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NowAgnostic
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So that’s your disagreement with him? You think science cannot be neutral and unbiased in that sense?How do you think he defines science? As neutral with respect to philosophy? He does think science is neutral and unbiased in this sense as he said in his AAAS speech.
Science never gives 100% absolutely certain proof.How can you be 100% certain and know that you know 100%?
What is there besides something’s natures?
But you just said He must still be creating in order to sustain things in existence, didn’t you? So therefore, I presume you wouldn’t have a problem with the idea that God, instead of willing that a frog remain a frog, wills that it transform into a pig?I do not see how it seems that way to you.It has to due with time. “1)” says God created, and “2)” says He still creates.
I guess the question here is this: do possible natures (essences) exist independently from the will of God or do they exist because of the will of God? If the latter, there simply is no distinction between the natural and the supernatural.
Aquinas is begging the question here.There are different types of miracles (Summa Contra Gentiles, lib. 3 cap. 101). Some miracles are still miraculous regardless how much we understand them or not.
If nature is “whatever God wills” then it’s silly to say “nature” can’t do something. And Aquinas also says that the ordering of causes does not proceed from necessity, but from the divine will.The highest degree in miracles comprises those works wherein something is done by God, that nature can never do: for instance, that two bodies occupy the same place, that the sun recede or stand still,… The second degree in miracles belongs to those whereby God does something that nature can do, but not in the same order: thus it is a work of nature that an animal live, see and walk: but that an animal live after being dead, see after being blind, walk after being lame,…
The practice of science indeed is not, since scientists are human.So it is utilitarian? There is always a philosophy it could be. Science is never free from the other areas of humanity. Kuhn shows this well, even if I may not agree with his relativist epistemology.
That wouldn’t be the most efficient way to do things, no.But he should not approach it totally blindly with a sort of “Monte Carlo” methodology.