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Old 06-01-2002, 05:12 PM   #21
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Further, you never really say what the realm of "supernatural" would include. You only tell me what it IS NOT. There isn't any attempt to give a positive description of what WOULD be "supernatural" if it existed. My suspicion is that "natural" is so open-ended for you that it would necessarily include anything you could describe or think of as real or possible.
So I remain unconvinced that there really is a meaningful distinction between that which is "natural" and that which is "supernatural". I think neither term has any meaning.
To my understanding philosophy can be divided into tree parts epistemology, metaphysics, and ethics. In turn metaphysics can be divided into two parts [I]natural science[I] and [I]theologyI] (or supernatural "science"). So by definition something that is natural is anything that can be understood and studied by the scientific method whereas the supernatural cannot.

In a book I read, written by a supernaturalist who believes he has occult, powers he makes a distinction between the supernatural and the natural:


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The All is divisible into two fundamentally different parts. On one side of the dividing plane is the universe of forms called the cosmos, the realm of motion and light. It comprise not only the every day world of the five senses but also the infinite number of polarities that spring form manifest being---hot and cold, day and night, good and evil. Whenever a thing is perceived as in dependent or unique it falls unto this side of the division that is the manifest universe. Cosmos is larger that the intuitive universe of space and time because in addition to the first four, it contains higher dimensions and parallel space-times.
On the other side of the dividing plane is the universe of the uncreated or chaos. The ancients usually pictured this as a seething gray mist in which undefined monsters dwelt. This is artistic license since the Unmanifest lacks all qualities, including mistiness and grayness, and its inhabitants (if it could be said to have any) are without form or duration. By it’s very nature the Unmanifest is inconceivable. Any picture or model a philosopher might build of it at once becomes invalid precisely because it has been formed, and therefore no longer represents the formless universe. Even featureless space has dimension and exists in time; it is a part of creation and cannot be used to represent the Unmanifest.

He also writes:

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Aleister Crowley, who despite his numerous faults was the greatest magician of the 20th century, defined magic (he spelled it magick) as "the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will." (Magick In Theory and Practice).
This is the most prevalent definition you are likely to encounter when reading modern textbooks on the practice of Western ritual magic. Unfortunately, it suffers from several serious defects.
Magic has never been, is not, nor will it ever become, a science. The mechanism of magic is transcendent. It functions outside of ordinary time and space.
Science, by its very definition, is concerned only with measurable and verifiable phenomena that function within the boundaries of natural laws. Phenomena that fall within the purview of science are those that may be predicted, observed, and verified by subsequent independent experiments. What is true in science remains always true, given the identical conditions. Science depends upon the predictable nature of material things for its very existence.
Magic occurs when a willed desire is projected into the transcendent creative source that lies at the root of all manifestation. In my books I refer to this creative source as the Unmanifest. By its very nature the Unmanifest cannot be measured, perceived or understood in any way whatsoever. It is the highest philosophical concept of God that is capable of being held in the human consciousness, but it is in every respect negative. We can say what the Unmanifest is not, but never what it is. This negative concept of God was held by the most enlightened teachers of such mystic sects such as the Neoplatonists, Gnostics and Hermetists. It was a secret teaching, and considered to be beyond the understanding of ordinary men and women.

