Showing posts with label Philosophy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philosophy. Show all posts

Friday, October 21, 2022

Theology: How It Is Related To Other Disciplines

*Theology by Herb Silverman

It has been said, with some justification, that philosophy is “questions that may never be answered” and “religion is answers that may never be questioned.” But some questions in philosophy have been answered— by science. Branches of science sprang out of philosophical questions, many of which were once thought to be empirically impossible to test, like the idea of an atom propounded by Greek philosopher Democritus, as represented by the above picture. Ancient Greek philosophers concerned themselves with deducing what matter is made from, what the nature of the stars are, and concepts like chemistry and physics. These were regarded as philosophical issues, but many such questions have been explored and answered by scientists.

Philosophy, religion, and science are each involved with a search for truth. Science describes the way the world is. Philosophy and religion attempt to answer questions about what ought to be and why. But religion, unlike philosophy and science, is usually based on divine revelation and authority.

The word “theology” comes from the Greek words theos meaning God and logos meaning the word about (or the study of) God. Theology assumes that the divine exists in some form, and evidence for and about that existence may be found through personal spiritual experience or historical records of such experiences as documented by others. In short, theology is the study of God and of God's relationship to the world.

I consider myself to be an expert on theology. Why? Because I think the number of experts on any topic is inversely proportional to the evidence available on that topic. And by that criterion, we are all experts on God because there is absolutely no evidence for her/his existence. Many theologians make up stuff about God or quote stuff from books made up by others. My acknowledgment that I know nothing about God makes me more of an expert than those who claim to know God or to know about him/her.

Nobody can produce evidence that God is more than a thought or belief. Scientists can see stars that have been dead for billions of years and can document microscopic bacteria that lived on Earth eons ago. But of God we have no trace, except reports about God that neither the writers nor those around them ever witnessed, and the faith of millions who convinced themselves that God lives and reigns somewhere in the sky. If I told people I have an unverifiable, invisible friend that I speak with, they would think I have an overactive imagination, if not outright insanity, unless I named this friend “God.”

Most theists recognize how intellectually feeble faith is when they see it applied to anything other than their personal god belief. Competing and contradictory claims for thousands of gods by billions of people throughout history only says that humans can believe just about anything. Religious belief is not a logical conclusion arrived at after researching all the world's faiths and deciding on the most sensible one. It usually comes from childhood indoctrination and is wrapped up with values and loyalties developed at that time. People don't make a rational choice to believe in a god, so they are unlikely to make a rational choice to stop believing in that god, though some do if they become evidence-based.

In debates, I've had with Christian theologians my opponents use what is called “apologetics,” a branch of Christian theology that defends Christianity against objections. Scientists don't need apologetics because nobody must believe in science for it to exist. When I provide debate opponents with biblical contradictions or questions they can't answer because no answer matches reality, I sometimes hear the unfalsifiable response “God works in mysterious ways.”

Confirmation bias also plays a large role when interpreting passages in “holy” books. For example, some theologians claim that the Bible has it right in ways that prominent scientists had it wrong. Many scientists once believed in an eternal, steady-state universe before we learned about the “Big Bang” and an expanding universe. Genesis opens with “In the beginning,” which some Christian apologists interpret as scientific evidence that the Bible describes a Big Bang beginning. I point out that Genesis goes on to say that God then created two lights, the greater to rule the day, and the lesser the night. Almost as an afterthought, God then made stars (which biblical writers did not know were other suns, many larger than our sun). The Bible contains so much anti-scientific nonsense because it's a product of an Iron Age culture, and the Bible has no more knowledge in it than the people of Mesopotamia had at that time.

I think there is a place for teaching the philosophy of religion in academia, including by religious studies departments at public universities. Also, perhaps, in theology departments, depending on how the topics are taught. Philosophy of religion is a branch of philosophy concerned with questions regarding religion, including the nature and existence of gods, the examination of religious experience, the analysis of religious vocabulary and texts, and the relationship of religion to science. A good religious studies program should expose students to all kinds of religious beliefs, and some students might realize that the religion in which they were raised makes no more sense than do a lot of other religions.

