I shudder to think what devoutly religious scientists like Francis Collins, or deeply philosophical ones like David Bohm would make of such tripe. — andrewk
Many thousands of years ago our culture was not broken into fragments as it is now. At that time science and spirituality were not separated. Since then they have grown far apart. In my view it is important to bring them together.
The modern view has been that of mechanism and the universe was compared to a gigantic machine (originally clockwork and later the structure of atoms). This outlook has gone on to regard the human being as a machine
This development has led to a view that has had bad effects. For example, Steven Weinberg, one of the leading physicists of our time has said the more we look into the cosmos the less we see any evidence of meaning. There is no place in this for spirit. It is all mechanism. The domain of spirit has receded until it’s gone as far as science is concerned. We may still hold onto the idea of spirit in spite of this, but at the expense at a kind of split in life.
Modern views on science must be contributing to the current lack of meaning. First of all directly by being mechanistic and secondly indirectly be leading people who want to hold onto spirituality to be incoherent in various aspects of their lives.
But does modern science really force us into mechanism? At present, most scientists seem to believe that this was inevitable.
A current notion that is commonly accepted is that science is value free except possibly for truth, honesty, and similar notions. But that is not really so. Thus, Thomas Khun has said that scientists almost unconsciously pick up paradigms in their apprenticeships which have all sorts of values in them. One of the current values is that mechanism is the right way and the only way. Another value is that we want to make everything calculable by some sort of algorithm.
When scientists just do there jobs, look at some new collected data and make their scientific article on what the data can tell to us, it isn't hard to imagine that by observing this 'behaviour' you get the impression of scientific materialism and physicalism being the dominant beliefs in the scientific community.
Ask them a little bit else and you can notice that physicalism isn't the trendiest fad in the community. — ssu
And the salient question is 'what possible changes could we make, in any attempt to somehow include the observer, to the way we practice the natural sciences?'. How would including the human observer change what we say about geology, or climate science? — Janus
The typical response you would get just about anywhere else on the internet, where rational thought is encouraged would be something of the sort to seek professional advice. — Wallows
However, one notable characteristic is that energy is not always linearly organised. For example, when looking at the relation between visible light and invisible light, instead of observing another red after the violet or another violet before the red, we find that, even using special instruments, the shades of colour do not exceed a certain spatial range. That is, the infra/ultra-red are close to the visible red, then followed by the infra/ultra-orange which are adjacent to the visible orange, and so on. — BrianW
What are the problems that you think are solved by not believing in Truth, or by supposing that all truth is relative? — PossibleAaran
The Truth is the transcendental Truth; it is what it is regardless how many different personal “truths” there are. — AJJ
It seems to me that a person who actually lived as if there were no truth would collapse right where they were, to eventually die and rot away; because there’d be no reason for them to do anything else. — AJJ
You have a good point. That there is Truth does not necessarily mean that we have access to it. However, I don’t think this affects the OP argument, since it can still be the case that facts ought to be believed, even if we can never really know what is and is not a fact. — AJJ
“The cat is on the mat” is false if the cat is not on the mat. — AJJ
true, and to follow convention, that does define a demarcation between 'hard science' and 'soft science.' — ernestm
The issue is that attempts to make the description too exact wind up excluding things that are conventionally considered science. While trying to make it too fuzzy (but concretely stated, so that a robot could follow it, say), wind up including things that are conventionally not considered science. — Terrapin Station
science is typically concerned with objective events. What we're going to call something and why we're going to call it that are not objective events. — Terrapin Station
If you regard science as a method, rather than some collection of facts, then there isn't really a way to define a limit to its application. — ernestm
First, in the spirit of solving one thing at a time, does this mean that you agree that it wouldn't be possible to come up with objective demarcation criteria? — Terrapin Station
We're talking about the supposed objectivity of calling/considering one set of activities "science" and another set of activities "pseudo-science" (or whatever else we'd like to call it), right? — Terrapin Station
What do these people mean when they say that have "felt God". One doesn't feel, or otherwise observe, God directly, like one observes how other organisms behave in their environment, or rockets blasting off and landing on the Moon. We can all (believers and non believers alike) observe these things and verify that the theories about are valid or not.
Referring to God would be more like theorizing the existence of atoms or the Big Bang. We dont observe those things, we use them to explain what we do observe, and it has to be logically consistent and coherent. God has yet to be defined in any consistent way, like atoms have. Each person that claims to have felt God may not agree on what God entails except that it can be felt, but how is that useful? How can that be tested? — Harry Hindu
The whole idea that there can be objective criteria is way off base. Any criteria are going to be subjective. — Terrapin Station
It's simply a matter of whether there's some consensus about it or not. And there is a consensus about what's scientific or not — Terrapin Station
Also, obviously one does not have to care about the consensus, though it is true that the consensus has some socio-psychological impact that's more difficult to avoid. — Terrapin Station
Those arguing for some kind of specific science, be it indigenous science, islamic science or whatever creationist humbug are politicizing themselves science. And they believe it's totally normal because they start from the idea that science is a tool of political power. — ssu
Wonder what you don't think to be a tool of oppression... — ssu
Traditions like belief in there existing witches and black magic. How noble traditions have been destroyed by science. — ssu
We can't define what science is? Not even a bit? Is it ridiculous even to try? — ssu
Ah!!!! Science is a tool for oppression!!! :death: — ssu
Simply the actual method it is? — ssu
Sorry, but you do conflate scientists with science. Especially everything else they can do or think that isn't science. — ssu
No free will - Quite long, but it's a complex issue. — FreeEnergy
During the minute that it takes me to compose this sentence, thousands of animals are being eaten alive, many others are running for their lives, whimpering with fear, others are slowly being devoured from within by rasping parasites, thousands of all kinds are dying of starvation, thirst, and disease. It must be so. If there ever is a time of plenty, this very fact will automatically lead to an increase in the population until the natural state of starvation and misery is restored — FreeEnergy
My ambitions had to do with the belief that if I'll make my life better I would become happy, I don't believe in this anymore — FreeEnergy
Life is an evolutional process of entropy acceleration, there is no free choice, it's not even clear why there is consciousness, evolution is cruel, stupid and wasteful by design, nothing you do matters in a non-local scale — FreeEnergy
How does one deal with an existential crisis? — FreeEnergy
everything feels meaningless — FreeEnergy
Why do scientific facts obtain so well? You can say that it is similar to how a carpenter creates a masterpiece furniture, but is that the same? A man-made object created by someone, or a social convention, can be arbitrarily changed, and is contingent, varied. Any decision on it would be the freedom of the carpenter, or the architect. Perhaps the language of the woordworker is real in that community, but they are contingent conventions. This is not so with the science language game. There are constraints that nature is imposing, making the findings a necessity. It is nature forcing our hand. It moves away from contingency and hits on necessity. — schopenhauer1
Of course the default is that the mathematically-informed science is just an interpretation. But the interpretation corresponds with a greater predictive ability and technology which gives it a different characteristic far beyond other language-games and their heuristics, even accounting for other heuristics getting refined over time with accumulated knowledge. — schopenhauer1