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Geremia
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What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
The only books I’ve seen that fulfill your criterion of criticize modern, or any science, as a futile attempt at seeking knowledge have science in the same category as religion. In other words both religion and science deal with relative or discursive thought. That is necessary for getting along in the world. So perhaps you need to ask if figuring out how to get to a destination, how to fix something, or how to save someone’s life or ease their suffering is futile, then great. You are a rare individual if you can’t see benefits coming from science. If you are trying to contrast scientific knowledge with religious knowledge, they are dealing with observable phenomenon and “spiritual” explanations for our existence, respectively. Neither one has to do with God, except one claims to, and offers some ethical standards that may be used by scientists as well as anyone else, if they wish to or subscribe by birth or conversion to a particular faith.What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
Posting a message that suggests that modern science is “a futile attempt at seeking knowledge” on messageboard on the internet, by means of a computer, is something that would almost certainly cause an irony meter to break…should an irony meter ever be designed by a scientist.What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
I’d say it’s nearly as ironic as an atheist who has over 1000 posts on a forum dedicated to theism.Posting a message that suggests that modern science is “a futile attempt at seeking knowledge” on messageboard on the internet, by means of a computer, is something that would almost certainly cause an irony meter to break…should an irony meter ever be designed by a scientist.
I’d say it’s nearly as ironic as an atheist who has over 1000 posts on a forum dedicated to theism.
To use a computer connected to the Net to denigrate science is utter hypocrisy.What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
Alice in Wonderland, or I guess any book about the occult and magik.What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
If you want books that show how science is limited, i.e.that show that science can explore some spheres of knowledge, but not all (which is what your question should have asked), then books by Fr. Stanley Jaki would be very good, particularly the collection of his essays, “The Limits of a Limitless Science”. There is also an interesting book by Bas C. Van Fraassen, “Laws and Symmetry”, which purports to show there are no such things as scientific laws, only models (mostly mathematical) constructed to make sense of the world around us–i.e. science doesn’t show us what the underlying reality is. Van Fraassen is an “anti-realist”, an empiricist as far as science goes. There are also books by Nancy Cartwright, a philosopher at the London School of Economics, which purport to show that science is all wet. I haven’t read any of them.What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
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.Posting a message that suggests that modern science is “a futile attempt at seeking knowledge” on messageboard on the internet, by means of a computer, is something that would almost certainly cause an irony meter to break…should an irony meter ever be designed by a scientist.
Yes, materialists would likely say modern science is all one needs to obtain wisdom. You have understood my question better than some other posters here.Practical science doesn’t really seek wisdom
I do not doubt that science has lead to technology. What I am asking is: Is this its only purpose or can it lead us to knowledge of objective, unchanging truths?To use a computer connected to the Net to denigrate science is utter hypocrisy.
So you are saying that science has only a utilitarian purpose? Would you deny modern science can help one understand God better? If so, then wouldn’t you have to deny that modern science cannot lead one to at least some absolute truths?What about medicine? If you were to develope diabetes mellitus would you be willing to use the Banting method to keep yourself alive? Do you use electrical apparatus to heat and light your house in winter? What about an automobile? Do you use one of them to get to work?
Well, by knowledge I meant something more akin to wisdom.If you want books that show how science is limited, i.e.that show that science can explore some spheres of knowledge, but not all (which is what your question should have asked),
Thanks for the resourcesthen books by Fr. Stanley Jaki would be very good, particularly the collection of his essays, “The Limits of a Limitless Science”. There is also an interesting book by Bas C. Van Fraassen, “Laws and Symmetry”, which purports to show there are no such things as scientific laws, only models (mostly mathematical) constructed to make sense of the world around us–i.e. science doesn’t show us what the underlying reality is. Van Fraassen is an “anti-realist”, an empiricist as far as science goes. There are also books by Nancy Cartwright, a philosopher at the London School of Economics, which purport to show that science is all wet. I haven’t read any of them.
To use a computer connected to the Net to denigrate science is utter hypocrisy.
As a materialist, I not only deny that science is all one needs for wisdom, I don’t even see it as a primary resource. Facts and practical knowledge are important, and science does have a profound lesson to heed in the value of skepticism and falsifiability, but wisdom is “judging well”, and is a function of one’s goals and objectives in life.Yes, materialists would likely say modern science is all one needs to obtain wisdom. You have understood my question better than some other posters here.
Absolute unchanging Truth is not in the realm of objective reality, though it contains it.Maybe some of your confusion is because you think they exist in the same place?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.
I don’t understand you; please elaborate. ThanksAbsolute unchanging Truth is not in the realm of objective reality, though it contains it.Maybe some of your confusion is because you think they exist in the same place?
By the way, just because I ask this question does not mean I believe science is futile. Far from it. I ask because I want to know what its opponents think of it.What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?
Great question. I wish more responses would stay on topic instead of seeking to debate something.Originally Posted by Geremia
What is a good book that criticizes modern science and considers it a futile attempt at seeking knowledge?