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Notes From Off Center
Life from the view of a pragmatist Christian and educator.
Why is naturalism the mode of operation that is most satisfying to you? Can you justify that belief on the same grounds that you would ask me to justify belief in God? Or are we all delusional because we practice certain ideations to order our existence that are not empirically provable?
Pos ... Continue reading »
Pos ... Continue reading »
1 year ago
Why do you assume that all atheists have a "belief" in naturalism? Not all atheists are naturalists, and visa versa.
Beg the question much?
1 year ago
1 year ago
1 year ago
Seriously though. The issue is mostly about a relation to our common reality. We all of us pretty much implicitly treat it as a moot point that our common physical reality exists. If you want to take issue with that, you're welcome to, but even arguing the point in practice concedes it.
We're then all left here, on this planet, trying to make sense of things. What exists? What doesn't? What things are true? What are false? The point of most atheists is not that science and empirical data are known to be the only possibly ways to answer those questions, but rather, if you're going to propose an alternative, you do have SOME standards to meet in convincing people that your alternative is workable and actually determines truth from falsehood, as opposed to just making stuff up or not really explaining anything.
For myself, I'm endlessly frustrated with "supernatural" explanations not because I insist on materialism or naturalism or any such thing, but because I insist on good explanations that actually explain things. And I'm endlessly disappointed by "supernaturalism" or what have you: it never casts light or insight on anything, answers mysteries, makes me go "ah ha!" Take questions about conscious experience, and geez, what the heck IS it? Science doesn't know. Heck, philosophers aren't even sure we're phrasing the question correctly. But theology and "non-natural" philosophies claim to have answers that supposedly the material world cannot provide. And yet, when you boil these "explanations" down, you basically get a creative rephrasing of our original ignorance.
So it's not that things like science are the "most satisfying" in any real sense. It's just that I'm still waiting to find out how the specific proposed alternative of, I dunno, supernaturalism?, provides anything satisfying at all.
1 year ago
I started to criticize this standard, but then realized that it is very similar to science. For in the end after all the evidence is gathered and the arguments are made, how are we to know which is right? In the end, it is basically by majority rule -- each of us is an imperfect logical engine because all of our logic is based on emotion -- each scientist weighs different evidence differently based on their predilections and experience. So one piece of evidence may be discounted by some scientists and held as the key to the whole puzzle by others. So the only way to really judge the worthiness of a scientific hypothesis is by what percentage of those people who are well-informed on the topic agree with it. I'm guessing it is likewise with theology.