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Kamalayka
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So, according to you, science has gone down the sh*tter?Anyway, science has gone from being the benefector or church patronage to a source of secular arguments against the church.
So, according to you, science has gone down the sh*tter?Anyway, science has gone from being the benefector or church patronage to a source of secular arguments against the church.
If our universe began as a vacuum fluctuation (and this is one of the current theories) from an eternal, infinite vacuum, that’s as “nothing” as “nothing” gets, and the universe is a something that spontaneously sprang from that nothing.I can just see Stephen Hawking releasing his new Theory of Nilly Willy.
I’ll agree for the sake of argument that there is no discernible patten or purpose in QM, but that’s a far cry from energy coming into being our of nothing and literally disappearing into nothingness.
I think you aren’t aware of inflationary cosmology – Alan Guth, Andre Linde, Paul Steinhardt. From MIT’s Guth:That would be part of my response, but ultimately I think you’ve misinterpreted what physicists mean by “zero energy”. Anti-matter isn’t literally less than zero. It is represented by -1, -2, . . -n; but, 0 is simply the lowest expected energy level. Anything “less than” 0 is just an existing energy level that is less than what is expected.
Appendix A of that book has an extended treatment on the negative energy of a gravitational field, btw.Now we can return to the key question: How is there any hope that the creation of the universe might be described by physical laws consistent with energy conservation? Answer: *the energy wstored in the gravitational field is represented by a negative number! *That is, the energy stored in an a gravitational field is actually less than zero. If negative numbers are allowed, then zero can be obtained by adding a positive number to a negative number of equal magnitude; for example 7 plus -7 equals zero. The immense energy thatwe observe in the form of matter can be canceled by a negative contribution to equal magnitude, coming from the gravitational field. There is no limit to to the magnitude of energy in the gravitational field, and hence no limit to the amount of matter/energy that it can cancel.
– Alan Guth, *Inflationary Cosmology, *p12
More on the rest of your questions anon.Most important of all, the question of the origin of the matter in the universe is no longer thought to be beyond the range of science. After two thousand years of scientific research, it now seems like that Lucretius was wrong. Conceivably, everything can be created from nothing. And “everything” might include a lot more than we can see. In the context of inflationary cosmology, it is fair to say that the universe is the ultimate free lunch.
I believe you are forgetting here my point – that the intuition of the (pre)scholastic era wasn’t and couldn’t have been informed by any of this, and only in the past century or so has “nothing” become a “something”. That’s the whole point of Barrow’s book, no? Do you suppose Aquinas, if he could “observe” the Big Bang would say “well it came from something!” Whatever STEM context used for that observation (if there was such a context), it would be perfectly nothing to Aquinas, and to us. Hence, the casual pronouncement that God creates ex nihilo.Can you cite any physicists who say this? I get the exact opposite impression. Barrow and Tipler state:
“[T]he quantum mechanical vacuum is not truly ‘nothing’; rather, the vacuum state has a rich structure which resides in a previously existing substratum of space-time . . .” (The Anthropic Principles in Classical Cosmology, p. 441).
We don’t get any spontaneous fluctuations apart from these vacuums.
QM in some ways is understood better than macrophysics. Certainly the precision and performance of the model is astounding. But we aren’t talking about a defeater for the idea that “out of nothing, nothing comes” – that’s not the corrigibility I’ve been referring to, but rather that the the macrophysical intuition that gives rise to that pronouncement is increasingly weakened with the knowledge gained at the QM level (an elsewhere, less forcefully).I assume you’re not saying that we can have no insights into QM whatsoever. Am I right? If we could have absolutely no insights, then we have an incorrigible, undefeated defeater for any of our claims about QM, in which case you’ve undercut your own argument.
Unless one holds the intuition as somehow “divine” or “cosmically authoritative” – itself a problematic stance – all intuition is suspect. That is, it’s not rejected outright, and is indeed crucially valuable for (name removed by moderator)ut and progress, but is subject to override and overthrow by reality, through objective apprehension of the world around us, and reasoning from that.Actually, I think think of two thinkers prior to modern science who believed that time is relative: St. Augustine and Leibniz. Come to think of it, Thomas thought so, too. Of course, GTR doesn’t violate any first principles, so its anti-intuitive nature only goes so far. I still think you’re making a hasty generalization from “some intuitions have been falsified” to “all of them are suspect”. We also see this generalization in your next example:
The point was that science in general provides this correlative information, that as the subject gets farther from man’s local experience, the intuitions hold up less and less well. This is not an insight Thomists appear to acknowledge, or be aware of.It’s mostly empty space, but the atoms are predictably much closer together than they would be in a soft object. In any case, this is a red herring, since it has nothing to do with the ex nihilo principle.