A fine book for philosophy of religion or religious studies is Karen Armstrong's A History of God, though more accurately it should be called “A History of God Belief.” Within authentic academia, in the absence of proof of the existence of something that something must be deemed not to exist until verifiable proof is found. So “God” should be held not to exist pending some sort of verifiable evidence.

College theology departments that mainly promote apologetics in religion-affiliated schools do not undertake a legitimate search for truth. At such schools, I like to see what science courses are in the curriculum if any. Some religion-affiliated schools “teach” why evolution is wrong. I don't so much mind theological viewpoints that incorporate legitimate science, but too many don't. It is difficult, I would even say impossible, for apologists to show how their “holy” book is consistent with modern scientific findings. I remember a time when people would feel a little embarrassed when they admitted they knew almost nothing about science. I never expected to hear what I hear from so many today, that they don't believe in science, as if science (like religion) is no more than a belief. Ignorance is not bliss and refusing to accept what we know is ignorance squared.

* From Nov/Dec 2022 Freethought Society Ezine

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Metaphysics: Just Philosophical Nonsense?

"Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that studies the first principles of being, identity and change, space and time, causality, necessity and possibility.[1][2][3] It includes questions about the nature of consciousness and the relationship between mind and matter. (Wikipedia)"
  • What does this mean? Are such questions answerable?  If so, how? Can they be verified/justified?
Meta: "beyond" (link)
Physics: "matter and energy" (link)
  • How do we know IF there is anything beyond matter and energy? Where is the evidence?
Philosopher Massimo Pigliucci struggles to find any reason to salvage this discipline that has been humbled by the sciences. Click on the link below:


Thursday, July 8, 2021

Science Needs No Philosophy, Philosophy Needs Science.

"Science predicts how nature behaves. Philosophy predicts what nature is. Science needs no philosophy to do science. Philosophy however needs science in order to check the validity of the philosophy. If your philosophy contradicts the behavior of nature then your philosophy is wrong. Science on its own can create technology because it studies and predicts the behavior of nature. Materialism is a philosophy that has attached itself to the technological success of science because the dominant paradigm in western academia is materialism. Science needs no philosophy, philosophy needs science."

~Bernardo Kastrup  (h/t Mr B Watson on YouTube comment to me)

Thursday, June 3, 2021

A Political Lesson From Socrates

"We’re used to thinking hugely well of democracy. But interestingly, one of the wisest people who ever lived, Socrates, had deep suspicions of it."

The USA and other representative democracies talk about democracy being superior to more authoritarian political systems. However, Socrates, the founder of philosophy, was skeptical of it in practice. Why? Click on the link below to find out:


Sunday, April 11, 2021

God Is Incoherent Regarding Time

"If God exists outside of time—not in time, but timeless and eternal—what would that mean about God's nature? God would never 'lose' the past or anticipate the future. God would not need to know the future, because to a timeless God, there would be no future. Everything would be ever-present in one timeless moment. But how could a timeless God relate to human beings?"

Time is not an abstract reality like mathematics, logic, and morality. It is part of our physical reality (matter, energy, and time). Any action within our reality takes time. In fact, the natural state of our reality is motion that is tempered by external resistance (link).

Click on the link below to see how philosophers and theologians struggle with the reality of "Time":


Thursday, August 6, 2020

All Claims By Christian Apologists Have Been Falsified Or Are Unfalsifiable

Falsified: found not true or correct (link).

Unfalsifiablenot able to be proven false, but not necessarily true (link). Unable to be studied by scientific methods, thus, "We don't know" is the appropriate response.
  • "We can consider the existence of god to be a scientific hypothesis and look for the empirical evidence that would follow. Many of the attributes associated with the Judaic-Christian-Islamic God have specific consequences that can be tested empirically. Such a God is supposed to play a central role in the operation of the universe and the lives of humans. As a result, evidence for him should be readily detectable by scientific means." ~ Victor Stenger (The God Hypothesis)
Below are examples of claims by Christian apologists that have not been accepted by science, the best method to understand objective reality (link):

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Black Cat Analogy

Philosophy is like being in a dark room and looking for a black cat.
Metaphysics is like being in a dark room and looking for a black cat that isn't there.
Theology is like being in a dark room and looking for a black cat that isn't there, and shouting "I found it!"
Science is like being in a dark room looking for a black cat while using a flashlight.
~origin unknown

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Does Science Justify Itself?

