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How do you know which is the real Christianity?
Elihu wrote:How do you know which is the real Christianity?
Matthew 7:16 NLT
You can detect them by the way they act, just as you can identify a tree by its fruit. You don't pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles.
Matthew 12:33 NLT
"A tree is identified by its fruit. Make a tree good, and its fruit will be good. Make a tree bad, and its fruit will be bad.
"The Scientific and Technical Research Council of Turkey (TÜBITAK) has put a stop to the publication and sale of all books in its archives that support the theory of evolution, daily Radikal has reported. The books have long been listed as “out of stock” on TÜBTAK's website, but their further publication is now slated to be stopped permanently. Titles by Richard Dawkins, Alan Moorehead, Stephen Jay Gould, Richard Levontin and James Watson are all included in the list of books that will no longer be available to Turkish readers. In early 2009, a huge uproar occurred when the cover story of a publication by TÜBITAK was pulled, reportedly because it focused on Darwin’s theory of evolution."
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkeys-science-state-council-halts-publication-of-evolution-books.aspx?pageID=238&nID=39047
Fundamentalists of all stripes need to fuck off.
divideandconquer wrote:
Sorry, "fuck off" is not an indifferent or objective response.
divideandconquer wrote:Fundamentalists of all stripes need to fuck off.
Like you, you mean? You see, in religious debates, people are supposed to get heated. If somebody enters the fray and they say they are not arguing from religion but rather "science", the tipoff that they really are arguing their religion is if they respond emotionally or get offended in any way at what us lowly "religious people" throw at them. If they get offended, it shows they are really defending another religion, same as everybody else. Because, after all, if they really have such a monopoly on objectivity and science as they insist they do, then they should feel total indifference towards what we unenlightened "religious" folk say to them. The fact that they too get riled up belies the fact that what we are really dealing with is two religious worldviews.
Sorry, "fuck off" is not an indifferent or objective response.
"Our intellect cannot know the singular in material things directly and primarily. The reason for this is that the principle of singularity in material things is individual matter; whereas our intellect understands by abstracting the intelligible species from such matter. Now what is abstracted from individual matter is universal. Hence our intellect knows directly only universals. But indirectly, however, and as it were by a kind of reflexion, it can know the singular, because even after abstracting the intelligible species, the intellect, in order to understand actually, needs to turn to the phantasms in which it understands the species. Therefore it understands the universal directly through the intelligible species, and indirectly the singular represented by the phantasm. And thus it forms the proposition, "Socrates is a man." (Pt. I, Qu. 86, Art. I)
divideandconquer wrote:Scientism mandates the imposition of science upon all fields of inquiry. When extended beyond it's legitimate fields of application, science becomes a rigid template, even the most complex of entities, like man, must conform. Thus, the epistemological cartel or epistemic autocracy only give metaphysical currency to empirically demonstrable and quantifiably demonstrable entities.
divideandconquer wrote:So in the context of governance, science becomes an oppressor.
divideandconquer wrote:The scientifically regimented state must jettison concepts of freedom and dignity because they defy quantification.
divideandconquer wrote:The citizen becomes little more than an amalgam of behavioral repertories who’s every thought, feeling, and idea becomes the product of external stimuli.
divideandconquer wrote:From the government's standpoint the populace's motivations can be calculated and systematized thereby allowing those few conditioners who are accountable to no moral master to develop economic and technological stimuli that can produce the desired patterns of mass behavior. Such a societal model is known as technocracy, or in the words of Aldous Huxley, a scientific dictatorship.
divideandconquer wrote:It was the rise of nominalism that confused ideas which inhabited the intellect with subjective images that inhabited the imagination stemming from sense perception and this epistemological confusion lead William of Ockham to reject universals.
justdrew wrote: Not at all sure there is anything worth calling "Scientism"
Who shall determine what the "legitimate fields" are? and how shall extension be prohibited?
Must conform? How then these thoughts of yours?
We should give currency to untouchable, unseeable entities? Like Dragons?
Also, there's a lot of metaphysical currency given to things that are only theory, as well as to many things that don't have a pointable-to physical existence. As for theory, most everything remains in the realm of theory, some more evidenced than others. The world moves on many contingencies.
what doesn't become an oppressor in context of governance? Is not the role of governance to compel right action? Perhaps you mean a more specific kind of oppression.
Well, that's not very scientific, yet, you base your belief in the non-existence of God on the lack of scientific proof, right?they do not defy quantification, happiness levels are perfectly quantifiable. Dignity is perfectly quantifiable, just ask people if they have dignity or happiness.
Certainly not Jesus Christ.Pretty sure rulers did that pretty much always, in one form or another. Lot of those rulers ruled religiously. I've seen little more effective at such indoctrination than religion. and what about this concept of "accountability to a moral master" - prey tell, who were the Spanish inquisitors morally accountable to?
Well, it's nominalism that led to the bifurcation of epistemology thus the belief that all things quantifiable represent the totality of reality. So all of those entities that defy quantification are relegated to impotent and ambiguous subjectivism. This is the epistemological rigidity that underpins scientism, which mandates the universal imposition of science upon all fields of inquiry.the problem of universals is interesting to think about, but it's an on-going thing. Don't turn Ockham's dumb razor into a boogieman. Though some hyper-skeptics make way too much use of it. If there's one thing science has learned in the intervening hundreds of years, it's that shit is way more complicated than Ockham ever conceived, and that simple explanations typically only go so far, before they have to be replaced with more complex models.
divideandconquer wrote:Scientism mandates the imposition of science upon all fields of inquiry. When extended beyond it's legitimate fields of application, science becomes a rigid template, even the most complex of entities, like man, must conform. Thus, the epistemological cartel or epistemic autocracy only give metaphysical currency to empirically demonstrable and quantifiably demonstrable entities.
So in the context of governance, science becomes an oppressor. The scientifically regimented state must jettison concepts of freedom and dignity because they defy quantification. The citizen becomes little more than an amalgam of behavioral repertories who’s every thought, feeling, and idea becomes the product of external stimuli. From the government's standpoint the populace's motivations can be calculated and systematized thereby allowing those few conditioners who are accountable to no moral master to develop economic and technological stimuli that can produce the desired patterns of mass behavior. Such a societal model is known as technocracy, or in the words of Aldous Huxley, a scientific dictatorship.
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