Hi CatsandDogs,
How is it a scientific hypothesis? It IS a hypothesis, but it is de facto non-scientific as it involves God.
God is not ruled out by science. Science just hasn’t found any evidence for God, and it’s not because it hasn’t tried. Prayer has certainly been studied extensively. The archaeologist who digs up Noah’s ark would be bigger than Indiana Jones. Scientists would love to verify any of the claims made by Christians.
Christians claim that God takes an active interest in human affairs. If this is true there will be evidence? Does God answer prayers, perform miracles? Then there must be evidence. Is God omnipotent, omniscient? Then we can imagine what the world would be like if that were true and compare it to the actual world.
I have good reason to believe God created the universe. You may have good reason that God didn’t create the universe.
I’d love to know how your reasoning is superior to mine!
If there were good reasons to believe a supernatural being created the universe, it would be part of our rational understanding of the universe–part of science. But it is not. It is my understanding that this is considered to be an article of faith to be believed without evidence. What reason do you have to believe that God created the universe?
I think it is reasonable to say, I don’t know how the universe began. It is not even clear that it makes sense to talk about the beginning of time since the word beginning assumes that time already exists.
That is where you’re wrong.
Science is only the subset of claims which can be verified by material convalidation, meaning by checking one material thing against another to explain how they work together.
It not that either of us is wrong, but it is a point of contention. We are both allowed to insist on our own definitions of science in debate. You seem to want to insist on a narrow view so you can continue attacking your favorite straw man: scientism. I prefer to talk about science as our best attempt to be intellectually honest–to distinguish what we wish were true from what we actually have good reason to believe Both definitions would be supported by the dictionary:
sci·ence
–noun
- 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.
- systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation.
- any of the branches of natural or physical science.
- systematized knowledge in general.
…
I suppose you don’t consider social sciences real sciences? Scientists can study any patterns, they don’t have to be measurable with any specific set of tools.
Claims of actual truth, which are axiomatically correct in every case, are never “reasonable” because they are not derived but revealed truths, and have nothing to do with science per se.
Science doesn’t deal with truth. It deals with workings. When something “works” it is a scientific fact, but it is not a truth because the entire circumstances of the “working” can never be utterly known…
I think we are always going to talk past one another to an extent? When you say that something means something, what does that mean? I see no difference in saying “what does this word mean?” and “how is this word used?” To me truth is a species of good. It is that which is good to believe. It is a property of sentences. To you, truth seems to be some sort of essence that you equate with God. I can’t imagine what is means to talk about truth when we aren’t referring to a statement that we are evaluating?
All of this is to explain that I don’t see how truth is never reasonable. Reasonable is a word we use to describe rationales that are convincing, and nothing is more convincing than the truth.
Are you a polytheist? Do you understand the vast VAST difference between polytheism and monotheism? Do you realize that atheism is simply neg-monotheism, and not anti-theism?
I’m just someone who does not want to pretend to know things that I don’t know.
I only believe in one fewer god than you do, and I find yours just as unconvincing as you find all the others.
Since that fellows flight is not part of truth as given to us by the Magisterium, it’s neither a “scientific fact” nor a “religious truth”.
I was trying to be careful not to offend anyone, but to be more to the point: You can insert any of the claims made about Jesus for “Muhammed flew to Heaven on a winged horse”? If there were good reasons to believe those things, they would be part of our scientific understanding of the world. If Jesus ever floats down from the clouds and demonstrates his superpowers, Christianity will stand revealed as a science. (I apologize if those words offend, that is not my intention.) The point is that we CAN know these things in a scientific way. We just don’t, because we have no evidence.
Love is verifiable as having something more to do with happiness than hate precisely because that “verifying” isn’t scientific.
Love is not scientifically measurable, and is only capable of being “handled” by the application of natural law, which is a legal “technique” which requires an understanding of how to “listen” to natural law.
I disagree that love cannot be verified scientifically. Again, you seem to be insisting that scientists can only use some particular set of tools? There are objective differences in the way someone behaves towards a person when they love them as compared to when they hate them. We can talk about such things scientifically.
Thanks for taking the time to correspond!
Best,
Leela