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Anselm33
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“La foi consiste a’ croire ce que la raison ne croit pas…Il ne suffit pas qu’un chose soit possible pour la croire.” Faith is the belief in that for which reason gives no basis to believe…It is not enough for a thing to be possible for it to be believed. Voltaire, Questions sur l’Encyclopedie
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Unbelievers commonly say that those who believe in God do so on faith, and therefore their belief is irrational. This argument is flawed because it neglects the element of faith that is basic to all belief, whether in mathematics, science, philosophy, or in our encounters with the world around us. Consider, for example, Euclid's geometry, the most rational and logical of all the math we learned at school. You start off with postulates or axioms, statements that are presumed to be self-evident and don't need proof (that is, statements that one takes on faith). So, for the parallel postulate
However, this parallel postulate is valid for Euclid’s geometry, but not for that of Reimann or Lobachevsky. so it is faith that would determine which parallel postulate we choose (or the application to a physical situation–just think of the angles of a triangle on a sphere). Similarly, the commutative property for multiplication, a times b = b times a, independent of the order of multiplication, is valid for arithmetic and ordinary variables in algebra, but not always for other mathematical quantities, e.g. matrices or quantum mechanical operators.“If a line segment intersects two straight lines forming two interior angles on the same side that sum to less than two right angles, then the two lines, if extended indefinitely, meet on that side on which the angles sum to less than two right angles”.
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To all the above, the devout believer in scientism might reply, “so what, that's all abstract mathematical stuff—it doesn't have anything to do with the real world, like science does”. And to that assertion I will reply, the belief that science explains everything about the world is itself an article of faith; it can't be proven by science. You can't do a scientific experiment to show that everything is explained by science. That statement about what science can do is, in fact, a metaphysical argument
And, if to many of you metaphysics is a dirty word (or nonsensical), let me ask, if you believe that science tells us everything about the physical world, how many of you have actually confirmed this, rather than taking the word of others? How many of you have done measurement to prove that the force of gravity is inversely proportional to the square of the distance between two masses? How many of you have done the double-slit experiment with individual particles to show the strange superposition principle of quantum mechanics. And I don't say that it is wrong to take the word of others as evidence for something. That is how our belief system operates. As a scientist, a physicist 57 years in the field, I believe, along with Galileo that “The Laws of Nature are written by the hand of God in the language of mathematics”, and that theories that are confirmed by repeated measurements reflect the nature of the real world, although possibly incompletely.
Besides taking the word of others in scientific matters, I take the word of others with respect to religious matters. I believe the writings of Alexis Carrel, a Nobel Prize winner (and prior to that observation, not a devout Catholic) that a miracle occurred at Lourdes. [catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?id=2866&CFID=57620704&CFTOKEN=69694874](http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?id=2866&CFID=57620704&CFTOKEN=69694874)
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So you can believe in your faith, scientism, that science explains everything there is to know about the world, but don't claim that it is more rational or rewarding than my religious faith. There is so much that science doesn't explain and never will be able to explain in terms of values, morality, beauty and purpose, that I feel sorry for those who have only scientism to support them.