MECHANISM OF MAGIC
The projection of magical desire by will into the Unmanifest may be symbolized by the extension of a ray through a mathematical point that has been expanded by means of a spiral vortex.
At the very moment desire enters the Unmanifest, it is reflected as though from a mirror back into the universe. If the ray of will has been properly projected, the returning ray will be altered in such a way that it accomplishes the desire of the magician. Because this reflux of potential is transcendent, it is not bound by natural laws. It accomplishes the ritual purpose of the magician in unpredictable ways.
Magic leaps over cause and effect. It takes little or no account of the temporal arrow (the forward flow of time). In magic a small action can produce a disproportionately large result in a way that is unconnected causally. An action in the future can cause another action in the past. Magic in action is indistinguishable from luck, or chance, or coincidence.
The only perceptible connection between the projected ray of desire and the returning reflux of fulfillment is subjective and intuitive. The psychologist Carl Jung observed this phenomenon of magic and to some extent made it respectable by applying a name to it -- synchronicity. Magical desire and magical fulfillment have a synchronistic connection. That is to say, they are causally unconnected, but linked by meaningfulness in the human mind.
Synchronistic happenings cannot be predicted or replicated. They are beyond the scope of science. All attempts to measure magic using instruments are foredoomed to failure. At best, the reaction that occurs in the universe as a result of the reflected ray of potential issuing from the Unmanifest can be studied. But since is it unconnected by the laws of physics in time and space from its initiating ray, no relationship can ever be proven. Science must regard it as an isolated chance occurrence.
For example, even if it can be shown that a particular chant was muttered within a magic circle at the same time that a flash of light illuminated the sky, scientists would vigorously deny any connection between the two events because no causal link can be measured by machines or explained by the laws of physics. In fact, there may well be a delay of time between the muttering of the chant and the flash of light. Or it may happen that the flash occurs before the chant is spoken. For these reasons science is at a complete loss where magic is concerned, and always will be.

The terms “supernatural” and “natural” do have meanings. However this meaning is very useless seeing as how the supernatural does not exist in reality by definition, and there is no evidence to suggest that such things as magic, god, Unmanifest, miracles, spirits e.c.t. exist in some other reality. Even if this reality did exist there is no reason to think it interacts with this one in any way. Occam’s razor chops it off as an unnecessary complication of matters. As an atheist and a metaphysical naturalist I think the most logical thing to do is to conclude that there is no such thing as the supernatural realm. But theists don’t care very much for logic or reality they have “faith”.
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Old 06-01-2002, 06:32 PM   #22
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I agree with Taffy and I don't think he's making any covert attempt at debate either. Supernaturalism cannot exist by definition, and it is something that BD has posted about before (albeit better received)


devilnaut


I don't think it's so much worth quibbling over whether the actual word supernatural has any definition, for it clearly does. I think the question is whether this definition has any relevance or meaning to anything, and it looks like that's what Taffy is getting at. To me at least.

[ June 01, 2002: Message edited by: Devilnaut ]</p>
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Old 06-01-2002, 06:46 PM   #23
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I had previously posted this:
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My definition of science, quoted in my prior post (above), rests upon the classical claim of empiricism: all knowledge originates in experience. So, we have yet-another distinction between "natural" ("experiencable") and "supernatural" (not "experiencable"). My claim would be that any believers in the "supernatural" who claim that they "experience" the "supernatural" are mistaken in that belief. Yes, they have an "experience," but that "experience" is, virtually by definition, "natural." The "supernatural" is, virtually by definition, not "experiencable."
However, Taffy, you deliberately cut off the above quote when you copied only this much of it:
Quote:
My definition of science, quoted in my prior post (above), rests upon the classical claim of empiricism: all knowledge originates in experience. So, we have yet-another distinction between "natural" ("experiencable") and "supernatural" (not "experiencable")
You then took issue with what I posted, thusly:
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Originally posted by Taffy Lewis:
<strong>Many theists believe they experience God. Therefore if they accept your definition of "natural" then they must believe that God is "natural". Further, if God exists I don't see why he couldn't be experienced. If that is so then he is "experiencable" and thus "natural". In order for you to maintain that God would be "supernatural" if he existed would mean that you would have to say that God cannot possibly be experienced. But surely if God exists he could bring about a direct experience of him. I don't see why not. </strong>
Of course, you must have known that I had already responded to this point in the part of my quote that you deliberately cut off.

My assertion is that theists are falsely interpreting their actual experiences and attributing them to God when, in point of fact, they are of entirely natural origin. This point was made quite forcefully in last year's II Book-of-the-Month <a href="http://www.secweb.org/bookstore/bookdetail.asp?BookID=690" target="_blank">Why God Won't Go Away: Brain Science and the Biology of Belief</a>. Thus, science declares that "believers" in God are mistaken. They are not actually experiencing God but are rather having quite normal and natural experiences which are defined as experiencing God through some sort of dogmatic theistic appropriation of those sorts of experiences (in other words, theists teach their followers that when they have this sort of experience, they are actually experiencing God, so this is a sort-of self-perpetuating meme of delusion).