The examples above don’t dent a tautology – nothing can do that. But in the tautological sense, “something can’t come from nothing” is just trivially true. In an existential sense, virtual particles, as a feature of STEM, are as “something from nothing” as it gets. Virtual particles are counter-intuitive because our macrophysical experience is consistently NOT like that; something comes from something – a rabbit doesn’t just appear from the magician’s hat. But a virtual particle is a “rabbit from the hat” in terms of causality and provenance. It happens in the context of STEM, yes, but virtual particles militate against our intuitions about “nothing” and “coming from”.I’m afraid you haven’t given any examples that stand up under scrutiny.
Yeah, those names ring a bell. Science is a team sport, and it evolves, sometimes in fits and starts. Darwin not only gave us the theory of evolution, we can thank him for plogiston, too. Whoops.
In Ordinatio, IIRC, Ockham does apply the principles of economy, emphasizing the oneness of God. I also think Ockham also collapsed Scotus’ distinctions between per se causes and per accidens causes, didn’t he?
Like so many great ideas, the originator had just a dim glimpse of the future scope and power of the idea. In this case, an ironic one as his efforts to improve the philosophical foundations for God and faith have become a withering intellectual blade against it.
What do you mean? Who is this ‘lone individual’ you speak of? Not you obviously; you are on the science team; you may use the royal ‘we’ and speak of what ‘we’ know now, now that the future has been realized, in these most modern of times, where the juggernaut of human knowledge has begun to race forward, where knowledge is power and as our knowledge grows our power grows, and no knowledge is left that is not power. You may think you avoid dogma; but do you? Maybe I’ve got you wrong, but your scientistic rhetoric is just the kind of thing Kierkegaard talked about. The point is not about attacking aeronautical engineering, please get that idea out of your head. It’s questioning the dogmatic notion that progress is something obvious and monolithic and inexorable (as long as we’re team players - on my team, that is), something that ‘we’ have in our possession just because we live at this point in history. That’s Hegelian dogmatism. Is that you?No, it’s an important point about the shortcomings of the individual as a lone individual, epistemically. Collaboration in knowledge building, via methods focused on objectivity and critical review leaves isolated inquiry in the dust.
To know Ockham is to know *Ordinatio. *Read and enjoy:
humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/wockord.html
Thanks for the links: it was the IIRC I was confused about. I thought you were trying to reference what you were talking about in Ockham’s Ordinatio. Could you help me out with that? I don’t think I’ll have time to read the whole Ordinatio until after Christmas maybe.“IIRC” is net-speak for “If I Recall Correctly”:
urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=iirc
That’s peculiar. I certainly make my share of typos and spelling errors, but this doesn’t seem to be one – the spelling I used was correct: “withering”, see here:
Ouch! My bad. My withers are wrung!You misspelled the word in your post, then corrected me for your error.
“…in the expectation that it would validate its beliefs”? Where are you getting this from? “Apologetics issue”? Do you mean this thread? Anyway, of course I believe science ain’t all that. Why would you think that it is? (Or first: what ‘all’, exactly, do you think it is?)Anyway, science has gone from being the benefector or church patronage to a source of secular arguments against the church. The church had a significant hand in giving rise to systematic science in expectation that it would validate its beliefs. On many points, though, science has become a source of frustration. Even in areas where Christian belief can be overlaid on solid science, science has garnered a reputation and credibility that have become an “apologetics issue” for the Church. Like your post here suggests, science ain’t all that, right?
By ‘lone individual’ I mean any person (me included) relying on their subjective experience alone as the source of knowledge. The easiest person I can fool is myself, and so armed with the experience of that understanding, objective methods of knowledge building, error correction and falsification become important. By collaborating with other individuals to “check my math”, as I check theirs, and they check everyone else’s, I deploy an effective means of reducing mistakes, attenuating subjective bias and distortion, and crucial feedback on my personal bearings.What do you mean? Who is this ‘lone individual’ you speak of? Not you obviously; you are on the science team; you may use the royal ‘we’ and speak of what ‘we’ know now, now that the future has been realized, in these most modern of times, where the juggernaut of human knowledge has begun to race forward, where knowledge is power and as our knowledge grows our power grows, and no knowledge is left that is not power.
Science is low dogma enterprise. It is quite dogmatic in its fundamental commitment to the reality of reality, and some measure of intelligibility of the universe as an empirical endeavor, but beyond that, everything is tentative, provisional, subject to critique, assault, falsification.You may think you avoid dogma; but do you? Maybe I’ve got you wrong, but your scientistic rhetoric is just the kind of thing Kierkegaard talked about.
It’s a fact that, like any other fact, is open to dispute and review, but one which stands up to any scrutiny you’d like to apply: science has accumulated a lot more natural knowledge, performative knowledge than it had centuries ago. If you want to dispute the idea that the massive growth in our natural knowledge is not progress, be my guest, that’d be a subjective assessment, just begging the question of what you (or I) call ‘progress’ in some general sense. But as a matter of achieving its own aims, science has indisputably made significant progress over the last several centuries, and is much further along toward its goal than it was: providing natural explanations for natural phenomena.The point is not about attacking aeronautical engineering, please get that idea out of your head. It’s questioning the dogmatic notion that progress is something obvious and monolithic and inexorable (as long as we’re team players - on my team, that is), something that ‘we’ have in our possession just because we live at this point in history. That’s Hegelian dogmatism. Is that you?