KNOWLEDGE philosophically is commonly taken to mean JUSTIFIED, true belief (link). A conflict persists over whether science depends on its justification on philosophy or is independent of such. The following article delves into the matter. Anyone who knows me knows that I support the latter. After reading this, I will let you decide. However, if you disagree with me, please refute this from the article: "- - - philosophy itself has no way of justifying its tenets."

Click on the link below:

Science is a product of science!

Monday, July 6, 2020

Catholic Apologist Rebutted

Bishop Robert Barron is a noted Catholic Evangelical, with a particular focus on atheism. He recently sponsored an Ad on Facebook offering a free download of his 22-page ebook entitled "Answering the Atheists." I downloaded it, edited it with some comments, and sent it back to him via email. Below is a synopsis of the content and essentially my responses (in red):
  • The Introduction included this sentence: "Today's atheists, in their condescending and often snarky dismissal of all transcendent truths, seem to be playing at atheism rather than seeing to the bottom of it."
  • My response: What ARE "transcendent truths?" There is objective truth only. 
  • He presented four "claims" that he thinks atheists make and then attempted to refute them.
  • Atheist Claim #1: There is no evidence for God.
  • His answer to Claim #1: There are plenty of "rational warrants" for belief in God.
  • My response: There is no objective evidence for any God. Reason/intuition/philosophy ("transcendence?") will never trump objective evidence (science) as the brain alone has flaws and only science can justify its assessments. All syllogisms used by Christian apologists have at least one false premise. The theist is making the claim, thus, is obligated to provide the objective evidence. Christianity makes claims on our objective reality, thus, science can evaluate the claims. Science has rejected them all. Why should religion get an exemption from this process?
  • Atheist Claim #2: What caused God? This is special pleading.
  • His answer to Claim #2: Nothing, as God is not contingent on anything else. It is the "First Cause."
  • My response: To say that God caused our reality is an argument from ignorance (God of the Gaps). Physics shows that an uncaused, eternal multiverse is at least as plausible as a God.
  • Atheist Claim #3: Science has disproved God.
  • His answer to Claim #3: This is Scientism (science is the only way of knowing). Other rational methods like philosophy transcend science.
  • My response: What you label pejoratively as "Scientism" is only talking about objective evidence. Of course, there are other ways of knowing. I have already addressed transcendence. No atheists I know make the positive claim that there is no God. We only say that we can't accept the claim because of the lack of objective evidence.
  • Atheist Claim #4: The Problem of Evil is a barrier to belief.
  • His answer to Claim #4: A finite mind cannot take in the workings of an infinite mind.
  • My response: You first have to show the evidence for an infinite mind. The Christian God supposedly is All-Good and we do not see evidence of such a reality, thus, it is falsified.
My assessment of this apologetic is that it is just another failed Christian apologetic. Only gullible, magical thinking atheists would fall for these arguments. Science-based thinkers, who are the atheists I know for the most part, would not be impressed, to say the least.


Sunday, June 21, 2020

Philosophy: A Discipline Looking For A Place

Philosophy has brought humanity reason and logic, and society owes it great thanks for such (link). However, since natural philosophy spawned off science, instead of idle speculation, humanity now has effective methods to best understand objective reality that can be justified/verified. So, what is left for philosophy? Sadly, it is left with "navel-gazing" such as this.

Friday, June 5, 2020

Levels Of Certainty And Christianity

Different types of knowledge have differing levels of certainty, and there is a hierarchy of such. From the highest to lowest (link):
  • Mathematics and Philosophical Logic
  • Experimental Science
  • Observational Science
  • Historical Knowledge
  • Philosophical and Theological Argument (Inference to the Best Explanation)
Christian apologists are functioning at the lowest level of certainty, but, one would never know it when exposed to them. Ironically, they are generally more certain than science-based thinkers, who are uncertain but do know that they have the best tools to understand objective reality. 

Inference to the Best Explanation is a kind of abductive reasoning in which one chooses the best hypothesis or theory that best explains the available data. We use this form of reasoning in our everyday activities and in legal trials. The problem for Christian apologists is that scientific and historical investigation, the higher levels of certainty, lead to rejection of all claims for a God. Another factor to consider is that claims for a God are extraordinary, which require extraordinary evidence (link).

