R
Russell_SA
Guest
Sociology is a science.This gets to the crux of the matter. Science deals with the observable, the measurable, the repeatable.
An atheist can indeed lead an upright and moral life. Nobody is disputing that fact. The motivation lies in the realm of philosophy or sociology, not science.
Psychological studies have shown the negative effects of isolation, for example.
Positive psychology has shown reduced recidivism resulting from employing hotel greeting techniques and avoiding negative conversations in hospital settings.
Those scientific studies merely show the practical effects which may lead to positive behavior or the avoidance of negative behavior.
It does not however account for altruistic behavior, which as stated lies outside physical science.
Science has a difficult time explaining outliers, those who do not fit within the normal statistical bounds of their studies. They are part of the reason that scientists are loath to say they have proved anything. Indeed, studies merely point to certain conclusions until shown otherwise.
The difference between philosophy and science, to me, is that philosophy is just thoughts about anything you want to think about. Science is then using philosophy and referencing the conclusions of those thoughts to reality. Did our logical thoughtful conclusions match up with reality? Reality is the reference point, to me, for justified logical conclusions. A=A in reality only if we what we know about the first A is 5 out of 15 other truths and the second A is also 5 out of 15 truths. However, when we study the first A in reality, we may discover that it has 8 out 8 truths instead. So we were logically correct from the initial philosophical discussion to conclude that A=A, but because we are ignorant of the reality of A, we ended up being factually wrong.
To me: Science only has difficulty with outliers because of our ignorance of the subject and the restrictions of the model we created.
To me: all human behavior is grounded in physical science, just that we are ignorant of the biochemical processes that create our decisions and responses. There is a study that looked at the mind and when the individual was asked Yes or No questions, the scientists could look at the brain patterns and know that the person was going to select Yes or No before the person was consciously aware of it. I have no experience with any form of human thought or decision process that can operate with out a brain. And I’m ok with that because that is what reality it showing me. I am not ok with concluding beyond that.
This is how my world view works. I look at what reality is showing me and what I can justify through real tests and then ground my conclusions in that. I don’t see why that is wrong in any way. I find that it stops me from being swindled by snake charmers, psudo-medicine, chakra cleansers, and healing crystal gurus. Reality is magical enough for me to not insult it by making up stuff that I can’t justify is there at all.