Here’s a short encapsulation of the idea:Thanks for the links: it was the IIRC I was confused about. I thought you were trying to reference what you were talking about in Ockham’s Ordinatio. Could you help me out with that? I don’t think I’ll have time to read the whole Ordinatio until after Christmas maybe.![]()
I’m quite sure that the Church patrons of science back several centuries ago when modern science was just getting off the ground expected the output of that science to dovetail nicely with Church dogma and doctrine. But today, I note from discussions on another forum, that science has become a major pain in the rear for the Church, for example on the issue of homosexuality and sexual orientation – the church can assent to the science emerging that establishes sexual orientation as heavily influenced by genetics and environmental factors beyond the individual’s control, but it works right against the traditional “received wisdom” of the Church – the Church still officially refers to homosexuality as a “disorder” right?
Call it the “Galileo Effect”, maybe, science getting too big for its britches, all puffed up by the evidence, from the Church’s perspective.
I want to address this statement before making my point. This statement assumes that nature is a subordinate to personal being. On the contrary,it’s human nature to be self determined. To assume that genes and environment are more powerfull factors than nature in determining the self is to not recognize human nature.the church can assent to the science emerging that establishes sexual orientation as heavily influenced by genetics and environmental factors beyond the individual’s control, but it works right against the traditional “received wisdom” of the Church – the Church still officially refers to homosexuality as a “disorder” right?
I guess that’s right. How would we recognize human nature apart from a) genetics, b) epigenetic factors, and c) social/cultural environmental influences?I want to address this statement before making my point. This statement assumes that nature is a subordinate to personal being. On the contrary,it’s human nature to be self determined. To assume that genes and environment are more powerfull factors than nature in determining the self is to not recognize human nature.
That may be a convenient adjustment for the RCC to make, but that’s not the usage that’s out there. Webster, for example:The experience of same sex attraction isn’t homosexuality.
The first meaning directly contradicts what you’ve said here. The way people deploy this term does mean “sexual attraction”. If you want to pull out clinical definitions, you will find even beefier definitions that discredit your claim here. There are many homosexuals who have never engaged in homosexual contact. They are homosexuals, and self-identify thus, as being primarily attracted in a sexual or romantic way to individuals of the opposite sex.1 : of, relating to, or characterized by a tendency to direct sexual desire toward another of the same sex
2 : of, relating to, or involving sexual intercourse between persons of the same sex
Yes but not only the behavior. The behavior is just the acting upon the attraction, the manifestation of the disposition.Sexual acts between two people of the same sex is homosexuality.
“thief” isn’t understood that way, but is defined by a behavior not an inclination or orientation.If that weren’t true everyone ever tempted to steal is a theif even if they never stole anything.
Note the absence of inclination, temptation or contemplation, and the conspicuous reliance on commission – the act of stealing. Thieving and homosexuality are fundamentally dissimilar in this regard – homosexuality obtains from desire and internal inclination. Theft does not.thief: one that steals especially stealthily or secretly; also : one who commits theft or larceny
According to who?Homosexuality is a disorder because the end purpose of human sexuality is not met through homosexual acts.
Homosexual acts are not considered sinful by the RCC?The science that discovers the facts surrounding the source of sexual attraction doesn’t work against the recieved wisdom of the Church. I guess one would have to know what was recieved to know that.
OK, roger that.Having said that, I read Sam Harrises book ’ The End of Faith’. Well reasoned critique of religious attitudes and how they enfluence culture. Albeit missing a few of the finer points in a similar fashion as the statement I responded to about the Church’s disposition towards homosexuality and science.
I’m sure. When Voltaire observed that if God didn’t exist we’d have to invent him, it wasn’t a matter of simple whimsy he was thinking of, I’d guess. It’s a feature of man’s evolved brain that he has a disposition of intentionality. Man is a story-telling being, “narrative-centric”. Religion and myth can and do fill important “market demands” in the mind of man. And significant benefits can and do obtain.What it presents as new to atheism ( new to me) is Sam’s acceptance of the nenefits religions have offered to humanity. The uncharacteristic acceptance of spirituality as real, necessary and proper to human nature. In fact he not only irritated the sensibilities of religious people, his book upset alot of atheists as well.
Yeah, Douglas Hofstadter, for instance, in I Am A Strange Loop gives a solid treatment to the idea of the “natural soul” and “spirituality” as a material phenomenon, as terms we can deploy usefully in the culture. One of the primitive parts of previous (and alas, much current) materialist thinking about religion and myth was that it wasn’t just false, but frivolously false. As the knowledge base broadens, one of the areas ripe for discovery is models that explain and perform in the area of human mysticism and supernaturalism. We are “wired for fantasy” in many areas, and that’s something we don’t have a lot of real knowledge about at this point, in terms of the underlying mechanics and processes.The aim it seems to me of the ‘New Atheism’ is an atheism that accepts the spiritual goods that the world religions offer to the human race, redefine them as entirely natural, remove reasoning that supports faith in their supernatural origins, point out the history of evil human behavior as evidence that religion has always lacked as a means to proper human ends,
I guess that’s right. How would we recognize human nature apart from a) genetics, b) epigenetic factors, and c) social/cultural environmental influences?
