That's not the way the word 'scientism' is used. 'Scientism' occurs when someone demands that non-scientific claims, such as claims about spiritual experiences, meet scientific standards. If, as you appear to be suggesting, the Vatican is claiming that phenomena occurred that contradict current science - which is a far stronger claim than just that it is not explained by current science - then they are making a claim about science, and it is not scientism to require that claims about science meet scientific standards.Furthermore, I think you're illustrating what I describe as 'scientism' - that only scientific accounts have credence, that religious authorities can't have. — Wayfarer
What more is there to it, and how does that extra feature lend support to belief in the efficacy of supplicatory prayer?But the kind of phenomena that are being discussed in these cases are not simply 'unexplained' - there's more to it than that. — Wayfarer
That it cannot be accounted for scientifically is no evidence for it being a miracle. The number of unexplained phenomena scientists observe is much greater than the number of explained phenomena. That's why they still have jobs - to search for explanations.The article I referred to is about a medical specialist who was called in to adjudicate whether a particular case could be accounted for scientifically. — Wayfarer
Sorry, I just noticed this comment, which is quite distinct to the one to which I just responded. I definitely would not put Catholicism generally in that box. It's the institution that I object to. There are some Catholics that I greatly admire, including their spiritual dimension.So you would put Catholicism generally in the same box? — Wayfarer
No, I think they are mistaken because:You think they all must be false as a matter of principle? — Wayfarer
Sure, but in the case of the Vatican's so-called miracles, they are never outlandish. They are all easily encompassed within the very wide area of things we do not understand about the human body. How strange of God to always avoid doing a miracle in an area where we understand the body very well - such as an inability to regrow legs.The miraculous is not necessarily the outlandish. — Wayfarer
I don't know who this 'we' is. Presumably you speak for yourself, but for who else? Not me. The trouble with miracle claims is not that they are in a box marked religion but in a box marked quackery. They belong with the carnival snake-oil salesmen of the 19th century, for the reasons so eloquently described by BC, amongst others. For me, the box marked religion is a 'good' box and deals with spirituality - which may or may not include a sense of the divine, not with rent-seeking petitions to a supernatural mafia boss.I think the underlying issue is that we've put all this in a box, marked 'religion', and declared our attitude towards it, and we don't at all want to contemplate the possibility of opening it again. — Wayfarer
Indeed. When the RC church is able to produce a case where an amputee has regrown a leg after prayers on their behalf, there will be reason for non-RC people to take these claims of miraculous healing seriously.What I believe happened in these situations is unexplained healing which has occurred periodically in cases where saints were not involved. — Bitter Crank
It is not sufficient. I don't know anybody that would describe a 1.51m human as 'tall'.Thus the condition is both sufficient and necessary for the conclusion. — Samuel Lacrampe
There is a great deal of philosophical discussion - some of it quite interesting - about the interpretation and implication of a premise like this in the case of beings that do not exist at the time of the action in question - 'future beings' or 'contingent future beings'. Peter Singer has an extended discussion of it in his book Practical Ethics - the chapter on killing animals.1 Do not harm others — Andrew4Handel
I don't know what that fellow is on about, if what he says matches your paraphrase. I don't know anybody welcoming Islam with open arms, any more than they are welcoming Hinduism or capitalism with open arms when we admit refugees that have those characteristics. It is people, not beliefs, towards which we feel compassion.And that brings us to Ross Douthat's point about those who are willing to welcome Islam with open arms, but who won't contemplate the possibility that their values ought to be respected. Why? Because all values, or even the absence of values, are a matter of individual opinion. — Wayfarer
I don't think Western is necessarily intended as pejorative. In the minds of some shallow thinkers it is, but not generally. Consider for instance Bertrand Russell's 'History of Western Philosophy' which is still, despite its flaws, regarded as one of the best, most approachable descriptions of the Western philosophical tradition. Russell certainly did not mean Western in a pejorative way. He was very respectful of the achievements of Western culture. 'Western' is just an easy way to distinguish it from the other two large, influential cultures and philosophical streams the Earth has seen, which are Chinese and Indian.I feel as though it was an umbrella term created to strawman all American and European ideas into being considered "bad" or "wrong". — SleepingAwake
That is not what you said. You did not mention scripture. You asked whether gay-marriage-opposing Muslims would abandon their support for terrorism if the West abandoned support for gay marriage.It was a rhetorical question, not a policy proposal. It is along the lines: the West requires and expects that Muslims consider revising the aspects of their scripture that support holy war and killing of infidels so as to better conform to the requirements of a pluralistic, global culture - that they abandon the concept of 'religiously-sanctioned violence'. — Wayfarer
I suggest you read more carefully. I did not say it did. But the post implies that any Muslim that is opposed to pornography and gay marriage supports terrorism.In no way did he say or imply that he was talking about all Muslims. — Thorongil
Terrorism can bring down the West not by military action but by making the West betray its values in the name of the so-called 'war against terror'. The fall will not be military but moral, and is well underway.How will terrorism bring down the west? — VagabondSpectre
That's reverting to action to prevent domestic terrorism incidents, which I have indicated - without rebuttal - is an insignificant issue in public policy terms.I mentioned that Western governments should shut down mosques that breed terrorists, try those suspected of plotting terrorist activities for treason, and force the Gulf Arab states to take more refugees. — Thorongil
Read the rebuttals from myself and WhiskeyWhiskers. That's not hard either.Read what I've said. It's not hard. — Thorongil
If we spent on those problems a quarter of the money and removal of personal freedom involved in the 'war against terror' we would reduce the annual death toll by a large multiple of the annual death toll in Western countries from terrorist acts.But solving "road deaths, inadequate-health-system-related deaths, or poverty-related deaths," is simple, right? — Thorongil
My recollection is that you made some statement purported to be a reason, it was challenged and shown to be no reason at all, and you didn't even attempt rebut that challenge. It was too many pages ago to find, but if you want to do that and try to recycle it, go for it.I gave you the reason. — Thorongil
I'm afraid I cannot tell you how it happens. I can only observe that it does. In my case I was disturbed by the notion of death for the first forty years or so of my life, then one day I found that I wasn't. There are all sorts of factors that I can think of that may have been relevant: reading Buddhist and Hindu writings, reading Epicurus and the Stoics, taking up bike riding in a busy, non-bike-friendly city where I feel my life is in danger every day, my children getting old enough that I no longer felt my death would create major financial and logistical stress for them and my partner, ceasing to believe in Hell. But it's all guesswork. All I know is that something changed so that I no longer fear it, and that I do not believe in individual survival after death. Indeed, I feared death the most when I believed in post-death survival - because of that RC Hell thing y'know.How can one be satisfied with the thought of one's own impending death without referring to the individual's after death experience? — Metaphysician Undercover