Sunday, May 10, 2020

Justice And Poverty: Moral Issues

Most people have fairly firm opinions on the topics of justice and poverty. The two links below delve into them and reveal the diversity of how we think and act about both of them. Since there is so much disagreement in society regarding them, is there a way to address them as a society? As Matt Dillahunty has said, * morality is subjective but once there is some agreement, HOW to address it uses objective evidence.

What is Justice?

Poverty & Our Response to It

* Morality comes from evolution and socialization, no God is necessary.

Friday, May 8, 2020

A Look At Knowledge

"Hank talks about some philosophy stuff, like a few of the key concepts philosophers use when discussing belief and knowledge, such as what defines an assertion and a proposition, and that belief is a kind of propositional attitude. Hank also discusses forms of justification and the traditional definition of knowledge, which Edmund Gettier just totally messed with, using his Gettier cases."

The Meaning of Knowledge

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Science VS Pseudoscience

"The early 1900s was an amazing time for Western science, as Albert Einstein was developing his theories of relativity and psychology was born, as Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis took over the scientific mainstream. Karl Popper observed these developments firsthand and came to draw a distinction between what he referred to as science and pseudoscience, which might best be summarized as science disconfirms, while pseudoscience confirms. While the way we describe these disciplines has changed in the intervening years, Popper’s ideas speak to the heart of how we arrive at knowledge."

  • "The traditional understanding of the Scientific Method: To look at the world with a scientific eye is to observe with no preconceived notions."
  • "Popper thought that we all have preconceived notions."
  • "Methods like Freud's that only served to confirm beliefs were pseudo-science and could be used to prove anything."
  • "It's easy to find confirmation of a theory if you are looking for it."
  • "Every false belief that we discover is actually good because it gets us that much closer to believing only true things."
  • "The only genuine test of a theory is one that's attempting to falsify it."
  • "Irrefutable (non-falsifiable) theories are not scientific."
  • "Once a theory has been disproven (falsified), time to give it up, let your beliefs go, accept the evidence, and move on."
  • "This is the modern scientific thinking that we accept today: testable; refutable; falsifiable. You don't seek to prove theories right, you only seek to prove them wrong."
  • "knowledge is about probability and contingency. We always should be ready to revise beliefs in the face of new evidence if superior. Belief should be contingent on the data themselves. Certainty is impossible. Certainty causes you to close your mind."
  • "You have to be open to the idea that your beliefs may be false - because that's the only way that holding onto them can really mean anything."
  • "You only get to believe things you have reasons for."

Karl Popper, Science, & Pseudoscience


Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Blind Spots In Apologetics

Most Christian apologists with whom I have come in contact talk about how most people on the planet believe in a God so it must be true. Ironically, their major apologetic is invalid philosophy but they do not reflect on the fact that this is an appeal to popularity or the fallacious argumentum ad populum. They reject the more reasonable counter-apologetic that God-belief and all superstition is an evolutionary side-effect/adaptation, purely natural and one of the common flaws in our thinking.

Ironically, they don't use this fallacy when confronting scientific consensus on a topic that falsifies their beliefs.

The video below does a good job in presenting the truth that we, as individuals, don't know as much as we think, and most of our knowledge comes to us through the human community of experts:

Why do we believe things that aren't true?

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

A Deeper Look Into Personhood

"Now that we’ve started talking about identity, today Hank tackles the question of personhood. Philosophers have tried to assess what constitutes personhood with a variety of different criteria, including genetic, cognitive, social, sentience, and the gradient theory. As with many of philosophy’s great questions, this has much broader implications than simple conjecture. The way we answer this question informs all sorts of things about the way we move about the world, including our views on some of our greatest social debates."