Okay, so you’re saying there are actually are such people, who “rely on their subjective experience alone as the source of knowledge”? Do you mean people who were raised by wolves? Or other people too, psychologically normal people?By ‘lone individual’ I mean any person (me included) relying on their subjective experience alone as the source of knowledge. The easiest person I can fool is myself, and so armed with the experience of that understanding, objective methods of knowledge building, error correction and falsification become important. By collaborating with other individuals to “check my math”, as I check theirs, and they check everyone else’s, I deploy an effective means of reducing mistakes, attenuating subjective bias and distortion, and crucial feedback on my personal bearings.
Science is low dogma enterprise. It is quite dogmatic in its fundamental commitment to the reality of reality, and some measure of intelligibility of the universe as an empirical endeavor, but beyond that, everything is tentative, provisional, subject to critique, assault, falsification.
How could a commitment to the reality of reality be dogmatic??? Anyway, of course science per se is not dogmatic, though many scientists of course are. But scientism is not science; it is an understanding of what science is and what role is appropriate to positivistic empirical investigation within the larger domain of human knowing. Scientism is dogmatic and you sound like you espouse it. This is a case where it doesn’t matter how often you recite some mantra about “the easiest person to fool is myself”; it doesn’t actually help you to not fool yourself (it might even incline you to do so in cases like this).Any theory you want to name is subject to overthrow, and the history of science is a story of one overthrowing after another. There are no truths in science that obtain “because God said so”. Neither is science dogmatic about what must be explained, or what it can explain. It explains what it can explain based on the evidence and the performance of its models.
So you espouse the idea that ‘science’ is a subsistent entity of some kind with essential, changeless goals that have indisputably been progressively realized over the last several centuries. In other words, the idea of ‘science’ hasn’t significantly changed since Plato and the standards of scientific progress that are understood by modern common sense are inevitable and unquestionable. And you claim your position is not dogmatic?It’s a fact that, like any other fact, is open to dispute and review, but one which stands up to any scrutiny you’d like to apply: science has accumulated a lot more natural knowledge, performative knowledge than it had centuries ago. If you want to dispute the idea that the massive growth in our natural knowledge is not progress, be my guest, that’d be a subjective assessment, just begging the question of what you (or I) call ‘progress’ in some general sense. But as a matter of achieving its own aims, science has indisputably made significant progress over the last several centuries, and is much further along toward its goal than it was: providing natural explanations for natural phenomena.
Here’s a short encapsulation of the idea:
Scotus: An infinite series of efficient causes related *per accidens *is possible, but that would require a finite series of efficient causes related *per se.
***Ockham: **Not, dude! An infinite series of productive causes can be self-sufficient.
Okay, thanks for clarifying. My original point here, though, remains the same: it is not about he said vs. he said. That’s no way to make or demonstrate progress. That’s fluff. The question is: who is right? And to answer that question, even tentatively, in a public way (remember your own rhetoric about the debility of isolated subjective experience), would require a much more detailed discussion.That’s an example I was pointing to concerning Ockham’s ontological nominalism. Where Scotus saw such an infinite series as contingent on something else, Ockham saw that contingency as superfluous, unnecessary.
I’m quite sure that the Church patrons of science back several centuries ago when modern science was just getting off the ground expected the output of that science to dovetail nicely with Church dogma and doctrine. But today, I note from discussions on another forum, that science has become a major pain in the rear for the Church, for example on the issue of homosexuality and sexual orientation – the church can assent to the science emerging that establishes sexual orientation as heavily influenced by genetics and environmental factors beyond the individual’s control, but it works right against the traditional “received wisdom” of the Church – the Church still officially refers to homosexuality as a “disorder” right?
Right, still a disorder, and from what I know of the issue the APA would refer to it the same way on scientific (evidence-based) grounds - but that’s not their MO. It’s well known that gay political advocacy runs scandalously rampant in the APA. The history of social activism is considered a science by some people too, you know.Call it the “Galileo Effect”, maybe, science getting too big for its britches, all puffed up by the evidence, from the Church’s perspective.
No, not alone, not solely through subjective experience. When they get on an airplane to go to Disneyworld, even if they are intuitively afraid to fly, they are relying on real knowledge systematically assembled by others. When it comes to questions of a philosophical nature, though, many are simply quite enamored of their intuitions, and subjective experience, *over against *the witness of real world knowledge. They “just know” the world was designed by God, for example, and their affinity for their subjective inclinations trumps any objective analysis of the situation. Reality “just feels better” if there’s some unseen yet authoritative deity that provides moral absolutes of a cosmic nature, so that… “feels” true, subjectively, and many go with it.Okay, so you’re saying there are actually are such people, who “rely on their subjective experience alone as the source of knowledge”? Do you mean people who were raised by wolves? Or other people too, psychologically normal people?
