Science, Naturalism,and Apologetics
that's like saying "you keep criticizing capitalism but you have to use economics to do it."
- No, Joe. It's actually more like saying "you keep criticizing capitalism, but you take advantage of the capitalist system whenever you find it economically worthwhile." This statement does not imply that capitalism is the only economic system. But it does point out a blatant hypocrisy.
Skep:
With regard to science, it's the same thing. You agree with the notion that "science purports to tell us how the physical world stacks up and wont allow any other method to introduce other kinds of truth" (your own words). But along comes somebody with this M-scale, which purports to be scientific, yet it violates the very precept of naturalism in science that you so despise.
Joe:
First of all naturalism is not science. It is not a methodology it's a philosophy;a metaphysical assumption. Rejecting naturalism and doing science is not a contradiction. You can do science and not be a naturalist.You claim to know so much about science and yet you don't even know the difference in philosophy and scientific method.
Secondly, there is nothing in M scale that opposes naturalism. It doesn't make any supernatural assumptions,it has nothing to do with the theory of naturalism. the M scale does not assume God exists.
Skep:
And you are quite happy to latch onto it, claiming that you have scientific backing for your non-naturalistic beliefs.
Joe:
In your,little cult of science worship the philosophical assumptions like naturalism are integral to science bit in real science they are not,,
These quotes say that naturalism is a philosophy,
the Stanford Encyclopedia of philosophy
The term “naturalism” has no very precise meaning in contemporary philosophy. Its current usage derives from debates in America in the first half of the last century. The self-proclaimed “naturalists” from that period included John Dewey, Ernest Nagel, Sidney Hook and Roy Wood Sellars. These philosophers aimed to ally philosophy more closely with science. They urged that reality is exhausted by nature, containing nothing “supernatural”, and that the scientific method should be used to investigate all areas of reality, including the “human spirit” (Krikorian 1944; Kim 2003).
Answer: Naturalism is the belief that all that exists in the universe is physical, material matter. There is no soul; we are just a complex collection of neurons. There is no Creator; there is evolution. And experiences like pain, pleasure, beauty, and a sense of self do not really exist. They are merely physiological reactions.
The philosophy of naturalism leads to several incomplete ways of thinking about the world. One of the most important concerns the philosophy of telos, or purpose. The Christian worldview holds that the purpose of a thing must be given to it by a higher authority. Since naturalism teaches there is no higher authority (no deity), it deduces that mankind, creation, and individuals have no purpose in life."
5/25/2018 08:00:00 AM
Joe:
The use of science is limited to those areas where it applies. I don't use science to tell me about God because God is not under the domain of scienceSkep:
- That statement is inconsistent with your claims that the "scientific" M-scale gives you empirical evidence that provides warrant for believe in God.
Joe:
First of all naturalism is not science. It is not a methodologySkep:
- That's right. And it is the metaphysical basis on which science is based. I never said otherwise.
Joe:
Secondly, there is nothing in M scale that opposes naturalism.Skep:
- If it gives you reason to believe in something supernatural (which is your claim), then it is not a tool of science. Science does nor deal with the supernatural.
Joe:
In your,little cult of science worship the philosophical assumptions like naturalism are integral to science bit in real science they are notSkep:
- See section 2 of the SEP article in naturalism (yes, the same one that you cited but didn't read). Science cannot proceed without a presumption that the physical world behaves in accordance with laws of naturalistic regularity.
Joe:
The use of science is limited to those areas where it applies. I don't use science to tell me about God because God is not under the domain of science.
Skep:
- That statement is inconsistent with your claims that the "scientific" M-scale gives you empirical evidence that provides warrant for believe in God.
Joe:
Not at all inconsistent it just means you haven't bothered to follow the argent.No one ever said evidence for God has to be direct empirical observation of God. That's why it's called the 'trace' of God and not "the direct observation of God."
First of all naturalism is not science. It is not a methodology
Skep:
- That's right. And it is the metaphysical basis on which science is based. I never said otherwise.
Joe:
yes you did, You said M scale violated naturalism as though Naturalist is a methodology rather than a metaphysical assumption,
Secondly, there is nothing in M scale that opposes naturalism.
Skep:
- If it gives you reason to believe in something supernatural (which is your claim), then it is not a tool of science. Science does nor deal with the supernatural.
Joe:
that is based upon your misunderstanding of what SN is,
Me: "In your,little cult of science worship the philosophical assumptions like naturalism are integral to science bit in real science they are not"
Skep:
- See section 2 of the SEP article in naturalism (yes, the same one that you cited but didn't read). Science cannot proceed without a presumption that the physical world behaves in accordance with laws of naturalistic regularity.
Joe:
that is not naturalism: one can assume that the the world behaves with naturalistic regularity without makimng it a metaphysical assumption. Moreover, you can't account for such laws, the major point of my overall argument(remember the argument?) is to account for those laws. The only rational way to account for them is to see them as product of mind,
commentary:
Christians can assume that God set up the natural world to function on its own. The reason is obvious, because if we know factually that God created the world it would make faith unnecessary and the quest for relationship with God would be undermined. God wants us to take a journey of faith, That seems rather obvious because the bible tells us 'we walk by faith and not by sight,"(2 Cor 5:7).Science needs to assume naturalism in terms of it's operational understanding, otherwise we would not be studying the natural world. Moreover, God and science have separate domains of knowledge that is what God meant to be, a world that functions on it's own, by naturalistic principles, but we do not have to make those principles into major metaphysical assumptions. We can keep them as operational assumptions for doing science. We can be aware that if Go works in the world we are moving beyond science into philosophy or theology when we talk about that.