Accordingly, if theists accept my definition of what is "natural" AND they also accept that scientific investigation produces scientific truthes about the "natural" realm, then they really ought to question those religious dogmas which define those sorts of "religious experiences" we have been discussing here as being actual experiences of "God" (whatever "God" might be in any given theistic worldview).

You are trolling, Taffy by engaging in the totally reprehensible behavior of first misquoting me and then responding to your false quote. CUT THAT OUT, PLEASE!
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<strong>But surely if God exists he could bring about a direct experience of him. I don't see why not. </strong>
Actually, I don't see why not either. And in fact, one of the proofs I accept for the non-existence of this "God" thing you are discussing here is the plain fact that science has never been able to gather together any acceptable evidence to the effect that any such "God-induced" experience or event of any nature whatsoever actually occurs.

Classically, these sorts of arguments go something like this: If Moses could part the Red Sea in the Torah story, then why can't we have some equivalent miracle today, with film at 11? In other words, if God had no problem revealing Himself and His power to a large body of Jews in ancient times, then just what does He have as a reason for not so revealing Himself today? It simply cannot be argued that whatever might actually exist of God today is extremely hidden from the senses (and sciences) of mankind. Modern atheological arguments now make this case rather emphatically. (See <a href="http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/nontheism/atheism/nonbelief.html" target="_blank">Arguments from Divine Hiddenness and Nonbelief</a> in the II Library.)

In view of the many scriptural claims for divine overtness (God as a "major and overt player" in the events described in the Bible), the entire idea that God is for some reason forced into "divine hiddeness" in modern times tends to ring rather hollow.

In view of the scientific claims to explain "religious experience" in entirely naturalistic terms, in my view, the burden of proof now shifts to the theists who wish to use this sort of "religious experience" as proof for the existence of God to demonstrate, in some scientific or logical way that there is an actual causal link between some supernatural "thing" (God?) and the experiences they are claiming as proof of the supernatural.

If God and the supernatural does exist in fact, then there must be some point of interface between the supernatural and the natural world. (The only rational alternative would be that the supernatural world does not in any way impinge upon, or connect with, the natural world. In that case, it can safely be ignored as it cannot cause any effect here within the natural world.) If there is such a point of interface between the natural and supernatural (God-populated) realms, then science ought to be able to detect, measure, and otherwise treat empirically each and every effect on the natural world which is in any way connected to God and/or the supernatural realm. The plain fact is that science cannot in any way detect, measure, or otherwise treat empirically any such phenomena. This is additional strong scientific evidence for the clear non-existence of any "God" and/or any "supernatural" realm.
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<strong>Clearly it would be circular for you to argue that science supports the claim that it is the only source of reliable information about reality. As I said before, that renders your faith a "supernatural" belief. So even a naturalist can be a supernaturalist. </strong>
Again, you are trolling for an argument, and you are doing so by redefining what "supernatural" means. I won't let you get away with this. Your claim is meaningless drivel when the usual understanding of what "supernatural" means is substituted in the above.

Given that I am a metaphysical naturalist, how else do you expect me to ground my worldview other than in the realm of the natural world? You might claim it is not reasonable for me to decide that science is the proper epistemological method to use. But once you grant me the right to choose that epistemology, you cannot claim that this is in any way a "supernatural" belief. Science is the antithesis of "supernaturalism."
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<strong>Are you saying that "supernatural" just means that something isn't real? If it is defined as "that which is not real" then any "evidence" for its existence must be considered misleading. When people talk about the existence of the supernatural they usually at least think such a realm COULD exist. </strong>
No, that is not what I'm saying at all!