It’s unassailable, cannot be questioned. That’s dogma!How could a commitment to the reality of reality be dogmatic???
That’s the beauty of science – it seperates the method and the discipline from the personality, the subjective individual participant.Anyway, of course science per se is not dogmatic, though many scientists of course are.
Maybe I misunderstand scientism, but I take scientism to be a belief that science is authoritative over all disciplines of life – arts, music, literature, politics, baseball. Insofar as that understanding is correct, I’m not subscriber to scientism, not hardly.But scientism is not science; it is an understanding of what science is and what role is appropriate to positivistic empirical investigation within the larger domain of human knowing. Scientism is dogmatic and you sound like you espouse it. This is a case where it doesn’t matter how often you recite some mantra about “the easiest person to fool is myself”; it doesn’t actually help you to not fool yourself (it might even incline you to do so in cases like this).
It is assailable, and open to criticism and review. It stands on its record of performance, on the evidence of what it has produced. It needs to assert no authority, or silence any challenges. A review of what science has produced in terms of knowledge will make the case for its efficacy and utility for man. No dogma needed, just look at the results.So you espouse the idea that ‘science’ is a subsistent entity of some kind with essential, changeless goals that have indisputably been progressively realized over the last several centuries. In other words, the idea of ‘science’ hasn’t significantly changed since Plato and the standards of scientific progress that are understood by modern common sense are inevitable and unquestionable. And you claim your position is not dogmatic?
Possibly, and I’m happy to pursue that. I am fascinated for the power of Ockham’s ideas in terms of how they undermine religion and support rational thinking. I’m sure he really didn’t have a clue what the downstream effects of his own ideas would be, upon his own ideas. This is part of my larger judgment that science in general is a “golem” of sorts, a “child of religion” which has ended up haunting and laying siege to religion. No way to treat your mother, that!Okay, thanks for clarifying. My original point here, though, remains the same: it is not about he said vs. he said. That’s no way to make or demonstrate progress. That’s fluff. The question is: who is right? And to answer that question, even tentatively, in a public way (remember your own rhetoric about the debility of isolated subjective experience), would require a much more detailed discussion.
Well, I take a dim view of that as sicence, if so. The unmistakably trend in the science that deals with data, genetics, and measured, isolated effects is directly away from any kind of “disorder”, though. Even in terms of evolution, it makes sense – mothers of gay males are statistically more fertile/fecund than the other mothers. There seems to be an evolutionary advantage in reproductive/gestational phenotypes that are more efficient in propagating genes even after paying the “tax” of homosexual males who do not produce offspring as much as heterosexual males.Right, still a disorder, and from what I know of the issue the APA would refer to it the same way on scientific (evidence-based) grounds - but that’s not their MO. It’s well known that gay political advocacy runs scandalously rampant in the APA. The history of social activism is considered a science by some people too, you know.
Well, to the extent sexual orientation is genetically/epigenetically determined, it undermines what Paul says in Romans, for example. And I don’t think there’s a case to be made that rules out social/psychological environmental factors, given what we know right now, in case that isn’t clear. To the extent being homosexual is a predetermined identity, though, it’s not like alcoholism at all. We are sexual beings in a fundamental level where “alcoholic dispositions” do not even apply.Anyway, the obvious point to make here is that there is nothing ‘problematic’ about the onset of a disorder being heavily influenced by genetics and environmental factors beyond the individual’s control. Why do you think there would be?
That presupposes that something really can come from nothing, so it doesn’t help to beg that question.If our universe began as a vacuum fluctuation (and this is one of the current theories) from an eternal, infinite vacuum, that’s as “nothing” as “nothing” gets, and the universe is a something that spontaneously sprang from that nothing.
I’m familiar with it. The key to understanding Guth’s statement is that negative numbers represent certain energy levels. He’s not saying there’s energy that’s less than nothing.I think you aren’t aware of inflationary cosmology – Alan Guth, Andre Linde, Paul Steinhardt. From MIT’s Guth: . . .
Barrow’s book presents a contrast between classical and modern physics, but his point remains that the modern notion of a vacuum is something. Just because there’s no discernible pattern does not at all imply that something can come from nothing.I believe you are forgetting here my point – that the intuition of the (pre)scholastic era wasn’t and couldn’t have been informed by any of this, and only in the past century or so has “nothing” become a “something”. That’s the whole point of Barrow’s book, no?
Thomas would, and actually did say, that if the universe had a beginning, then it had a First Cause. Of course, his own cosmological arguments are not dependent on this. Keep in mind that God is something.Do you suppose Aquinas, if he could “observe” the Big Bang would say “well it came from something!” Whatever STEM context used for that observation (if there was such a context), it would be perfectly nothing to Aquinas, and to us. Hence, the casual pronouncement that God creates ex nihilo.
