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09-03-2002, 01:47 PM | #71 |
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OK, so the wedge is simply that you haven't yet seen evidence of God. I agree that this shouldn't be a problem. People should be allowed to believe what they want. And I agree that forcing one's beliefs upon another is problematic, but such a condition is not exlusively the domain of theism. As you know the pervasiveness of Christianity's peculiar breed of theism is somewhat unique to Europe and America. Other societies, governments, and cultures have used similar or even more aggressive tactics to enforce other paradigms, including atheism.
But I was trying to get away from that, since there are endless variations of interpretations of both atheism and theism, with a few peculiar cross breeds such as Buddhism and Taoism, and atrocities have been committed by supposed adherents to all of these variations. So I was suggesting instead that all of this is beside the point, and wondering what it was about the two competing philosophies that was creating such a ruckus on this and other boards. Frankly, I think all of this appeal to naturalism on this board is bogus. Many believers appeal to naturalism as well. There are many things for which I can show you no evidence, but for which you must find evidence on your own or on the authority of someone else, but you believe in them. For example, unless you do the experiments yourself, how will you have conclusive evidence of the structure of an atom, or the genetic makeup of a human? You are left to simply rely on the authority of someone else. Which is of course relevant to your claim that your only moral authority is your own sense of morality. Which unless you were raised in a vacuum is based on the collective moralities of whatever authorities you have read, heard, seen, etc. throughout your life, and accepted. The key word here is ACCEPTED. You and I have been exposed to many of the same moral, scientific, religious, etc. authorities. We have also been exposed to some very different authorities. But along the way we were both faced with choices about which authorities we accepted. We have made different choices, you and I. And I submit that our choices were in a large measure based on our perceptions of the implications of accountability inherent in our choices. Simply put: The difference between you and I is not in our reliance on authority (evidence, testimony, etc. common to both science and religion and not mutually exclusive), but in which authorities we have chosen to rely upon. And our respective choices stem largely from our perceptions of what would bring greater freedom (choice), and what sort of accountability came with that freedom. We are both cynical about different things, and we are both exercising faith in different things. But our cynicism, and our faith aren't that much different qualitatively. |
09-03-2002, 02:12 PM | #72 | ||||||||
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If a scientist tells me about genetics, I can look over the data, and I could, if I chose, get the education required to understand it. But that's not necessary. When a scientist posits a theory, all the other scientists work to rip it apart. Whatever survives that crucible (and the future crucibles) is believed to be true because it *fits*. I don't accept the findings of a single scientist as truth because a scientist says it's true -- I *conditionally* accept it as true if it has been tested and retested and reviewed by the scientific community as a whole. If religion had error checking mechanisms like that built in, we'd all be much better off. Believing something is true because it says it in the Bible -- that's authority, and that is anathema to an inquiring mind. Quote:
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09-03-2002, 03:48 PM | #73 | |||||||
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You don't need to answer: there is none. This is the crucial difference that leads me to reject "revealed" knowledge. It is not subject to revision under any circumstances, even when it is blatantly, obviously, excruciatingly WRONG. Scientific authority is derived from the accuracy, integrity and explanatory power of the body of knowledge. Religious authority is derived from ... what? Quote:
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09-03-2002, 04:05 PM | #74 | |||||||
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What IS authority? Organized religion tends to reject truth claims based on secular authority. (And I'm aware that organized religion and theism are different. I just happen to be both.) If a theologin tells me about God, I can look over the data, and I could, if I chose, get the education required to understand it. But that IS necessary. When a theologin posits a theory, all the other theologins work to rip it apart. Whatever survives that crucible (and the future crucibles) is believed to be true because it *fits*. I don't accept the findings of a single theologin as truth because a theologin says it's true -- I *conditionally* accept it as true if it has been tested and retested and reviewed by the religious community as a whole (or if I have checked it myself). If science had error checking mechanisms like that built in, we'd all be much better off. Believing something is true because it says it in a scientific journal -- that's authority, and that is anathema to an inquiring mind. By the way, christianity has a simple error checking mechanism by which individual seekers can assertain truth in religion. It's called the Holy Ghost (he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance). No need to make fun of the Holy Ghost here simply because it is a subjective experience. I understand that you don't believe in him, but there are many who don't believe there is such a thing as objectivity either. You'd be hard pressed to get them to interpret scientific data the way the rest of the scientific community does. Quote:
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09-03-2002, 04:07 PM | #75 | |
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It may very well be that there are things we can never know. But I am not satisfied with that as an answer. Even if it is so, why should we accept revealed wisdom instead? We have no way of verifying that either, so it leaves us none the better, and perhaps much worse off, depending on which authority we accept (necessarily, accept on faith). Better to simply try to know as much as we can, and when we don't know, admit we don't know, and work with what we do know. |
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09-03-2002, 04:40 PM | #76 | |||||
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Darn, I thought I was done for the evening, but then returned to see that Kind Bud had posted.