Remember that the definition most people understand for "supernatural" is that the "supernatural" cannot be in any way accessed by empirical (experience) means. (This, of course, makes those who claim "religious experiences" as coming from the supernatual as asserting an oxymoronic claim.) While you have been casting stones at the metaphysical naturalists here who have taken issue with you, Taffy, you have strictly avoided making any claim whatsoever for what the word "supernatural" actually means to you. Instead, you have claimed that there is no distinction between the words "natural" and "supernatural." While I can see a purpose in your making such a claim, that purpose would generally be to attempt to confuse the issue. This is a common theistic trolling technique.
Quote:
<strong>When people talk about the existence of the supernatural they usually at least think such a realm COULD exist. </strong>
Yes, true. And not only that "such a realm COULD exist," but also that causes from such a realm COULD produce effects over here within the natural realm. The more science debunks these claims of effects from alleged supernatural causes, the less likely the actual existence of the supernatural realm becomes.

That is, in fact, the whole point of discussions like this one.
Quote:
I posted:
<strong>As to defining certain things that would, if they did exist, be within the supernatural realm, I can do that. The usual Christian ideas of soul, Heaven, and Hell are all clearly part of the "supernatural" realm. </strong>
To the above, Taffy responded:
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<strong>What makes them "supernatural"? It's certainly not clear to me that if they existed they would be supernatural. Why wouldn't they just be another aspect of the "natural" world? Do you think they are "supernatural" because you think they don't exist? </strong>
Those things are supernatural because it is part and parcel of the claims made in favor of their existence that they cannot be "experienced" (or empirically verified) by inhabitants of the "natural" realm (i.e., scientists and/or scientific subjects).

Again, the dividing line between the "natural" and the "supernatural" is the ability of ordinary "natural" people to "experience" the existence of such a thing in some rational way, either now or in the future. The claim of the adherents of supernaturalism is that you cannot experience any such thing until you yourself make the transition from the "natural" realm into the "supernatural" realm (i.e., you die and your "soul" then experiences either Heaven, Hell, or some other sort of "afterlife," depending upon exactly which theistic system is being advocated).

If souls, Heaven, and Hell were part of the "natural" realm, then they could be experienced by people while those people (including scientists) are still alive (i.e., still part of the "natural" realm). It is clear that this is not the claim being advanced by most rational advocates of the reality of the supernatural realm (largely excepting Eastern religions, which make substantially different claims about these subjects, since those religions believe in "reincarnation" rather than an "afterlife" of some sort).
Quote:
Finally, Taffy responded, once again, to the definitions of "natural" and "supernatural" thusly:
<strong>I have no definition for these terms. As I have said, I think they have no content. When one hears different definitions of these terms it is easy to find counterintuitive implications for them. </strong>
Only a troll would adhere to this assertion at this point in this discussion. I rest my case.

== Bill
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Old 06-02-2002, 11:13 AM   #24
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ReasonableDoubt:

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If I insist to you that I saw a plane rise noisily and powerfully into the sky, you will form some opinion. If I insist that I saw a glowing man rise majestically and unaided into the sky, you will form a radically different opinion. And, I suspect that you'll 'remain convinced' that the distinction between these two responses is meaningful and warranted.
Arthur C. Clarke famously said "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." This is essentially what I am arguing.

What about the examples of the plane and glowing-man makes them "supernatural"? What would be the difference between a "sufficiently advanced technology" causing a glowing man to rise and a "supernatural" being or beings causing a glowing man to rise? I would like a positive characterization of the features of these events that makes them fit the "category" of the "supernatural" rather than the mere result of a "sufficiently advanced technology". It's not enough to just say they are "not natural". The reason is that I have the suspicion that "natural" will just turn out to be "anything whatsoever" or "anything I can think of" or "anything that can be described". In other words, the category of "natural" is so open-ended that it cannot, even in principle, exclude anything. Any failure to propose an actual positive feature of something "supernatural" demonstrates this.

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Relying on this shortcoming to defend or defeat theism seem less than useful.
The inability to draw a meaningful natural/supernatural distinction does nothing to defeat or defend theism.

Quote:
The universe we live in gives every appearance of being governed by scientific laws and, at least in principle, ammenable to scientific investigation. To the best of my knowledge, naturalism is the assertion that such a universe exemplifies all that exists.
What would it mean to say that the universe follows nonscientific laws? I have a feeling you won't be able to think of anything. Possibly, for you, the term "scientific" will just mean "however the universe happens to behave". Once again it is totally open-ended.

