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Anselm33
Guest
It would take more than a single post to respond to the bold-faced question, but if you’re really interested here are some books and articles that will broaden your horizons:No, my opinion applies to science, which is the best – and only – method of knowing what stuff is, what stuff is made of, and how stuff works. If you think that there is a better method to know things about what stuff is, what stuff is made of, and how stuff works, please state the method and demonstrate how you know that is better.
Sure. What I want to eat and what I want to do on a Saturday night are a heck of a lot more important to me than how many subatomic particles we can identify.
Which, again, demonstrates that knowledge is not absolute and that our petty little brains may not be able to figure out every last thing about the universe.
But the fact that knowledge is not absolute doesn’t mean that we are justified in taking claims on faith, which is what your OP is trying to say.
If science can only go up to a point, then that tells us that science can only go up to a point. It does not imply that there has to be some other method of knowing that is superior to science.
Again, if you think that there is a method of knowing that is superior to science, let’s see you demonstrate it and how you know that it is superior.(emphasis added)
“On Physics and Philosophy” Bernard d’Espagnat
“Laws and Symmetry” Bas van Fraassen
“Issues in the Philosophy of Cosmology” George F R Ellis Handbook in Philosophy of Physics, Ed J
Butterfield and J Earman (Elsevier, 2006),arXiv:astro-ph/0602280v2,
Anselm
PS–you should have waited until I finished editing my previous posts, but thanks for your comments.