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09-10-2002, 08:27 AM | #101 | |
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All areas of human endeavor limit themselves. Writers limit themselves to words. Painters are limited to painting and so forth. Scientists limit themselves to the natural. People who try to comprehend existence and do not limit themselves to the natural are called philosophers and theologians. My understanding is that society has got that covered. Vanderzyden, is there a shortage of philosophers and theologians to the point that it is necessary to press scientists into service? If so, it sounds like a terrible idea, I don’t think they would make good philosophers or theologians. Examining a claim that something is created can be scientific. However when there is little or no evidence to support it what is the point. It is then speculation and not science. If you wish to speculate that life had a creator, go right ahead, but if you want to be taken seriously by scientists you better have some good evidence. I do agree you have a point that scientists have a knee jerk reaction that rejects creationism. It does show a certain amount of close mindedness, however in defense of science, there are many fantastic claims with little or no evidence made all the time. There is barely enough time to examine legitimate scientific claims let alone all the claims constantly being made at the fringe. If there is anything at all to the ID claim, then it will have to be IDers that do the work and come up with the extraordinary proof. Only then will it be noticed by the scientific community. Vanderzyden the ball is in your court, not the court of science. Put up or shut up. Starboy |
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09-10-2002, 12:23 PM | #102 | ||||||||||||
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Here is yet another example in the form of a question: I assert that aliens from gilgamesh created the earth and everything on it. They're technology is very advanced and we cannot know them through sensory means. I only know it because they speak to me telepathically, and only I can know about them. Question: Can you prove I'm wrong? [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Skeptical ] [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Skeptical ]</p> |
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09-10-2002, 12:42 PM | #103 |
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Ok, perhaps I'm wrong. Vander, you wrote:
<strong>My problem is that methodological naturalism (MN)is the worldview of so many scientists, and they claim that it is science itself. I have indicated this repeatedly. MN systematically excludes any supernatural explanation as a cause for natural objects or phenomena.</strong> I want to take your objection seriously, so let's take some empirical data and you show me how I would consider supernatural claims and how I would differentiate between them. Data: A picture falls off the wall, seemingly on its own Non-natural explanation: ? Please fill in the question mark and tell me how you arrive at your conclusion and, most importantly, how do you distinguish one non-natural claim from another. |
09-10-2002, 02:55 PM | #104 | ||
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My argument is not that "God did it" or "it is designed" are wholly satisfying answers for the HOW questions, but it is for many WHY questions. WHY? and HOW? are equally valid scientific questions. Examples: -- Why do sub-cellular components work so well together? Why do the work at all? -- Why are there immense differences between humans and apes? -- Why is there a weak and strong nuclear force? Why are they important phenomena? -- Why might allowance for design inference change the entire approach to scientific investigation? You cheat yourself by not seeing these as scientific questions. Quote:
There is only a natural explanation for the falling picture. Let me reiterate: Many things have natural explanations. However: Many things do not. I understand your distinction between NEV and EV explanations. What you are not grasping is that the explanations themselves are non-empirical. Despite your insistence, logic and math are non-empirical. (To use your technique: I defy you to empirically demonstrate the number 2). You have done nothing to demonstrate the contrary, but have only insisted that we can "agree" on "objective". Apparently, you say this in ignorance of extensive historical philosophical inquiry concerning empiricism. The "objective" does not exist: it is non-empirical. The evidence means nothing without an explanation. Whatever explanation you provide, it will not be empirical itself. It will explain empirical phenomena. It must be persuasive, and convincing--these are, again, non-empirical. My observations: -- You won't you admit that we heavily rely on non-empirical constructs to conduct scientific investigation. -- You fail to refute or address my insistence that a philosophy underlies Darwinism. It is the philosophy that is problematic. -- You narrowly restrict science to what is tangible. Vanderzyden [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Vanderzyden ]</p> |
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09-10-2002, 03:19 PM | #105 | |
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I think we need to make a distinction between non-natural explanations and non-empirical explanations. Holy design is a non natural, yet empirical, explanation. We can accept it as a hypothesis, and see which theory the evidence best suits: evolution or design. This is actually done. I assume you think IDists get their papers rejected because of a natural bias? They do not, an ID paper would be accepted as soon as ID produces any evidence for design. I submit that science considers non-natural questions all the time. The hypothesis: 'subject A uses supernatural powers to read the minds of other persons' is a non natural hypothesis. If it were confirmed it would become a non-natural theory, no less. But what science can never do is consider non-empirical EVIDENCE. Vander, so far you have (arguably) demonstrated what a non-empirical hypothesis looks like. Now show us what non-empirical evidence looks like. |
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09-10-2002, 03:40 PM | #106 | ||
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Starboy [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Starboy ]</p> |
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09-10-2002, 03:49 PM | #107 | |
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Your fourth question is different but invalid. It won't change the approach to scientific investigation, it'll destroy science. Well, I suppose destruction is an extreme form of change, but that's what'll happen. When you include the possibility of supernatural forces, you aren't doing science any more. |
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09-10-2002, 03:59 PM | #108 | |
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Are you saying that “narrowly restricting science to what is tangible” is the philosophy underlying Darwinism? How is that a philosophy? If that were not the philosophy, then would you mind explaining what is the philosophy and why it is flawed? Starboy |
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09-10-2002, 04:07 PM | #109 | |
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Science accepts supernatural hypotheses, but can not work with non-empirical evidence. Science can test to see if demons cause disease, or if bacteria do it. It does this by examining empirical evidence. What do you think would happen to science if we took some cancerous tissue under a microscope and found the cells covered in occult symbols and surrounded by little creatures who say 'hello i'm a demon', then dissapear? The hypothesis: 'demons cause cancer' would become the scientific theory: 'demons cause cancer'. A non natural explanation, derived from empirical evidence. Science would have a new field: demonology, but science would be the same old beast it always was, formulating hypotheses and finding evidence for or against them. The same is true of the theories of special creation and intelligent design. These are hypotheses that could be confirmed by empirical evidence, if only the evidence existed. The real question here should be about non-empirical evidence, which I don't think exists. What does 'evidence we cannot sense' mean, anyway? |
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09-10-2002, 04:44 PM | #110 | |
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Starboy [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Starboy ]</p> |
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