I don’t have any disagreement that matter may be spontaneous, or random, but you have to show the connection between this and “something coming from nothing” in order for your objection to stand.On the interim, our intuitions can be informed by the knowledge gained. STEM is “volatile” in a creative sense, giving spontaneous rise to fluctuations an disturbances at random places and times, “from nothing” – where “nothing” is “no thing”.
I realize this is what you believe, but I maintain there is no weakening at all. There’s just no connection, however implicit, between spontaneity and something coming from nothing. Moreover, I’ve pointed out that QM actually confirms the ex nihilo principle. To restate that it’s still weakened is circular.QM in some ways is understood better than macrophysics. Certainly the precision and performance of the model is astounding. But we aren’t talking about a defeater for the idea that “out of nothing, nothing comes” – that’s not the corrigibility I’ve been referring to, but rather that the the macrophysical intuition that gives rise to that pronouncement is increasingly weakened with the knowledge gained at the QM level (an elsewhere, less forcefully).
I don’t agree with you about the necessity of corrigibility. “I am appeared to redly” is incorrigible if, in fact, I see something that appears red to me. There are a number of a priori principles that are both true/meaningful, as well as unfalsifiable, such as those found in logic and mathematics. I would also add the ex nihilo principle to that list. In sum, not all intuition is subject, especially if you’re using “intuition” as a blanket term for all non-empirically derived principles.Unless one holds the intuition as somehow “divine” or “cosmically authoritative” – itself a problematic stance – all intuition is suspect. That is, it’s not rejected outright, and is indeed crucially valuable for (name removed by moderator)ut and progress, but is subject to override and overthrow by reality, through objective apprehension of the world around us, and reasoning from that.
I wouldn’t limit that to survival. Some things are transcendental in both an ontological and epistemological sense – there could be no intelligibility or knowledge without them.So it’s all subject to doubt. We have an intution that reality is real, for example. And while we can doubt that intution in principle, it’s transcendentally imperative – it’s a necessary precondition for survival, and thinking about the world around us.
I’ll continue to wait for a single example that validates this statement.None of that serves as a defeater for any particular intuition per se. But the performance of our intuitions as a function of “distance” from our local experience is informative. The “farther out” we get, the more inadequate our intuitions are. Thomistic metaphysics, just by virtue of being metaphysical, are “really far out”, and thus increasingly suspect in light of discovery in past centuries.
Lucky for these Scholastics, their arguments didn’t necessitate the S-PSR.‘scholastic man’ had a strong level of trust in the S-PSR, for example. And well he might, given what was available to him, knowledge-wise and experientially. Modern man, however, understands that the idea that every true proposition does NOT necessarily have a sufficient reason why it is true.
That’s a bit of a hasty generalization to make about Thomists. In any case, if we are going to take this “counter-intuition” proposal seriously, then we cannot even trust our own cognitive faculties in coming to the conclusion that our intuitions may be wrong. This, of course, undercuts your own argument.The point was that science in general provides this correlative information, that as the subject gets farther from man’s local experience, the intuitions hold up less and less well. This is not an insight Thomists appear to acknowledge, or be aware of.
A tautology would be something like, “nothing is nothing,” or, “something is something.” “Something cannot come from nothing” is not tautological. Nevertheless, even tautologies are meaningful, so they shouldn’t be dismissed as contributing nothing to knowledge.The examples above don’t dent a tautology – nothing can do that. But in the tautological sense, “something can’t come from nothing” is just trivially true.
But, where are you getting this connection from? How do we get from mere spontaneity to a free lunch? Further, we do observe spontaneity at the macro-level, especially if there is such a thing as free will.In an existential sense, virtual particles, as a feature of STEM, are as “something from nothing” as it gets. Virtual particles are counter-intuitive because our macrophysical experience is consistently NOT like that; something comes from something – a rabbit doesn’t just appear from the magician’s hat. But a virtual particle is a “rabbit from the hat” in terms of causality and provenance. It happens in the context of STEM, yes, but virtual particles militate against our intuitions about “nothing” and “coming from”.
But you’re trying to create a false contrast here: between fear which is intuitive and ‘reliance on real knowledge’ which is not. You can’t really believe that’s a real distinction?No, not alone, not solely through subjective experience. When they get on an airplane to go to Disneyworld, even if they are intuitively afraid to fly, they are relying on real knowledge systematically assembled by others.
Of course you may be right about this, whatever it is exactly that you mean; but again, your simply claiming that this is the case, using all sorts of vague and ambiguous terms with non-identified referents, is pure ad hominem self-congratulatory fluff (rationally speaking). If science is rigorous and objective, this wouldn’t be science; what point is there in praising science if you don’t try to emulate what is good about what you’re praising? You can insist on rigorous epistemological standards, but such insistence becomes pretty silly when its picture of rigor is purely dogmatic and itself not at all rigorous.When it comes to questions of a philosophical nature, though, many are simply quite enamored of their intuitions, and subjective experience, *over against *the witness of real world knowledge. They “just know” the world was designed by God, for example, and their affinity for their subjective inclinations trumps any objective analysis of the situation. Reality “just feels better” if there’s some unseen yet authoritative deity that provides moral absolutes of a cosmic nature, so that… “feels” true, subjectively, and many go with it.
