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tonyrey
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It seems obvious that science cannot justify or explain itself. Do you agree or disagree?
I agree, but for a special reason. “Sciences”, in the general sense of the word (lumping together things like math, chemistry, and ethics), do not prove their own principles. I’m sure you remember “axioms” and “theorems” from high school geometry. “Axioms” were mathematical statements that do not have proofs and which cannot be proven but are taken to be true anyway, but “theorems” you had to prove for homework. You cannot prove “axioms” from within the science of geometry; you have to go to the science of metaphysics. In the same way you cannot use chemical experiments to prove the principles of chemistry; the explanation of how electrons work in atoms and molecules comes from the science of physics, not from within chemistry. In ethics you can prove that murder is wrong, but what *makes *right right and wrong wrong has to come from outside ethics, because ethics takes the rightness of right and the wrongness of wrong for granted. In any science you have to start somewhere.It seems obvious that science cannot justify or explain itself. Do you agree or disagree?
I agree but it cannot make sense of the persons who create science!“Science” at its most fundamental level is the only thing that we have to make sense of the world we live in.
Welcome to the forum! I agree with you but atheists like Dawkins claim science has made religion superfluous with its explanation of the origin of life and human beings.I am in full agreement with Luke K. It is important to remember what science is, and what it is not. Science is simply the application of reason (a gift from God) to the physical world in an attempt to explain and predict natural phenomena. It should also be noted that all science, like mathematics, is based on a set of axioms (as mentioned above) that are human-defined and must be accepted as true before you can proceed. You are free, however, to reject axioms or develop new ones, in which case you are simply defining a different “kind” of science or math. This can be most obviously seen in the field of geometry. Euclidian geometry (which is what we all learned in school) is based on a set of axioms, one of which is “parallel lines never intersect.” If you reject this assumption, however, and allow for the intersection of parallel lines, you get a different system of geometry, known as Non-Euclidian. It turns out that Non-Euclidian geometry greatly simplifies calculations performed on surfaces that are not flat – like a globe. Without Non-Euclidian geometry, it would be much more difficult to calculate, for example, the shortest path for an airplane flying half-way around the world. Thus,the axioms chosen for any given model are generally chosen because they are the most convenient for explaining our observations.
Now, back to the subject at hand. Based on the Scientific Method, all good scientific theories must be falsifiable. This brings us to what science is NOT. Science has no business investigating hypotheses that are, by definition, unfalsifiable. A prime example is the existence of God. There is no experiment that can prove that God does NOT exist, therefore science simply has no place in the discussion. (Note that I define a Scientific experiment as one that has observable and reproducible results, therefore “Thought Experiments” do not count.)
The final conclusion that I have come to is that science and religion can never be in conflict for two reasons. 1) They generally address completely separate issues and rarely intersect. 2) On the rare occasion that they intersect, there can be no conflict because both Faith and Reason are both gifts from God. (If they appear to conflict, then someone is wrong.)
Dawkins doesn’t speak for the whole scientific community, even though he’d like to believe so. There are many Christian, and other theists, who are also scientists. Even paleoanthropologists.Welcome to the forum! I agree with you but atheists like Dawkins claim science has made religion superfluous with its explanation of the origin of life and human beings.
New Scientist Science Mag
Theology is also, properly, a science. Note “facts or truths” or “principles” in the bolded part. Those who study the natural world have, over time, distanced themselves from religion is order to be able to objectively pursue knowledge without interference from churches. Galileo is probably the classic example.sci·ence
/ˈsaɪəns/ Show Spelled[sahy-uhns] Show IPA
–noun
1.
**a branch of knowledge or study dealing with a body of facts or truths systematically arranged and showing the operation of general laws: **the mathematical sciences.
2. systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation.
3. any of the branches of natural or physical science.
4. systematized knowledge in general.
5. knowledge, as of facts or principles; knowledge gained by systematic study.
6. a particular branch of knowledge.
7. skill, especially reflecting a precise application of facts or principles; proficiency.
Without addressing for now the gist of your argument, I notice you included ethics in the category of science. I know ethics is a branch of philosophy. Do you regard philosophy as science?I agree, but for a special reason. “Sciences”, in the general sense of the word (lumping together things like math, chemistry, and ethics), do not prove their own principles. I’m sure you remember “axioms” and “theorems” from high school geometry. “Axioms” were mathematical statements that do not have proofs and which cannot be proven but are taken to be true anyway, but “theorems” you had to prove for homework. You cannot prove “axioms” from within the science of geometry; you have to go to the science of metaphysics. In the same way you cannot use chemical experiments to prove the principles of chemistry; the explanation of how electrons work in atoms and molecules comes from the science of physics, not from within chemistry. In ethics you can prove that murder is wrong, but what *makes *right right and wrong wrong has to come from outside ethics, because ethics takes the rightness of right and the wrongness of wrong for granted. In any science you have to start somewhere.
When people say they believe science over religion they usually have no idea what they’re talking about. They usually mean something like “Religion says there’s a God, but unless you show me God in a test tube I won’t believe he exists”. But what they don’t realize is that there is no “scientific experiment” that proves that “scientific experiments” are a way to know anything. It’s just an excuse to disbelieve what is morally inconvenient.
Where do you think our technology comes from?Science is a scam. To think that our technology come from earthly science is absurd.
Not from earthly science, that’s for sure. Technology comes from an upper-world we are unaware of. We must give God credit for all technology. Again, science is a sham.Where do you think our technology comes from?
Yes. It has principles and methods like any other science. But unlike physical sciences, in philosophy you don’t start with the conclusions and work backwards to the principles but start with the principles arrived at by intuition and work out the conclusions.Without addressing for now the gist of your argument, I notice you included ethics in the category of science. I know ethics is a branch of philosophy. Do you regard philosophy as science?
I agree. Objectivity seems a rare phenomenon if we are to go by the scientific Establishment…Those who pursue knowledge and truth, aren’t themselves necessarily objective. (see: Dawkins or any Creationist)
Agree. There are so many things that science will never be able to explain.
I agree. Questions of science are preceded in the logical order by questions of being.It seems obvious that science cannot justify or explain itself. Do you agree or disagree?
“By their fruits you will know them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles?” – Matthew 7:16It seems obvious that science cannot justify or explain itself. Do you agree or disagree?
Well, it wasn’t obvious to me!
Do you acknowledge or do you not that someone made that same comment in the year 1400? Well, they got owned. You will too in a couple hundred years from now.
It’s quite obvious that your comment is portraying that science cannot answer before the big bang, therefore god. In other words, what we do not yet understand, therefore god is the answer. Unfortunately, this answer gets owned more and more every year since all recorded history.
I agree if you mean science as most people understand it, e.g., physics, chemistry, biology, etc . What these sciences cannot explain is “truth” itself.It seems obvious that science cannot justify or explain itself. Do you agree or disagree?
Which many scientists ignore!I agree. Questions of science are preceded in the logical order by questions of being.