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MindOverMatter2
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You my friend are a bio-mechanical machine.Another great thread cho.
How about ME.
You my friend are a bio-mechanical machine.Another great thread cho.
How about ME.
Science contradicts genesisI guess my first question would by Why? I just don’t understand the challenge and its implication that science and religion are competing explanations of the natural world. I do not see this to be the case, and, in fact, I think science is a subset of a religious worldview so that the statement water boils at 100 degrees celsius is not mutually exclusive with, say, the Christian beliefs articulated in the creeds. Science, after all, is predicated on the religious premise that existence is intelligible and is discernible through reason and inquiry (i.e., science) because existence was rationally created, endowed with logos from the divine Logos.
the Loving way God hold both scientists and all the natural world in being at every momentAny takers?
Why science exists in the first place. Science cannot on its own solve the problem of induction. Philosophy has tried and failed to solve this one too. Only religion, the christian religion that is, can provide an adequite answer to this.Any takers?
Why?Why science exists in the first place. Science cannot on its own solve the problem of induction.
Explain why that is?Philosophy has tried and failed to solve this one too.
How?Only religion, the Christian religion that is, can provide an adequate answer to this.
Why does “context” matter, and why do we need religion?Religion places the natural world in context.
So what if we deny what we are? Why does that matter?We humans need context in order to understand what we experience.
To deny that is to deny a basic part of what we are.
We evolved.And why do we have that part of ourselves when other creatures don’t seem to?
So?Dogs and cats don’t wonder about their place in the scheme of things. Whales don’t either, even though they are highly intelligent, nor do elephants or even apes.
Does that mean that there is something greater than man or is it just an illusion of our biochemical make-up? What does one mean by the word “greater” beyond its normal reference to size?Only man feels that something about himself needs explaining within the context of something greater than himself.
Well, we actually have a VERY limited view of the universe, and yet science posits that its observations are universal laws which apply equally and everywhere within the physical universe. In order to extrapolate that concept from our very limited observational powers, we have to base that on one VERY religious precept: that the universe is rational.I like the last part of your paragraph. I suppose that could be a good argument; that the intelligibility of the universe corresponds to the intelligence of a mind so much so that it would seem that the universe sprang forth from a mind?
Promethius:Well, we actually have a VERY limited view of the universe, and yet science posits that its observations are universal laws which apply equally and everywhere within the physical universe. In order to extrapolate that concept from our very limited observational powers, we have to base that on one VERY religious precept: that the universe is rational.
If the universe is NOT rational, then there can be no such thing as universal scientific assertion, since all we can say is “in this constrained subset of the physical universe, at this constrained timeframe, under these circumstances, we have observed that the universe tends towards behaving in X manner”
On further meditation on the OP’s question, I think it could be summed up in the word sin. It is obvious that human beings are flawed. But why is this? Is it because of natural selection? Doesn’t seem likely. So, why do we do such horrendous things (and such wonderful things)? The Church teaches us it’s because of original sin. Science cannot tell us anything about why we are so flawed and never will be able to.
A thing is horrendous in your subjective opinion according to your taste. There is a natural desire to survive and reproduce, and each individual has their own idea of what it means to survive and what it takes to survive. Every individual has an idea of what they are willing to sacrifice when it comes to pleasure and pain. Thus it seems reasonable, in a resource driven world, that ones persons desire will come in to conflict with another persons desire, and war will perhaps ensue. Philosophically speaking, I don’t see why original sin need be employed in-order to understand human behaviour.On further meditation on the OP’s question, I think it could be summed up in the word sin. It is obvious that human beings are flawed. But why is this? Is it because of natural selection? Doesn’t seem likely. So, why do we do such horrendous things? (And such wonderful things–what is virtue?–science cannot tell us). The Church teaches us we’re flawed/wounded beings because of original sin. Science cannot tell us anything about it, and never will be able to.
true. likewise with the capacity of humans to choose to act on the weaker instinct, such as compassion, as against stronger instincts, such as fear for one’s life. (e.g. if a building is burning down and someone else cannot get out)On further meditation on the OP’s question, I think it could be summed up in the word sin. It is obvious that human beings are flawed. But why is this? Is it because of natural selection? Doesn’t seem likely. So, why do we do such horrendous things? (And such wonderful things–what is virtue?–science cannot tell us). The Church teaches us we’re flawed/wounded beings because of original sin. Science cannot tell us anything about it, and never will be able to.
Yes, why human beings can be altruistic. Science cannot answer that. :yup:true. likewise with the capacity of humans to choose to act on the weaker instinct, such as compassion, as against stronger instincts, such as fear for one’s life. (e.g. if a building is burning down and someone else cannot get out)
No.A thing is horrendous in your subjective opinion according to your taste.![]()