Conservative Christians use the concept of personhood for a product of conception within a woman in a rigid manner. The video below takes a more nuanced look at it (view to the end, as bodily autonomy is addressed briefly):

Personhood: Crash Course Philosophy

Friday, April 17, 2020

Proper Basic Belief

What makes a belief "proper", "basic", and/or "foundational?"
Foundationalism holds that all beliefs must be justified in order to be believed. Beliefs, therefore, fall into two categories:
  • Beliefs that are properly basic, in that they do not depend upon justification of other beliefs, but on something outside the realm of belief (a "non-doxastic justification")
  • Beliefs that derive from one or more basic beliefs, and therefore depend on the basic beliefs for their validity (link)

Sounds simple, doesn't it? Unfortunately, many religious try to justify their beliefs as foundational, thus, not requiring the need for evidence. This can be seen at its extreme within the Reformed Epistemology movement. As far as I can determine, there are few beliefs that qualify as foundational. I think of mathematics and logic as qualifying. Can you think of others? How about Core Values? Hey, how about science: "- - - (science) is validated by its results and needs no a priori justification."

Oh, remember: "science" means "knowledge" in Latin and "knowledge" philosophically means "True, Justified Belief." It is the ONLY epistemological system that verifies/justifies its beliefs.


Thursday, April 16, 2020

What Is "Sophisticated Theology/Philosophy?"

One of my favorite atheist authors is John W. Loftus. He recently reposted one of his quotes on Facebook that I consider a classic. Here it is:
"What is Sophisticated Theology/Philosophy?
"Sophisticated theology/philosophy is argumentation used by delusional people to defend the indefensible. It is pure sophistry, empty rhetoric without substance, fallacious reasoning, ungrounded assertions lacking sufficient evidence. Sophisticated theology/philosophy is a kind of red-herring argumentation used as a smokescreen to hide the fact that faith lacks sufficient evidence. Follow its trail and you will be led down the rabbit hole of definitions used to obfuscate the lack of evidence. Sophisticated theology/philosophy confuses people who don't share that sophistication. At its most fundamental level sophisticated theology/philosophy is nothing more than special pleading."



Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Does Consciousness Defeat Materialism?

One of my frequent YouTube video channels is "Closer to Truth" with Robert Lawrence Kuhn. It is from PBS television broadcasts. It "features leading philosophers and scientists exploring humanity’s deepest questions." While it is beautifully and professionally done, the problem I have is that Kuhn, a PhD brain scientist, is searching for the truth in the wrong places: philosophy and religion. The latest episode is entitled, "Does consciousness defeat materialism?" and is emblematic of his wanting to believe in a God. It is worth 26 minutes of your time.

This is my comment on it. There usually are some interesting comments to my comments if I comment:

  • "Science addresses testable claims and has a structured verification/justification process to minimize errors. Up to this point, science points to the high probability of mind/consciousness being a product of the material brain. Unfortunately, all the claims from philosophers, noetic scientists, intelligent design proponents, and others interested in finding non-material causes for consciousness have failed to present evidence for such. If they claim that science is not the correct tool for addressing the claim, what is, and how would you justify it? Until humanity comes up with a way to evaluate, accept, and verify the non-material claim, we are left with the probability found by science mentioned above. Anything else is an argument from ignorance."

Below is a link to the video:

"Does anything exist beyond the physical world? If yes, could consciousness undermine materialism? If no, could consciousness confirm materialism? It’s the big test."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWv-YtElLxk

Friday, March 27, 2020

Philosophical Argument

As many of you probably know, I am not a fan of using philosophy to support claims on objective reality. However, it is valuable for organizing thoughts, especially regarding reasoned arguments. Below are summaries of categories of argument, with links to two 10-minute videos from which the information was obtained:

Deductive

General to specific, from the top down.  Premises lead to a conclusion. The conclusion is certain if all premises are true. This is the category of argument from the religious, purveyors of alternatives to medicine, and all other pseudosciences. Unfortunately, there is at least one faulty premise in their arguments, thus, all of their conclusions are unsupported.

Inductive

Specific to general, from the bottom up. Premises lead to a conclusion. The conclusion is **not certain but probable if all premises are true. This is the category of argument science uses.

** If the conclusion is highly probable, we should live our lives as if it is true and real, from a practical standpoint.

Abductive

Draws a conclusion based on the explanation that best explains a state of events, rather than the evidence provided by the premises. Rules out possible explanations until you find the most probable one given the evidence. Used when you don't have clear evidence from the past and it is a puzzling situation. Physicians use it for diagnosing, and detectives use it to solve crimes. You use it in your everyday life also.

Remember, 


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Choose how you look at reality wisely. Yes, it is a binary choice.

Choose how you look at reality wisely. Yes, it is a binary choice.
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