I’m not talking about philosophy here,I’m talking about a mere perspective – assuming or pretending that only natural causes exist – that determines the way scientists give their professional accounts for all phenomena. A perspective does not amount to philosophy.
I don’t see that you would recognize when you are talking about philosophy and when you are not. If you have been influenced by Philip Johnson or ID theorists, the distinction between philosophy and science would not necessarily be clear to you, since it is not clear to them.
Let’ stick with your earlier statement as an example of your postion: You said, “I was referring not to scientific methods,but to the naturalistic perspective of science,or methodological naturalism. That is what causes scientists to attribute to natural causes what only God can do: the ability to create life,order,thought,and physical existence.”
First, you imply that (modern) scientific methods and methodological naturalism are different. That is false. Nor have you attempted to present any proof for your assertion. Consequently, your statement cannot be accepted.
Second, you used “naturalistic perspective” in a manner that is ambiguous. Do you know what “ambiguity” means? If so, then you will realize your logical error in equating “naturalistic perspective” with “methodological naturalism”. The equation can only be properly discussed when the ambiguity is removed through additional stipulation.
Third, science, when its observes methodological naturalism does not attribute to natural causes such things as thought or physical existence. A scientist who additionally adheres to a “philosophical naturalism” will
assume natural causes can account for “thought” or the coming into existence from nothing of natural things, but that is at bottom, a philosophical error, which goes nowhere in science, and never will. Show me a
scientific experiment or study that “demonstrates” a natural cause for human conceptual thinking or creation from nothing.
Fourth, in regard to the creation of life, there is nothing known scientifically, philosophically, or theologically that says
abiogenesis is an impossibility. Theoretically, natural causes can produce life because matter already contains all of the specificity required to generate life
abiogentically. Whether
abiogenesis actually occurred, remains an open question.
In sum, there are so many errors intertwined in just your two sentences quoted above, I do not know if you can ever extricate yourself. I think you may be forever locked in. For example, you are still beating the same “strawman” with your misrepresentation of just what “methodological naturalism” entails. You have given the term an erroneous meaning. Also, this same error simultaneously shows that you do not know much of anything about scientific methods.
How many ways can I explain this? Your argument involves not only the logical fallacy of “strawman”, but also the fallacy of
petitio principii (question begging). You continually misdefine “methodological naturalism” according to what you think it means, and then you try to show what it wrong with methodological naturalism. Your reasoning is circular and hence proves nothing. But that has been your choice to “repeatedly” present a fallacious argument, one that proves nothing whatsoever. :juggle: