one-liners and missives
one-liners and missives
Wow, MS, you are a hard one to predict. You issue several almost empty posts, then suddenly you publish a missive. But I really appreciate you taking the time to fill in enough detail to say something substantive.
It is clear that your offense is still largely from my rejection of your religious tenets as much as the science vs religion issue.
I will touch on a just a few points in your post.
From MS:
Science is your God. Your dogma.
Science is something I have great respect for, a respect that I give to no religious philosophy. I make that distinction simply because my experience and analysis of religion convinces me that it is not fundamentally true. On an emotional level religion serves as a comfort blanket for many people that buffers against the injustices of life and promises something after death. I would love it if someone could show me that life continued after death, but absent that proof, to hold that belief is nothing short of self-delusion. I will not lie to myself that way.
On a social level, religions provide a community for fellowship and common interests. This is why most Mormons stay Mormon, most Catholics stay Catholics, and so on. If some religion were really the repository of demonstrable eternal truth, then all truth-seeking people should gravitate to it. The social aspect of religion provides a natural setting for most peoples need for a comfortable social interaction. But beneath it all I still find no validity to any special insight into eternal truths. Rather, every religion I have looked at has not only compromised on truth, but many dogmatically defend lies. A literal adherence to Genesis is just that, a blind acceptance of a fairy tale.
I find it strange that Christians in their own society and writings will speak so glowingly and reverently of the meaning of faith and god and such, and then in their need to discredit science, will charge that scientists employ similar ideals in their “worship of science”. You charge that science is my god. I know what Mormons think of their god. If your worship for your god is on the same level as my respect for science, then your god is much less than what Mormons portray him to be in their books. You either sully the terms normally used to describe religion, or you imbue on science a level of reverence that few scientists really hold, when you equate my science with your god.
You have a fluid dogma. Dogmatically non-dogmatic as it were.
Fundamentally you are correct. As I pointedly said, science deals in advancing knowledge, and current knowledge is always tentative. This hardly means that science might be completely screwed up and we just haven’t realized it yet. Technology, the applied side of science, would simply fail to work if our ideas were fundamentally flawed. As in Newton’s case, we may find that we have been using an understanding that was flawed in extreme cases, but in the day-to-day world Newton is just fine.
You can take Newton's laws as acceptable and worthy of being the foundation of elementary science teaching despite the fact that they are often not what they are portrayed to be, but if a faith doesn't disclose 'meat' and 'milk' and all in between on demand then it is 'dishonest' and, in your view, not possibly the conduit of God's word.
I hesitate to comment on this, because I sense reference to our previous discussion in theological forums on what I perceive to be errors in Mormonism. I will not go down that avenue in this forum, other than to directly say that Mormonism, like all religions, holds and defends as truthful teachings that are lies. You buy into the lies, I presume for the same reasons most returned Mormon missionaries do. I have enumerated s significant number of them before, and unless you have significant new evidence that I am wrong, the extant postings will suffice on those issues.
Science is free to publish 'approximations' to be built upon but if God were to ever do similarly with man then it's an irreconcilable discrepancy and God doesn't exist.
Religionists are the ones who decree the inviolability of their god and his teachings. If you want to propose a “learn as he goes along” god, please do so. I am aware in Mormon history where statements approaching this idea were made, and were answered with denunciations that such thinking means maybe we are just experiments of god, and he might decide we are actually mistakes.
All who mention the limitations of science are painted as anti-Science pro-inquisition bigots. On simple tangents and extrapolations you've tried to paint me as some fanatic that would round up all scientists and place them under house arrest. You know full well the rhetorical power of insinuation and constant hinting. I, like you, don't have forever to answer every hint and attempt at slandering made against me. But the astute will see that you insinuate my stance then proceed to use the false or grossly exaggerated personas to paint me in whatever hue you feel best suits your agenda. You demand that what you say be judged solely on it's merits but you feel free and easy in your character attacks. Never mind what Nibley says, forget his logic or reasoning, he's NOT A SCIENTIST. How DARE a non-scientist question science and it's pervading presumptions or those who participate in it!
We are not attacking science. We are attacking the false idea that science is the end all of authority on truth.
And I am saying that science, is spite of its need to refine itself, is more in conformance with the evidence that nature provides than is religion. I will not accept a second-place method of gaining knowledge when a better way is in front of me.
I am pointing out that since science can never answer the questions as to why we're here, what we're supposed to do and what comes next then it's all a bunch of nonsense.
Just like Nibley, here you fault science for not having eschatological answers. And it doesn’t. Ultimate beginnings, ultimate endings, reasons for existence – science is poorly equipped to deal with these questions. But to buy into the answers religion has in these fields is predicated on faith, which is little more than a balm for the discomfort people have over such questions.
Science is inherently stymied yet it is set up by the likes of ThePhy as the great salvation of man kind. Salvation from what? Does it matter? It's all just a big show.
Nonsense. Science provides knowledge about the physical world, nothing more. I am sorry if in not answering the question of eternity you find fault in it. Now, how many of the applications of scientifically derived technology that you enjoy do not work because science has limited itself to what it can address? As you say – “Does it matter?” Remove all the benefits of science from your life and see what you think.
Anyway, your post continues on in a similar vein, deriding science for not providing the ultimate answers. In such fields, where science is silent, religion is not hesitant to provide all the placebos that the yearning masses want.
As many scientists have said before, I don’t find discomfort in not knowing, but I strongly object to being asked to accept a lie. Religion, as far as I know all religion – falls in the latter category.