Believing in God and/or science

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
  #51 (permalink)  
Old 06-07-2008
Creating

Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,445
ughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to beholdughaibu is a splendid one to behold
Re: Believing in God and/or science

http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/arch...lie_Review.pdf
Reply With Quote
  #52 (permalink)  
Old 06-07-2008
InfiniteNow's Avatar
Suspended

Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 8,378
InfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Believing in God and/or science

Quote:
Originally Posted by ughaibu View Post
Thanks.


Quote:
Of course, it is easy to avoid many of the more specific concerns of traditional Christian theology. Did the serpent really speak in the Garden of Eden, for example? (I’m told that this issue still divides certain sects of the Dutch reformed church.) But in their big, abstract, de-natured contemporary forms—the forms in which they feature in Leslie’s book, among other things—these issues can seem to be simply there.

But it’s easy to be misled by familiarity. The concerns in question are easily visible if we think of analogous examples further from home, geographically, ideologically or historically. Think of the talking snake, after all, or “creation science”. For my part, I’m attracted by the thought of a future in which the question whether god exists seems just as silly. I’m suspicious of the whole theological game, even in its de-natured forms; and not impressed by the argument that these must be serious questions, because we get undergraduates to think about them.

Quote:
We’ve also noted that even when religion isn’t in the same game as science, it is only saved by pragmatism if it turns out to be useful. So, finally, to the question I’ve been deferring. Is religion good for us? Does it improve our lives? This is a huge issue, of course, and an urgent one.

It would not be hard to replace the word "religion" with "belief in god."
Reply With Quote
  #53 (permalink)  
Old 07-27-2008
InfiniteNow's Avatar
Suspended

Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 8,378
InfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Believing in God and/or science

Via Swans on Tea today (and in a "Six Degrees to Kevin Bacon" way, further via Physics and Physicists):

Swans on Tea Faith and Ignorance

"Richard MacKenzie of the University of Montreal has written a rather thought-provoking and lengthy article as a rebuttal to a talk given by Lawrence Krauss. In it, he is disputing Krauss’s assertion that:

Faith is not the enemy.
Ignorance is the enemy. "
<...>
"The bottom line is that direct observation shows that faith does not obstruct scientists from doing science. That said, there are many who portray themselves as scientists who, due to their faith, are doing a brand of science which is an indignity to the word. I have in mind particularly those whose principal goal in science is to advance a faith-based agenda. One must wonder whether these individuals, who probably have a reasonable amount of scientific talent, might not be doing respectable science if their scientificity had not been stronger, or their religiosity weaker.

Does faith obstruct non-scientists from learning science? I would argue that it does, for several reasons."

See the paper for more.
http://arxiv.org/pdf/0807.3670v1 (.pdf)
Reply With Quote
  #54 (permalink)  
Old 07-27-2008
Suspended

Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 612
nutronjon will become famous soon enoughnutronjon will become famous soon enough
Re: Believing in God and/or science

Quote:
Originally Posted by InfiniteNow View Post
Thanks.








It would not be hard to replace the word "religion" with "belief in god."
Huh? Isn't religion a whole lot more than believing in the existence of God? My Webster Dictionary says religion is belief and worship of God or gods. It goes on to say religion is "a specific system of belief or worship, etc., built around God, a code of ethics, a philosophy of life, etc."

Simply believing in the existence of God, does not meet the requirements for religion. Personally, I think it is pointless to worship a God, because if there is a God, I don't believe the God can be malnipulated by prayers and pious acts. On the other hand, using science to know of God, that is the stuff of the universe and organizing forces, means we can make better choices, and that is a good thing. Here the focus is not science and the study of nature, not religion. See the difference?
Reply With Quote
  #55 (permalink)  
Old 07-27-2008
InfiniteNow's Avatar
Suspended

Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 8,378
InfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond reputeInfiniteNow has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Believing in God and/or science

Quote:
Originally Posted by nutronjon View Post
Simply believing in the existence of God, does not meet the requirements for religion.

<...>

See the difference?
Of course, I do, but you need to keep my comments in the context in which they were made. Did you read the link to which I was responding?


Also, can we try to avoid making this YET ANOTHER thread about your belief that nature is god? We've beaten that horse so many times it's really starting to stink up the place, and I'm not sure there's enough FeBreeze in existence to resolve that.

Last edited by InfiniteNow; 07-27-2008 at 09:53 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #56 (permalink)  
Old 07-27-2008
HydrogenBond's Avatar
Creating

Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 1,971
HydrogenBond is a name known to allHydrogenBond is a name known to allHydrogenBond is a name known to allHydrogenBond is a name known to allHydrogenBond is a name known to allHydrogenBond is a name known to allHydrogenBond is a name known to all
Re: Believing in God and/or science

The God concept, if taken as a concept, is boundless. It is both infinite and infinitesimal to use two math concepts. It has eternal and instantaneous attributes of time, etc. Based on that, the God concept has played a role in shaping the human mind to be able to think abstractly. It is not designed for concrete thinking, but for abstract thinking.

What abstract thinking does is expand the mind beyond concrete boundaries. Invention does not logically follow from concrete boundaries. It requires a leap beyond the concrete into an abstraction. Einstein's relativity would not follow from concrete thinking of the time. It required an abstract leap. The God concept is the most comprehensive abstraction since by its very nature it is designed to include almost everything at its extreme limits.

Religion often tries to make the boundless abstract concept of god concrete by defining a person. This personification is not always logical, so others throw away the supreme abstraction. If one is not creative, these two approaches may not make any difference. You can let other people think for you, and simply parrot it back. But if you are creative and like to think more independently, you need frontiers that are open farther than the eye can see. This where what shall be exists or where the new cage ends.
Reply With Quote
  #57 (permalink)  
Old 08-03-2008
Pyrotex's Avatar
Slaying Bad Memes
Latest blog: I need a Vacation
Hypography Staff Member
Moderator
Editor
13 Days in Hell Champion!
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 3,885
Blog Entries: 8
Pyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond reputePyrotex has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via MSN to Pyrotex
Re: Believing in God and/or science

Quote:
Originally Posted by InfiniteNow View Post
...We've beaten that horse so many times it's really starting to stink up the place, and I'm not sure there's enough FeBreeze in existence to resolve that.
not enough FeBreeze

Good one. Rat own.
__________________
Hypography Forums Moderator
-- - - - - -
What concerns me is not the way things are, but rather the way people think things are.
Epictetus, Greek Philosopher
The map is NOT the territory.
Korzybski, Polish-American Philosopher
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Philosophy of Science: Science is About Solving Puzzles coberst Philosophy and Humanities 5 06-08-2006
Help: The Relation between Science fiction and science Oracle Science Projects and Homework 5 11-23-2005
This Week in Science - online science radio program Marshall Clark Websites 2 07-23-2005
Anyone believing REINCARNATION aberration? zahizahi Philosophy and Humanities 12 03-14-2005
Current Science Fiction = Future Science Fact? Noah Computer Science 18 06-09-2004

» Current Poll
Favorite James Bond?
Sean Connery - 63.64%
7 Votes
George Lazenby - 0%
0 Votes
David Niven - 9.09%
1 Vote
Roger Moore - 9.09%
1 Vote
Timothy Dalton - 9.09%
1 Vote
Pierce Brosnan - 0%
0 Votes
Daniel Craig - 9.09%
1 Vote
Hate 'em all - 0%
0 Votes
Who's James Bond? - 0%
0 Votes
Total Votes: 11
You may not vote on this poll.

All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:43 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0 ©2008, Crawlability, Inc.
Copyright © 2000-2008 Hypography
Part of the Hypography - Science for Everyone Network