On 12 Jan, 18:54, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Welcome, Twirlip. Your post is just fine. Good food for good thoughts.
> And, anyone who quotes Kant in his/her first post here can stick
> around, as far as I'm concerned anyway ... :-)
>

Kant?  Wasn't he 'the pissant who was very rarely stable'?

> On 12 Jan., 19:03, Twirlip <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Jan 12, 3:48 am, fiddler <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Why do so few people (otherwise intelligent for the most part) have
> > > such a tweaked view of science? I'm so tired of hearing it described
> > > as a religion (oh ya, well you worship science!), a dogma (ya but
> > > since science says...then you have to believe it!), a choice (just
> > > because you like science, doesn't mean I have to!), ETC...!!!!!
> > > Science is a method of understanding the world around the person in
> > > question. It is not an alternate to religion.
>
> > Science isn't a religion, or an alternative to religion, but scientism
> > is like a religion, and is an alternative to religion.  It's not hard
> > to see that people sometimes confuse science with scientism (whether
> > or not they believe in scientism), unless you deny that the word
> > 'scientism' has any clear meaning. Do you?
>
> > > Science is the direct examination of evidence. It is only useful when
> > > contemplating something testable or checkable.
> > > Have you ever had a leak and systematically checked for which pipe it
> > > was? Welcome to science.
> > > Have you ever had question and looked for an answer or asked someone
> > > that has? welcome to science.
> > > Have you ever altered a recipe because something sounded good or you
> > > thought might work? welcome to science.
>
> > Fair enough.
>
> > > If you have ever prayed for your pipe to stop leaking, prayed for an
> > > answer, or prayed for food to make itself, you aren't a scientist and
> > > very likely will never have the capacity for science.
>
> > I'm not a believer in any formal religion, yet I think I sometimes
> > pray. Most often, I only pray in a silly way, when I am merely
> > desperate for some unknown entity to step in and help me, but it's not
> > always so silly. Sometimes I have some belief in something or Someone
> > I am praying to.
>
> > > Science does not give a damn about you or your feelings
>
> > What, then, does one do with a self or with feelings that have gone
> > awry?  Turn to science?  To psychiatric medication, perhaps, because
> > the brain at least is a tangible object for scientific enquiry?  Is
> > psychiatry scientific?
>
> > > it is a concept and a method, not a consoler for delusion or failure.
>
> > But delusion and failure are part of the human condition.  Is there,
> > then, no difference between truth and falsehood, in any of the ways of
> > addressing our human limitations and failings?  Is one religion, or
> > one therapeutic fad, as good, or as bad, as any another?  If science
> > cannot address a question, then does that question have no answer, or
> > will any old answer do as well as another?
>
> > > Science does not care about oneness or deities. Since these are
> > > generally self defeating logical concepts
>
> > Can you logically demonstrate their alleged self-defeating quality?
>
> > > and not concepts that appear
> > > in the natural world, science COULD NOT speak on them and never does.
>
> > Whereof science cannot speak, must all remain silent?
>
> > > Science does not care about whether or not you are confused on some
> > > philosophical concept. Science can however, allow you to explore and
> > > investigate an amazing world surrounded by a complex solar system, in
> > > a superbly beautiful galaxy.
>
> > I can be lost in wonder at the structure of the ribosome, or the
> > Triangulum galaxy, or the set of zeros of the Riemann zeta function
> > (but is mathematics a science?), and at the human mind(s) that can
> > discover (or invent) such things, but there is much to wonder about
> > that does not seem to form a subject for scientific enquiry, but is at
> > least as important as anything in science, such as ethics. ("The
> > starry heavens above, the moral law within.")
>
> > > Science can allow you to understand that simply existing is such a
> > > beautiful and awesome concept, that no little metaphysical idea needs
> > > be entertained if one wants to be amazed, confused, or challenged by
> > > everything that they purport to search for.
>
> > I can't see what you are saying here.  You have some sense of beauty
> > and awe (good, that speaks well of you), but you seem to be saying
> > that you owe it all to science, in much the same pious way that
> > religious people are often inclined modestly to attribute all good
> > human qualities to God. Is this not somewhat religious of you?  If
> > not, then what exactly are you saying, in scientific terms?
>
> > >  -Personal note:-
> > > It will take all of your energy and attention to understand even a
> > > small amount of the knowledge that awaits you and is literally just
> > > sitting there waiting for you to find it. Don't waste life on unproven
> > > concepts reinforced with prophets and people that are proven to be
> > > wrong and/or nonexistent.
>
> > I can never get rid of my feeling of stupidity for not yet seeming to
> > have seen this 'proof' that is supposed to be out there somewhere: a
> > proof that all manner of things (never exactly specified, it seems) do
> > not exist, and that belief in all manner of things is 'irrational'.
>
> > To take a specific example of something in which I believe personally,
> > which I think of as being 'paranormal', yet which I do not think of as
> > being either 'supernatural' (breaking natural laws) or
> > 'irrational' (contradicting itself, or contradicting other well-
> > established beliefs which I hold): are you aware of some knock-down
> > logical or empirical argument that C. G. Jung's concept of
> > synchronicity is somehow a nonsensical idea, or a false theory? (It's
> > certainly very bewildering and disorientating.)
>
> > (I don't even know how to define 'paranormal', but I am amused to find
> > this, in Wikipedia: "*Paranormal* is a general term that describes
> > unusual experiences that lack a scientific explanation, or phenomena
> > alleged to be outside of science's current ability to explain or
> > measure [...] but the scientific community [...] maintains that
> > scientific evidence does not support paranormal beliefs." No shit,
> > Sherlock!)
>
> > (Sorry if this is too long, or incoherent, or typographically or
> > stylistically ill-formed - it's my first attempt to post to this
> > forum, and therefore a bit of an experiment in many respects.)- Hide quoted 
> > text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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