stefano wrote:Well I didn't want to name her because she can't reply, but I had in mind some quotes by Canadian_Watcher:vanlose kid wrote:what struck me specifically about stefano's remark (and this is not an attack on his person) was that i can't imagine who he's speaking to on this thread.Those are from a post in the context of having children learn both young Earth creationism and evolution as 'two sides', equally valid. Now, no doubt there are holes in the story of our origins which we have to plug by guesswork as well as we can, but calling the theory of evolution 'rife with bullshit' is preposterous on its face. We, or at least those of us who take an interest, know better where we come from than anyone before us has.Canadian_Watcher wrote:the theory of evolution is rife with bullshit, but it's the best thing we think we've got. Might as well not stop now.[...]We don't have the true answer to the question "where do we come from."That was what I had in mind when I highlighted that bit in Jack's post about the limits of current knowledge, and when I replied to Sounder that empiricism will eventually (has already actually, viz. Lyall Watson or Rupert Sheldrake) make clear the limits of strict materialism. We should be positive about what we think we know, and keen to defend our theories in debate. We ought, though, also to be clear about what we don't know and about the things that still defy explanation. Consistent empiricism overturned strict materialism in physics 90 years ago and will inevitably do the same in biology at some stage.Canadian_Watcher wrote:we ought not to be so "positive' about what we think we know.
As for definitional troubles... I'm afraid I can't help. By nature I would tend to mean matter, life and mind (and again, I think strict materialism in the last two areas is non-empirical and unscientific, as is the method of breaking nature up into constituent parts and studying those). Science doesn't have to be concerned with the tangible: Jungian analysis is a science, techniques of meditation are a science. As is, to answer your example of heartbreak, just being nice to someone who's going through a bad patch. You know that in previous instances when a friend was sad it made them and you feel better if you gave them a hug or squeezed their arm or made a joke, so be scientific and do that (I'm sort of joking but not completely).If you're trying to bring in an idea of non-overlapping_magisteria then go for it, I won't argue with that. But in the magisterium of knowing where we come from, how old the Earth is and that kind of thing science has the final word, full stop.vanlose kid wrote:i thought scientific method had precisely specified uses. now i know it's universally applicable everywhere and the solution to every kind of problem in existence. maybe it can help me with the problem of understanding how that can possibly be.
I happened to last week eventually get my hands on a text I'd been looking for for ages, Holism and Evolution by Jan Smuts, a dense little tome on philosophy and science he cranked out in between stints as Prime Minister of South Africa. A bit sad that this was written in 1926:Jan Smuts wrote:[In the 19th century] the materialists contended [...] that life and mind were born from matter. From this they proceeded (quite illegitimately) to infer the primacy and self-sufficiency of matter in the order of the universe, and to reduce life and mind to a subsidiary and subordinate position as mere epiphenomena, as appearances on the surface of the one reality, matter. To use the Platonic figure, to them matter was the lyre, and the soul was the music of that lyre; the lyre was the substantive and abiding reality, and the music a mere passing product. And thus the priority and dominance of matter made of life and the soul merely transient and embarrassed phantoms of the stage of existence. This materialism was most hotly resented and contested by those who held to the spiritual values and realities. They denied not only the primacy of matter but also that life or mind sprang from it and were dependent on it in any real sense. In fact they denied the principle of Evolution as undermining all the spiritual and moral values of life. Both sides, materialists and spiritualists alike, were under the influence of the hard physical concepts of cause and effect which played such a great part in the science of the nineteenth century. There could be nothing more in the effect than there was already in the cause; and if matter caused the soul, there could be nothing more in the soul than there already was in matter. [...] The abstract validity of this argument was never questioned and was thoroughly believed in by both sides. Hence those who affirmed the theory of Evolution tended to be materialists, and those who were spiritualists were logically forced to deny Evolution.[...] To-day thoughtful men and women are sincere and convinced Evolutionists, without troubling themselves over the dead and forgotten issue of materialism versus spiritualism.
you'll probably consider this as yet another meaningless semantic point but again: if i read you rightly, transcendental meditation, fengshui, art history, physics, biology, housekeeping, alchemy, tarot reading, astrology are all sciences, practically anything and the kitchen sink. which makes me wonder why, in your own idiosyncratic, or is it holistic, definition of science, creationism is excluded? because you don't like it? "no, because creationism is not a science" you say. well how do you make that distinction? where do you draw the line? and do you really think that i'm arguing against the definition of science so pliable as to admit anything you like into it?
what would you consider to be the experimental method of fengshui? should it be on the curriculum? what about astrology?
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