At any rate, thank you for your input.
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Old 06-02-2002, 11:43 AM   #25
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Bill:

One of your statements says:

Quote:
The "supernatural" is, virtually by definition, not "experiencable.
But later after quoting my statement that "But surely if God exists he could bring about a direct experience of him. I don't see why not." you responded by saying "Actually, I don't see why not either". So you think the concept of God would include the capacity of being "experiencable". That means you believe the concept of God fits into the "natural" category. If even God would be "natural" then what could the "category" of "supernatural" possibly include?

Quote:
Given that I am a metaphysical naturalist, how else do you expect me to ground my worldview other than in the realm of the natural world? You might claim it is not reasonable for me to decide that science is the proper epistemological method to use. But once you grant me the right to choose that epistemology, you cannot claim that this is in any way a "supernatural" belief. Science is the antithesis of "supernaturalism."
My point here is that you cannot use "science" to justify the claim that "Science is the only reliable means to information about the world." because that would be clearly circular.

By your definition any statement that cannot be supported by the scientific method would be a "supernatural" claim. It follows immediately that your belief in the epistemology of the scientific method is "supernatural".

So again, a naturalist would be a supernaturalist. This is meaningless.
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Old 06-02-2002, 02:24 PM   #26
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Quote:
Originally posted by Taffy Lewis:
<strong>Bill:

My point here is that you cannot use "science" to justify the claim that "Science is the only reliable means to information about the world." because that would be clearly circular.
</strong>
Taffy, science provides reliable information about the world. That is inarguable. The reliability of scientific knowledge is true even if the scientific division between natural and supernatural is false. "Science" is NOT used to justify the claim that "science is the only reliable means to information about the world." Science is justified by success. No other mode of knowing can replicate the ability of science to produce useful and reliable knowledge about the world.

When you come up with a more reliable method for knowing than scientific methods, by all means bring it on.

This success suggests that the distinction made by science between the natural and the supernatural is useful and reliable. Not to mention clear, or else thousands of scientists, from many different cultural backgrounds, could not successfully apply the method. This ability of humans from differing backgrounds to apply scientific methodology suggests that the problem here is not unclear definitions, but your refusal to understand.

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Old 06-03-2002, 03:03 AM   #27
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Bill:

You claim:

Quote:
My assertion is that theists are falsely interpreting their actual experiences and attributing them to God when, in point of fact, they are of entirely natural origin. This point was made quite forcefully in last year's II Book-of-the-Month Why God Won't Go Away: Brain Science and the Biology of Belief.
The authors of this book do not claim that theists "are falsely interpreting" their experiences. In fact they suggest otherwise. A clear statement of their beliefs can be found on pages 9 and 171-172.
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Old 06-03-2002, 03:29 PM   #28
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I've been reading the exchanges re naturalism and supernaturalism with interest. I would like to comment but I don't like the terms being discussed, since supernaturalism depends on naturalism for its meaning. I would like to suggest materialsim(matter) and spiritualism(spirit) as terms for discussion. These can be more intelligently discussed, I think, but I will wait to see if anyone objects to my changing the terms.
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Old 06-03-2002, 05:48 PM   #29
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fwh:

Quote:
I would like to comment but I don't like the terms being discussed, since supernaturalism depends on naturalism for its meaning.
That's the problem. "Supernatural" seems to mean "anything not natural" but "natural" is defined in such an open-ended or broad fashion that it can't exclude anything.

This is why none of the proponents of the natural/supernatural distinction can think of any positive features of the "supernatural". They can only tell you what it is not. They never tell you any actual features that it would possess if it did exist.

What is a "positive" feature of an electron? They have charge. That is an actual property that they have. Notice that pointing out actual features of the "supernatural" has not been done.

For the proponents of the distinction, any property or feature they could ever think of would simply be considered natural.

"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
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Old 06-03-2002, 06:05 PM   #30
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Taffy,

there's an awful lot of stuff in this old universe of ours that can be described. You seem to be complaining because you can't get a description of the undescribable.

The supernatural is klsiuhdf and nreklaw, except when it ie slknrel't'tlt.

How are you going to conceptualize something which is, by definition, outside of the items we are able to perceive or conceive?

cheers,
Michael
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