Was the Klingon war arc wrapped up then or not?
I think it is, actually....it's not irrational for religious people to want to retain their religious beliefs whilst also accepting scientific truth...
From that description, it really sounds like you're more of an agnostic than an atheist. "X can never be tested, therefore we Just Don't Know and we ought to hold the possibility open" is a very different position from "X can never be tested, therefore there's no reason to believe it."And neither is anything else we can offer logically, that is the whole point, we can never truly know. That's what faith means and is also why my atheism is as much about faith as any other stance. That we can never know means we can only believe, or not.
In fact, I don't see how it could be anything other than irrational. To do so, to hold such fundamentally incompatible worldviews in one's head at the same time, requires either (as others have posted) that one willingly discard major parts of one or both worldviews to elide the conflict, or alternately (probably the case for most people) that one never possesses any informed, sophisticated understanding of those views in the first place.
From that description, it really sounds like you're more of an atheist than an agnostic. "X can never be tested, therefore we Just Don't Know and we ought to hold the possibility open" is a very different position from "X can never be tested, therefore there's no reason to believe it."
Atheism is not an act of faith. It's the exact opposite. It's an act of rational skepticism.
As Richard Dawkins once put it, "it is completely unrealistic to claim, as Gould and many others do, that religion keeps itself away from science's turf,
I believe they can co-exist but don't feel the need to justify my belief system. Truth is I think science is loaded with theory and unproved formula. It tries thoughAt the end of the day I don't really have a dog in this fight. Maybe one of the posters in this thread who is religious and believes that Science and Faith can coexist can do a better job of explaining this point of view.
I think it is, actually.
In fact, I don't see how it could be anything other than irrational. To do so, to hold such fundamentally incompatible worldviews in one's head at the same time, requires either (as others have posted) that one willingly discard major parts of one or both worldviews to elide the conflict, or alternately (probably the case for most people) that one never possesses any informed, sophisticated understanding of those views in the first place.
I mean, I appreciate your inclination to be tolerant and diplomatic about this sort of thing, especially given your personal background. And as an attorney and a devoted civil libertarian, I would certainly defend anyone's right to believe in absolutely any religion they like, as a matter of fundamental personal autonomy. That doesn't mean I think it's rational of anyone to do so, though.
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And this betrays a pretty fundamental misunderstanding of how science works. "It's only a theory" is frequently trotted out when evolution, or climate change comes up. To dismiss 'theory' so casually is to dismiss an explanation for a phenomenon which fits with all known evidence. Because that's what a theory is. It doesn't mean 'guess', or 'idea'. It means something which explains the evidence that we have about a particular phenomenon. The theory of evolution by natural selection, for example, explains the evidence that we have (and its a lot) about the progression and change in life forms over the course of the Earth's history. When we discover new evidence, it tests the theory. So far, the theory has won out. What is 'proof' if not the accumulation of relevant evidence to the point where doubt is unreasonable?Truth is I think science is loaded with theory and unproved formula. It tries though
Whoops, mea culpa. I meant to type "you sound like more of agnostic than an atheist." I've edited now to clarify.I said I was an atheist......
Kindly share an example of a system, any system at all within the universe as we know it, within which causality and rationality do not have any meaning.`And no, rational skepticism would be a statement within the confines of the system where the word "rational" has meaning. It would be based on applying occam's razor to simplify an hypothesis, concepts which are meaningless outside of that system where causality has meaning.Outside of that setting an statement is one of faith, regardless of the likelihood of it's literal truth.
Well, of course it's a generalization. We're talking about billions of people here. I freely acknowledge the likely existence of outliers, but (as in any population) outliers are not the ones from whom you should generalize. On the whole, I find that people who claim to accept science yet also hold on to religious beliefs cannot actually explain what exactly they believe to be true about either, nor how they can rationally reconcile them. They're just trying to have their cake and eat it too.I feel that your view is a generalised, blanket judgement on a very diverse group of people...