…and presumably you’re saying they shouldn’t be? You know this how? Intuitively? Or is this a ‘scientific’ claim, in your view?But in many other areas, these same folk are more than happy to take advantage of the fruits of systematized, collective knowledge.
It’s unassailable, cannot be questioned. That’s dogma!
Before I roll over and accept this claim, can you tell me what ‘eschewing the belief that reality is reality’ even means? (And obviously I’m looking for something informative and non-question-begging.)Man is not at liberty to eschew that belief, or proceed as if he truly doubted it, lest he die, violently and soon, in many cases.
Does it really though? Is this something you’ve had an intuition about? Or is there a ‘discipline’ that has established this fact independently of ‘personality’?That’s the beauty of science – it seperates the method and the discipline from the personality, the subjective individual participant.
imho, you do misunderstand scientism (not that there is a single neat definition for the term, but I can’t even imagine what it would mean to say, for example, that “science is authoritative over the ‘discipline of life’ that is baseball”). Scientism insists on the cognitive superiority of the natural sciences and dismisses the cognitive claims of other Wissenschaften, or claims that these are destined to be subsumed under the Naturwissenschaften and their particular kind of objectivity and exactness. It is obviously based, I think, on an intuition (one that is shallow and stupid). But maybe this bears more discussion. For now I’ll just say that I think that perhaps you have a habit of making hasty claims, the consequences of which you do not understand and would not agree with if you did understand them.Maybe I misunderstand scientism, but I take scientism to be a belief that science is authoritative over all disciplines of life – arts, music, literature, politics, baseball. Insofar as that understanding is correct, I’m not subscriber to scientism, not hardly.
You’re missing the point entirely, I believe. You make non-scientific claims about science and claim that ‘science’ does the same - it doesn’t and can’t: science can only make scientific claims. You don’t understand the structure of scientific knowledge at all if you think that it results speak for themselves about their own ‘efficacy’, at least in a sense which is relevant to this debate - that is just your intuition speaking, not science.It is assailable, and open to criticism and review. It stands on its record of performance, on the evidence of what it has produced. It needs to assert no authority, or silence any challenges. A review of what science has produced in terms of knowledge will make the case for its efficacy and utility for man. No dogma needed, just look at the results.
I think this is indeed a fascinating topic. My one comment for now will be that your hypostatization of ideas and their power is partially correct, but naive; ideas are part of the life of spirit and human person’s necessarily underlie ideas as well as their material history/progress.Possibly, and I’m happy to pursue that. I am fascinated for the power of Ockham’s ideas in terms of how they undermine religion and support rational thinking. I’m sure he really didn’t have a clue what the downstream effects of his own ideas would be, upon his own ideas. This is part of my larger judgment that science in general is a “golem” of sorts, a “child of religion” which has ended up haunting and laying siege to religion. No way to treat your mother, that!
Well, I take a dim view of that as sicence, if so. The unmistakably trend in the science that deals with data, genetics, and measured, isolated effects is directly away from any kind of “disorder”, though. Even in terms of evolution, it makes sense – mothers of gay males are statistically more fertile/fecund than the other mothers. There seems to be an evolutionary advantage in reproductive/gestational phenotypes that are more efficient in propagating genes even after paying the “tax” of homosexual males who do not produce offspring as much as heterosexual males.
Your ‘dim views’ are perhaps all too dim - certainly a more substantive comment would be in order than what you have offered here. Anyway, yes, the physiological science is interesting; but why do you think it is problematic for RC doctrines??? Don’t just tell me it is!Anyway, that’s a subject of interest – the physiological science, not any kind of fluffy sociology. I think the physiological science is problematic for the doctrines of the RCC.
Well, to the extent sexual orientation is genetically/epigenetically determined, it undermines what Paul says in Romans, for example. And I don’t think there’s a case to be made that rules out social/psychological environmental factors, given what we know right now, in case that isn’t clear. To the extent being homosexual is a predetermined identity, though, it’s not like alcoholism at all. We are sexual beings in a fundamental level where “alcoholic dispositions” do not even apply.
I’m sorry, which part of Catholic theology? Not all of it, I hope! Please clarify. I don’t mean to be unkind but this is more fluff.Someone upthread tried the “homosexuality is the act, not the inclination” trick, and I think that gives away the game here with respect to the church. If homosexuality is an expression of man’s (God given) nature, not the behavior but the basic, core affinity, Catholic theology looks quite at odds with the reality of man as man.
I have yet to have anyone successfully argue how Dr. Mengele was out of line, by using the scientific method. As soon as someone says that he was out of line, they appeal to something not in the jurisdiction of science - morality and ethics - which is the domain of philosophy or theology. Thus, that’s one thing that makes science ugly, and why I don’t trust Science alone as the final truth.That’s the beauty of science – it seperates the method and the discipline from the personality, the subjective individual participant.