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[ September 03, 2002: Message edited by: Mike ]</p> |
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09-03-2002, 05:06 PM | #77 | |||||||||
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As for whether observation is of limited use without interpretation, I am not sure what you mean. There is no observation until the data is reduced. Before that, the activity is data collection. So the observation is the interpretation of the data collected - the empirical "fact." Now, for an eyewitness, fact and observation are intricately intertwined, because the instrument for data collection and data reduction are intricately intertwined. I don't have any conscious awareness of photons being refracted through the lens of my eye, striking the retina where the interaction with dyes produces a spatially related neural signal that my brain interprets as the cloudtops of Jupiter viewed through my telescope. I just see Jupiter, and bands and belts of what look like clouds and storms and eddies. But those processes of data collection and reduction are going on, unawares. So where do you draw the line between data collection and reduction, and observation? What about when you're detecting solar neutrinos with the Japanese Super Kamiokande Neutrino Observatory. You don't "observe" a neutrino until you reduce mounds of data recording the electrical signals from thousands of photomultiplier tubes with precise timing, plow all that data through your graphing program to produce a 3-dimensional representation of the dectector tank and the location, signal level and timing of each photomultiplier tube, and from that deduce the mass, speed, trajectory and other properties of the particle or particles that caused the interaction that produced the burst of electrons that originated the Cherenkov radiation that the photomultiplier tubes detected. Only then can you distinguish between debris from a cosmic ray interaction high in the atmosphere, a photon or neutron from natural radioactive decay in the surrounding rock, and a neutrino interaction. But if we had an organ that worked like Super Kamiokande, we'd just say "I saw a neutrino" in the same sort of casual way as I say "I saw Jupiter through my telescope." You have to be very careful when you try to draw a line between observation and interpretation, because they are two sides of the same coin. So I can't conclude with you that the interpretation of our observations - which is the same thing, really - relies upon authority. That doesn't even make any sense to me. It seems to me that this claim of yours implies that I can make you see a sofa instead of a hot dog if I am sufficiently authoritative. Quote:
And how DO I go about correcting the errors in the Book of Mormon? You think the GA's will accept this new revelation I had last night, and publish it to the membership? No? Why not? Is it because: 1. My revelation is not harmonious with prior revelation? (Then what of your claim that revealed truth can be revised? If not through new revelation, then how?) 2. My authority is not sufficient to accept my revelation? (Then how do you establish authority? Producing revelation worked for Joseph Smith.) 3. Something you will undoubtedly find more clever, because I will allow you to think it up. (I got an answer for everything ) Quote:
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[ September 03, 2002: Message edited by: Kind Bud ]</p> |
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09-04-2002, 10:55 AM | #78 |
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This fancy mouse somehow deleted my post, so this will be much shorter than the original:
Your response was very technical and impressive, but if I understood it you simply clarified the point I was trying to make. I like that you made a connection between authority and history. All of us have a history, and before we did, we did very little interpretation (eg. a baby making observations of the delivery room). But as we aquired language (which we first took on authority eg. Mom says that big long thing is a sofa, and that little long thing is a hot dog, the first she says wouldn't be good for food, but the second she says I can chew on) we gained a more complex ability to interpret our observations, until observation and interpretation SEEMED to be the same thing. But most respectable cognitive scientists will tell you (on authority) that there is a difference between sensation and perception, and a difference between perception and long or short-term storage in memory (which requires interpretation, classification, etc.). A flash of light in the corner of my eye is sensed, the fact that the light is attached to an approaching semi is perceived, the possibility that the semi will crush me if I don't move is an interpretation (which is based on authority, unless I have been crushed by a semi before, or seen someone crushed by a semi before). You and an uneducated aboriginal aquaintance looking through a telescope at Jupiter will observe the exact same thing, but you will understand very different things about your observation based on the authorities you have experienced. But neither of you have been to Jupiter. Which interpretation is