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01-16-2003, 10:22 PM | #11 | |
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01-16-2003, 11:11 PM | #12 | |
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Personally, I don't quite understand what the heck the author is talking about. Either luvluv needs to elaborate or the author is clearly attributing invented meanings to known concepts in an effort to sound legitimate. |
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01-17-2003, 12:01 AM | #13 | |
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My thoughts exactly.
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01-17-2003, 12:25 AM | #14 |
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The word "supernatural" has no real meaning.
Except, of course, to billions of theists, fiction writers, ESP researchers.... |
01-17-2003, 06:11 AM | #15 |
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If in nature we observed on lets say 1 out of 1,000,000 instances phenomena that implied that human life could not exist, then one possible explanation would be that reality doesn't matter to our existence. The current state of affairs is that everything we observe is consistent with reality being important to our existence. So if there is a super nature, contrary to all claims otherwise, it appears to be irrelevant, unless of course you think that a rich fantasy life is important to mental health.
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01-17-2003, 06:24 AM | #16 | |
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01-17-2003, 03:33 PM | #17 | |
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The division of the universe into supernatural and natural actually seems to fall into: natural: what we do understand supernatural: what we don't understand There is a lot of arrogance in dividing things that way - as if itself nature cared about our current understanding. |
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01-17-2003, 04:14 PM | #18 |
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luvluv,
Your thread title asks: "Can naturalism be falsified?" Yes. To do so, it suffices to show that something exists that is supernatural. Good Luck! Sincerely, Goliath |
01-17-2003, 04:37 PM | #19 |
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fando:
I said that the author was a naturalist in the sense that he wants to preserve nature, and that he was upset with the metaphysical naturalists. Maybe I should just say materialists to avoid the confusion? Goliath: My point is that if you are committed enough to the philosophy of naturalism, you could simply say of any phenomenon you do not understand: "Oh, science simply hasn't explained that YET, but it will." And you could keep saying this forever, regardless of the question or the progress of science. I actually think a perfect example of this is the human mind. I'm not dogmatic about it, and a supernaturalistic account of the workings of the mind is not essential to my faith. But simply as a layman who has casually read about the issue, I don't think there will ever be an exhaustive, fully realized, purely naturalistic account of the workings of the human mind. I don't think you'll ever get hope or inspiration or joy down to the movements of molecules. That's just my opinion. But I also feel that no matter how bleak it looks, a committed naturalist will continue to say "We'll figure it out one day". Thus it seems to me that naturalism is immune from falsification. |
01-17-2003, 05:11 PM | #20 | ||||
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We could. There is no way that I know of determining whether we will know all that there is to know, and so the best way to go about things is to assume that things are knowable. If we fail, so what? The benefits of the continuation of the scientific endevour far outweigh the risks of working on it in vain. Quote:
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