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Moonstruck888
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I can’t say I ever have thought about it, or even heard of it.What do you think about distributism?
I can’t say I ever have thought about it, or even heard of it.What do you think about distributism?
Reckon you’re in a cross thread situation. Seem to remember someone on Is secular sinister? mentioning those four dudes.To use Stalin or Mao Tse Tung as examples of socialists is akin to characterizing all religious people as Abu Hamza or Gerry Falwell.
The point is still relevant.Reckon you’re in a cross thread situation. Seem to remember someone on Is secular sinister? mentioning those four dudes.
Geremia,Just browsing those books, they seem more to be popular science. I would like something written by a good philosopher, e.g., but thanks anyways.
Moral relativists hold that there are no moral absolutes or authorities, so they would not assign labels to moral viewpoints as you have done.I’m an unabashed moral relativist. The only people who deal in moral absolutes are the raving despots, fundamentalist bampots and the indoctrinated beyond redemption.
Did you forget to include me?:tsktsk:I’m an unabashed moral relativist. The only people who deal in moral absolutes are the raving despots, fundamentalist bampots and the indoctrinated beyond redemption.
ROTFL!!!Moral relativists hold that there are no moral absolutes or authorities, so they would not assign labels to moral viewpoints as you have done.
You are something else.
Who are you?Did you forget to include me?:tsktsk:
I like this response. Geremia’s goal, ostensibly, since the first post of the thread was to discredit science (“a futile attempt at seeking knowledge”), and here we have Kuhn, Popper, Feyerabend, three thinkers who more than any other in the last century responsible for crediting science as a gainful enterprise toward knowledge. Popper, for example, keeps science honest by stressing the importance of discipline in liability to falsification. This is a serious and substantial challenge for science, but one which has strengthened its epistemology immensely. Popper has done, through skepticism and analysis, what no one has been able to do for theology or non-scientific philosophy, to provide and promote epistemic criteria that qualify scientific knowledge as knowledge.Geremia,
I must have missed something; you’re OP didn’t mention philosophers, merely books. Okay, so if you want a philosopher that critiques science, take a second look at the Horgan book, you will find the names of: Paul Feyerabend, Thomas Kuhn, and Karl Popper, the three most famous philosophers of science of the twentieth century, in the text and the bibliography from which you can get the names of their books. Here is what Horgan has to say about these three on page 33 of his book, “These philosophers realized that in an age when science is ascendent, the highest calling of philosphery should be to serve as the negative capability of science, to infuse scientists with doubt. Only thus can the human quest for knowledge remain open-ended, potentially infinite; only thus can we remain awestruck before the mystery of the cosmos.”
However if you want a quick answer to your OP, it would be a lot easier reading the Horgan book than reading any of the three philosophers.
Yppop
It is philosophy that has established the foundations and limitations of scientific knowledge…Popper has done, through skepticism and analysis, what no one has been able to do for theology or non-scientific philosophy, to provide and promote epistemic criteria that qualify scientific knowledge as knowledge.
Yes, and both aspects are to the credit of Popper and science as an enterprise. This is conspicuously what is missing from theology. Fine by me, as I said, but likely not what Geremia was looking for in this thread.It is philosophy that has established the foundations and limitations of scientific knowledge…
Like science theology has philosophical foundations but theology is also concerned with such questions as good and evil, free will and the purpose of life whereas science is limited to physical reality.Yes, and both aspects are to the credit of Popper and science as an enterprise. This is conspicuously what is missing from theology.
It doesn’t matter to me what side of the argument the author wants to take. I have read Popper; he is very good.Fine by me, as I said, but likely not what Geremia was looking for in this thread.
Since physical science deals with the world of the senses it cannot transcend the realm of contingency. Physical science can provide merely plausible hypotheses. A “scientific” theory is never proven, it can only be supported or not supported.Haha… I think you have misunderstood what I mean by “knowledge.” Sorry if I didn’t clarify. By knowledge I mean an understanding of absolute, unchanging truths, an understanding of objective reality.
That seems to contradict[BIBLEDRB]Romans 1:20[/BIBLEDRB]Since physical science deals with the world of the senses it cannot transcend the realm of contingency.
You mean that modern physics is solely suppositional (hypothetical) as opposed to illative?Physical science can provide merely plausible hypotheses. A “scientific” theory is never proven, it can only be supported or not supported.
For the invisible things of him, from the creation of the world, are clearly seen,I like this footnote to Romans 1:20 from the Haydock version quoted:
That which is known of God. Or may be easily known of God, is manifest in them. The light of reason demonstrates to them the existence of one God, the maker and preserver of all things. This is made known to them from the creation of the world, or from the creatures in the world: the Creator may be discovered by the creatures, and as S. Chrys. here says, every Scythian, every barbarian, may come to the knowledge of God by the wonderful harmony [3] of all things, which proclaims the existence of God louder than any trumpet: but having known him, they did not glorify him; they acted contrary to their knowledge, abandoning themselves to idolatry, and the vain worship of many gods, and to all manner of vices and abominations against the light of reason.
Science has led us to technology and effective medicine, how is that futile?What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?