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itinerant1
Guest
I agree with the majority of things which you have said here. However, I am not sure what you mean when you imply that scientism discounts the laws of nature such have been formulated by Newton, etc.The problem with secular science isn’t science. Rather, the problem is the human willed advocacy of scientism. An ‘ism’ is a philosophy. The ‘ism’ is the proposition of an intuitive fill-in-the-blank argument (i.e. evolution.) called the missing-link. Why would clever apes need to attempt an argument about a meaningless existence? Scientism is the belief that evolution is the center of the universe. So, scientism is a philosophical measure of all things in existence by the reasoning faculty of the mind interpreting a fill-in-the-blank philosophy without a scientific re-occuring condition (i.e. the Newtonian laws of physics, and Bernoulli’s law.) The human being uses his or her voice to give life to science in the foundation of debate through suggestive means of eloquence. Salvation of a human being is left out of science. How can a scientist discuss morals and objective laws of right and wrong?
Fundamentalism is the other ‘ism.’ In some sense, the problem of creationism and scientism is a Protestant type of debate. The fundamenalist approach centers everything around a literal sense of understanding though the faculty of the mind. Man begins to measure Scripture by his or her own intuitive will.
The problem with the two ‘ism’s’ is that neither one is necessarily a genuine desire of loving one’s neighbor. Both scientism and fundamentalism is fueled by pride. That is, both believe man is the measure of all things. The fundamentalist view is man needs God and man is incapable of doing things without God. The observation isn’t a bad one. Accept, the fundamentalist cannot understand Joseph loving God and being a chaste spouse. Love is missing on both sides.
What does scientism view about abortion, euthanasia, disordered sexual attractions, etc.?
Also, scientism, if you include Darwin and certain neo-Darwinists in that category, measure all things by human reason, but it is not “human reason” as traditionally and properly understood. Human reason was Darwin’s personal enemy. He sought to dethrone “that Citadel”, as he refers to it in his Notebooks. And dethrone it he did. Certain of Darwin’s contempories, who were evolutionists, were very uncomfortable with Darwin’s use of reason to attack reason.
Nonetheless, this is what he accomplished by applying the principles of the “Origin of Species” to man in “The Descent of Man”. In Darwin’s world view, one which he had before his voyage on the Beagle, man is nothing more than a sophisticated ape. In his early Notebooks, Darwin was delighted to think that animals and humans “may be all melted together”.
One of Darwin’s contemporaries, Huxley, was quick to realize and and bold enough to straightforwardly state that the primary result of Darwinian theory is the liberation of man from sexual ethics. Victorian society found comfort in Darwin’s view. (It’s odd to think the sexual liberation of the 20th century '60’s may have originated around the time of the 19th century '60’s.)
Darwin was logically conflicted and philosophically confused when he thought human reason can show that human reason is not radically different than the cognitive powers of higher animals. Darwin remained clueless about the real nature of man and his power or faculty of reason.
Radical materialism and atheism are necessarily implied by Darwin’s theory. The metaphysical truths that man achieves are no longer real knowledge. Darwin dethroned the “Citadel”.
One of the many contemporary cultural consequences of Darwinism is the subjection of reason to will, such as is found in modern and post-modern ideologies. For example, the primacy of will over reason is an assumed premise of Deconstructionism.