Sorry, I haven’t been following this thread, but I read your post, and I can’t let a false statement like that go unchallenged.And thus, we’re back to the New Atheism - its code of ethics says that all is allowed
I think ‘dogmatism’ is the support for ‘dogma’, no? A look at Webster suggests that’s the case.Not quite! There’s a difference between ‘cannot conceivably be questioned’ and ‘is understood to be beyond doubt’. Dogmas are not beyond questioning. My point, anyway, was about dogmatism, not dogmas. There is no pejorative connotation implied by ‘dogma’, whereas ‘dogmatism’ implies stubbornness, disregard for evidence, closed-mindedness.
I’m not sure if it’s in this thread or not, but the example I use regularly is finding your hand in an open flame? Ouch! What happens? Even if you want to pretend you believe that reality isn’t real, that the flame isn’t actual and neither is your hand, your brain stem will override your malfunctioning cerebral cortex and force your hand to take evasive action from the flame.Before I roll over and accept this claim, can you tell me what ‘eschewing the belief that reality is reality’ even means? (And obviously I’m looking for something informative and non-question-begging.)
It’s observed, over and over. Objective review and analysis catches mistakes and identifies bias at the individual level that can be filtered out or adjusted when identified. In a recent analysis of network traffic problems for an Internet service I’m working on, I got “spanked” for some math errors that I rejected even after being corrected the first time. It took a replication elsewhere and some checking against a couple other sources to see that I was in fact mistaken. It was not malicious on my part, but that is the kind of experience that objective knowledge building puts into my/our experience base all the time.Does it really though? Is this something you’ve had an intuition about? Or is there a ‘discipline’ that has established this fact independently of ‘personality’?
Could be. Perhaps I subscribe to sceintism under your definition. I’m well aware of the apocalyptic predictions that typically accompany criticism of atheism, and in fact, I understand that to be a/the major impetus in resisting it, rather than fact-based, reasoning on the evidence. A major sustaining influence of Christianity I believe is the simple fear of the ramifications if this is a godless universe. However scary or dystopian that is, though, such assessments don’t make a godless world godful, or vice versa. It is what it is. In any case, I do understand that whatever the reasoned conclusions are about the actual state of reality, we aren’t bound to choose despair, or nihilism or hate.imho, you do misunderstand scientism (not that there is a single neat definition for the term, but I can’t even imagine what it would mean to say, for example, that “science is authoritative over the ‘discipline of life’ that is baseball”). Scientism insists on the cognitive superiority of the natural sciences and dismisses the cognitive claims of other Wissenschaften, or claims that these are destined to be subsumed under the Naturwissenschaften and their particular kind of objectivity and exactness. It is obviously based, I think, on an intuition (one that is shallow and stupid). But maybe this bears more discussion. For now I’ll just say that I think that perhaps you have a habit of making hasty claims, the consequences of which you do not understand and would not agree with if you did understand them.
You’re missing the point entirely, I believe. You make non-scientific claims about science and claim that ‘science’ does the same - it doesn’t and can’t: science can only make scientific claims. You don’t understand the structure of scientific knowledge at all if you think that it results speak for themselves about their own ‘efficacy’, at least in a sense which is relevant to this debate - that is just your intuition speaking, not science.
Maybe it’s best to avoid being abstract here, and talk about specifics. If we look at, say, scientific models of aerodynamics, we can observe that those models are performative. We don’t need any more metaphysical commitments than ‘reality is ral’ to understand that the predictions and modeling produced by modern aerodynamic are effective in supporting flight.Right?Let’s just start there, and you tell me where the illicit intuitions got snuck in.I think this is indeed a fascinating topic. My one comment for now will be that your hypostatization of ideas and their power is partially correct, but naive; ideas are part of the life of spirit and human person’s necessarily underlie ideas as well as their material history/progress.
I don’t disagree with this last sentence.
do you think it is problematic for RC doctrines??? Don’t just tell me it is!Well, that one I will chalk up to the, uh, clever forum settings that cap my posts at 7,000 chars. That subject is a good one to pursue, but there’s no way to support that “in-line” here. It would have to be split into a seperate thread. Adding just a little color to what I said above, the physiology that is revealed, and being revealed by science is on that puts human sexuality at a much more pervasive, horizontal level than the picture of man, as is and as should be, delivered in *Humanae Vitae. *Sex as a recreative and non-reproductive act keeps get emphasized as more and more of our wiring gets mapped out, for example. I understand the prohibition that understands man’s nature to be fallen, and thus Catholic strictures seek to “deny the flesh” in deference to a redeemed wisdom; but the more we learn, the more “anti-human” such understandings become in the light of our growing understanding of human physiology.Your ‘dim views’ are perhaps all too dim - certainly a more substantive comment would be in order than what you have offered here. Anyway, yes, the physiological science is interesting; but why
There. That was barely enough to tease, and will probably make me have to split my post, here!
-TS
(see, told ya!)