.
Take the underlying principles of religious belief and apply them to prevailing materialistic views. — Nobel Dust
Is not this assertion that "we cannot know" itself a dogma with affirmations and denials? Is not this itself a statement of knowledge? Is "we cannot know with certainty" not itself an assertion of KNOWLEDGE (a dogmatic assertion) as THE WAY to interpret Scripture? Whether conscious of it or not, this is what is called "double-talk" and those who believe this are doing the very thing they claim to despise, even in the very speaking of it. Its like Oprah stating on national television that it is arrogant to think Jesus is the only way, and then turning around and telling us the ONLY WAY is to believe that all religions lead to the same God. Is this not itself an arrogant claim ... a claim which must have a bird's eye view of knowledge to state it with such certainty. — John Hendryx: Reformation Theology (blog)
By the way, and not that it's important, I was perusing the Get Creative! topic in the lounge and noticed some of your artistic expressions.I'm one of the practitioners of a personal spiritual practice that you felt the need to alert me to here. I'm not a member of a religion. Correct me if I'm wrong, but you seem to have assumed so simply because I'm not critiquing religion here, and I'm using it in a neutral way as an analogy. — Noble Dust
I guess that I didn't recognize taking science as a "source of moral authority or a basis for normative judgement" as an expression of rationalization — praxis
By the way, and not that it's important, I was perusing the Get Creative! topic in the lounge and noticed some of your artistic expressions. — praxis
I take it to be the initial recognition of the divorce of facts and values that is one of the basic problems of modern philosophy. — Wayfarer
Don't we evaluate everything? — praxis
There seems to be a subtlety, or fundamental understanding, that I'm missing. Maybe if you could give a practical example.Indeed we do - but what I'm talking about is looking to science to provide a normative basis for values, which is often beyond it's legitimate scope. — Wayfarer
I'm sure. Because my profession demands that I be in front of a computer screen all day I try to avoid additional eye strain and consume books in audio format when possible. Unfortunately Audible only has two Weber offerings, both short form.Weber is worth reading in long form, to appreciate the rigour and erudition of his writing. — Wayfarer
Clearly we don't want to give power back to magicians, and we don't want to remain in the iron cage. So what can we do?Rationalization destroyed the authority of magical powers, but it also brought into being the machine-like regulation of bureaucracy, which ultimately challenges all systems of belief. — Max Weber
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