Why thank you. Indeed, very civil all around!Having said that, I do appreciate your opinion and have enjoyed the opportunity to debate this with you. One of the things I like most about this board is the high level of discourse with intelligent people. When we're not all arguing about Discovery of course.
I've never found that.On the whole, I find that people who claim to accept science yet also hold on to religious beliefs cannot actually explain what exactly they believe to be true about either, nor how they can rationally reconcile them. They're just trying to have their cake and eat it too.
As a religious person I can describe what I think is true, why I disagree with science in some instances, and why I disagree with religious institutions at times. It isn't binary.On the whole, I find that people who claim to accept science yet also hold on to religious beliefs cannot actually explain what exactly they believe to be true about either, nor how they can rationally reconcile them. They're just trying to have their cake and eat it too.
Kindly share an example of a system, any system at all within the universe as we know it, within which causality and rationality do not have any meaning.`
No, it's really not. It's inherent to your very particular definition of God in this thread, which seems carefully designed to isolate that deity from the realm of scientific understanding, but it's very much not inherent to pretty much any God or gods that have ever been claimed to exist by pretty much every organized religion ever.God, however, would not be a part of that universe, that is inherent to what it means to be god, to be outside the system such a being created.
Well, then, it's apparently always misapplied.Religion is not about the objective, if it is used as a justification for comments about the physical world(which it often has) it is being misapplied.
I will grant you that science doesn't much address "meaning or purpose" in any teleological sense, since those things are human mental and emotional constructs. As such, they are indeed the domain of philosophy (referring to it in the contemporary sense, as opposed to the older "natural philosophy" which encompassed science itself along with various other realms of learning). Philosophy, however, also operates just fine on a secular and naturalistic basis, without having to posit anything at all supernatural or otherwise "outside the universe." Adding religious faith to the mix adds, literally, nothing at all to what philosophy can accomplish.Likewise science has nothing to say about the meaning or purpose of the physical world, it has nothing to say about god and associated values, those are the arena of faith (or philosophy)
No, it's really not. It's inherent to your very particular definition of God in this thread, which seems carefully designed to isolate that deity from the realm of scientific understanding, but it's very much not inherent to pretty much any God or gods that have ever been claimed to exist by pretty much every organized religion ever.
Well, then, it's apparently always misapplied.
Seriously, can you name one major religion that doesn't do this as a matter of routine?
I will grant you that science doesn't much address "meaning or purpose" in any teleological sense, since those things are human mental and emotional constructs. As such, they are indeed the domain of philosophy (referring to it in the contemporary sense, as opposed to the older "natural philosophy" which encompassed science itself along with various other realms of learning). Philosophy, however, also operates just fine on a secular and naturalistic basis, without having to posit anything at all supernatural or otherwise "outside the universe." Adding religious faith to the mix adds, literally, nothing at all to what philosophy can accomplish.
It seems that you're saying, then, that faith (specifically) is philosophically compatible with science so long as it doesn't make any of the mistakes routinely committed by religion? That seems like an awfully difficult distinction to get people to make in the real world.
The only kind of faith you seem to be saying is actually safe, useful, and compatible with a scientific worldview is one which scrupulously avoids organized religion and religious authorities, imposes no behavioral injunctions, makes no truth claims about the natural world, and offers no untestable supernatural answers. What, precisely, would such faith be in? Just how abstracted can you make it before it evaporates into nothing?
Truth is I think science is loaded with theory and unproved formula. It tries though![]()
One doesn't need faith for that. Values and principle, morality... ethics are things that should exist with or without faith. I'm atheist, always was, I still have principles and moralityBut what faith gives me is a framework of morality, a set of principles and values which guide my daily life and decisions, and allow me to process my experiences in a way that rationality alone cannot.
And I don't argue that one needs it.One doesn't need faith for that. Values and principle, morality... ethics are things that should exist with or without faith. I'm atheist, always was, I still have principles and morality
Nor does one need science for principles and morality. Actually one doesn't need science.
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