correct? If you say you see Jupiter, and he says he sees a multicolored sphere, who's description relies less on authority? The process of making changes in religion has never relied on convincing an authority to change his/her mind. You simply start a new church. And although different churches have diverse interpretations about the same observations, there are many common elements. Perhaps these common elements are tantamount to what is left in phlebas' crucible. And similarly, if this scientific journal won't publish your results because they don't like your interpretation do you throw up your hands? No. You look for another journal. If you can't find one that will publish you, and you believe strongly in your interpretation, then you self-publish. And maybe start your own journal. And although there are diverse interpretations of what is observed in science, there are many common elements.... Why do I believe the Book of Mormon and not the Quran? Let's say I don't disbelieve the Quran, but based on my experience, I believe the Book of Mormon to be a more correct interpretation. And why do you believe your college science instruction over your public high school science instruction? Why do you prefer Rand over Marx, or Marx over Rand? Why do you live in the U.S.A.? Why do you believe the universe will stabilize/collapse/continue to expand vs. the alternatives? I've got a copy of the Quran from which I am gleaning truth. I've read the Hindu Gita (which, by the way, was another attempt at religious reformation). I've studied the Tao. I've found truth in all of them. Just like I found truth in my high school science classes. But I've found something that I believe is a more complete interpretation. If I someday believe that I've found something better, then I suppose I will act on that assumption, as others have done. Just looking at the last 500 years, I see religion and science growing (up) together, not apart. And as for your "weak" concept of god. Both your understading of the adjective "weak" and your standards of what constitutes impressive godliness are based on your acceptance of authoritative definitions. What could be stronger than the strongest of all living things? Regardless of whether or not he can make a rock too big for himself to lift. What could be smarter than the smartest of all living things, regardless of whether he retains the ability to learn something new? What could be more impressive than the most impressive of all living things? Regardless of whether he is as impressive as you imagined. Whether or not you think my conception of God is impressive or weak--that is interpretation and it's based on an understanding of our language that was handed to you by authority. [ September 04, 2002: Message edited by: Mike ]</p> |
09-04-2002, 01:37 PM | #79 | ||||||||||
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The problem with using an intelligent designer as an answer to anything is that it only opens more unanswerable questions. Where did this designer come from? Why did something this powerful design anything at all? Why did he go through such trouble to make it look natural? (And, for Christians, why does this designer have to be the one in the Bible?) You might think that simplifies things. I don't. Quote:
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Example: Someone is working in her kitchen and she notices the shadow of a cross on the floor, but she's too busy to investigate. Is the cross a sign of some sort from God, or did something cross-shaped get between the floor and the sun? Later on, she goes outside and notices the frame of a new house next door has gone up, and it has several boards positioned perpendicular to each other. But the sun has moved and she can no longer see if it casts any cross-shaped shadows. What would you assume? Quote:
How could I possibly ask you to accept it on my authority? What authority do I have? Quote:
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Secondly, point me to any scientific study of God's existence? The existence of God is outside the realm of science, since it is not testable, falsifiable, etc etc. What science has shown time and time again is that most of the things humans have called "miracles" throughout history do actually have simple, natural explanations. Things like rainbows and eclipses. Or is that another appeal to authority? Maybe rainbows are not really refracted light, but fringe scientists assert it is? Perhaps a solar eclipse is a sign from God, but we foolish humans think it's just the moon passing in front of the sun because some intelligent-looking man in a lab coat told us that? (And by "miracle," I mean something that contradicts the laws of nature. I don't mean "the miracle of life" or "the love of a child is a miracle" or any other bumper-stickers.) Lastly, who says I'm part of a movement? I am an atheist because I lack a belief in any gods. I'm not passing out blazer buttons or teaching secret handshakes. |
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09-04-2002, 04:22 PM | #80 |
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phlebas,
Where did you get your reasons for believing in God peer reviewed? Er...church? |
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