SuperFerret
King of the Urban Jungle
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Bald is a hairstyle.
And atheism isn't a religion, though Science has many traits in common with religion though.
Bald is a hairstyle.
Consideringthe percentage of chacne of the Big Bang happening and forming all life is barely even a number it's so small...I think it takes more faith to be an athiest than it does to be of any form of religion. A belief in theory, often times not based on any firm facts or proofs. One could say that Atheism in itself is a religion of a sort.
Such as...
How so?
Do some not shave their heads for style?
^it can be impractical resourcewise, but yes, thats actually a stipulation of science, that it is repeatable.
The point of the scientific method is to remove as much subjectivity as possible. Removing all subjectivity is of course impossible (all perception is subjective) however that error is acounted for. It is calculated. Nothing is stated as infallible, fallibility is assumed. The goal of science is increasingly remove more error. It is never finished, never complete.
It's one thing to have something happen, and interpret it. However then in science you must find support for that interpretation. It is not simply accepted. Never assumed to be 100% true.
It is the difference between saying "God works in mysterious ways" and seeing unanswered questions and seeking most objective explanation we are capable of.
It is a difference in how our perception of the world is understood, aproached and used.
Just a bad analogy.
It's more the like the difference between 0 slope and No Slope, if you understand my meaning.
Trusting those who tell you "X is true" based on their word.
Are their experiences peer-reviewed and rigorously tested with the scientific method? No? Then yeah, it's actually completely different.speaking to anyone who's truly faithful, they surely have experiences that show the existence of a higher power to them, how is this any different?
First of all, no one with any understanding of science or the scientific method ever claimed that the big bang theory was infallible. It is simply the best explaination that we have now based on the observable evidence. As new evidence arises, our understanding of the theory, the theory itself will be adusted or even abandoned. It is not a matter of faith because it is a conceptual framework made up of what we know, not what we believe.
It is calculated that there are roughly 70,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (70 sextillion)stars in the observable universe and most likely many more beyond that (they are so far away that the light of even the first stars there hasn't even reached us yet). Even if the chances of life being produced are infinitesimal, with that amount of space, with that number of stars, with amount of time that has been available, ther percent chance is that there are millions of planets with life.
Also chemicals react in certain ways. Put certain elements and compounds together with some kind of stimulation, be it simply movement, gravitation, eletrical sparks, radiation, etc, they react very easily. Created or not, we are made up of chemical compounds. Nothing that we are made up of is particularly rare. Just compounds produced by fusion at the hearts of the aforementioned preposterous amounts of stars, that all work under similar processes. Meaning that what life is made of is all over the universe.
And the scientific method is faulty.
I'm not sure you're qualified to say that it's faulty, since you don't seem to know what it is (otherwise, you wouldn't have described "Trusting those who tell you "X is true" based on their word" as science, nor would you have likened personal anecdotes to science).
Regardless, the assertion doesn't have much to do with my response.
The average person just takes scientists' words for it. They don't question it. They're told that X is the truth because of Y, and they just accept it. They don't attempt to recreate the experiment themselves (mainly because the average person doesn't have the equipment or knowledge to do so with certain experiments). They just trust that they're being told the truth.
And really, religion is the same way. You get religious leaders saying Z is the truth, and the average person doesn't question it. They don't bother checking their religious texts. They just trust that they're being told the truth.
Unless you're a scientist or a religious scholar of some sort, all you're doing is arguing something that someone else told you and you assume is true.
And yet, you still likened science to "Trusting those who tell you "X is true" based on their word" and personal anecdotes. This suggests a critical misunderstanding, or alternatively, a deliberate misrepresentation.As someone who has studied science, I am familiar with the scientific method and what it is.
As I explained previously, that is not science. An individual's trust has nothing to do with science; it is simply that person's trust. Trusting someone who claims to have done some science is not science.Trusting someone on their word is not part of it, but you are implicitly trusting that they went through this method and that their findings are legitimate.
Such as...?And the reluctance to accept anecdotal evidence is one of the biggest faults of the scientific method. Something need not be repeatable to have happened.
And yet, you still likened science to "Trusting those who tell you "X is true" based on their word" and personal anecdotes. This suggests a critical misunderstanding, or alternatively, a deliberate misrepresentation.
As I explained previously, that is not science. An individual's trust has nothing to do with science; it is simply that person's trust. Trusting someone who claims to have done some science is not science.
Not incidentally, this is why the scientific community will rip apart the experiments, methodologies, and theories of their peers for the express purpose of determining whether or not the information is valid.
Such as...?
Very well:Where did I do this? I'd like a direct quote, because I don't believe I did any such thing.
SuperFerret said:Science has many traits in common with religion though.
bunk said:Such as...
SuperFerret said:Trusting those who tell you "X is true" based on their word.
"But SuperFerret, with science, I can go and look for myself and find out that X is true."
Two things here, (1) can you?, and (2) speaking to anyone who's truly faithful, they surely have experiences that show the existence of a higher power to them, how is this any different?
I know what he is saying, and I know what you are saying. I understand that most people do not scientifically verify what they believe. What I am explaining to you is that this is not science. Trusting someone's word is not science, believing someone's claim is not science. Only the scientific method is science.Maybe you should read Manic's post. He was a bit more wordy, but he said what I was saying.
Why? You haven't explained how emotions illustrate your claim about repeatability in the scientific method.Okay, explain emotions scientifically.
Okay, explain emotions scientifically.
The latter makes sense to me; one would expect that organisms capable of a love response are going to breed more than the alternative, for example.The James–Lange theory posits that emotional experience is largely due to the experience of bodily changes. The "functionalist" approach to emotions (for example, Nico Frijda and Freitas-Magalhaes) holds that emotions have evolved for a particular function, such as to keep the subject safe.
The average person just takes scientists' words for it. They don't question it. They're told that X is the truth because of Y, and they just accept it. They don't attempt to recreate the experiment themselves (mainly because the average person doesn't have the equipment or knowledge to do so with certain experiments). They just trust that they're being told the truth.
And really, religion is the same way. You get religious leaders saying Z is the truth, and the average person doesn't question it. They don't bother checking their religious texts. They just trust that they're being told the truth.
Unless you're a scientist or a religious scholar of some sort, all you're doing is arguing something that someone else told you and you assume is true.
The difference is that we all experience the results of science on a daily basis. We know that the system in place that produced all of our scientific accomplishments is also responsible for producing the scientists themselves. We trust scientists, because we trust the results of their efforts. What similar system is in place for our religious leaders?
I think you missed the point; Bunk was explaining that science produces results that demonstrate truth value of the science. That is to say, we know the science of the combustion engine is sound and true because we have combustion engines that work.Religious leaders produce results on a social level.
Scientific discovery hardly produces social results, just as religion is hardly going to produce technological results.
As seen here, when asked by Bunk what traits science has in common with religion, you first liken science to trusting one's word without proof (the first item in bold) and then go on to liken it to personal anecdotes (the second item in bold).
I know what he is saying, and I know what you are saying. I understand that most people do not scientifically verify what they believe. What I am explaining to you is that this is not science. Trusting someone's word is not science, believing someone's claim is not science. Only the scientific method is science.
You claimed "Science has many traits in common with a religion." This is false, because science is a method, not a belief system. People may believe in scientific claims or theories in a way that is religious or faith-based in nature, but that is not science. That's just that person's belief.
Why? You haven't explained how emotions illustrate your claim about repeatability in the scientific method.
Sort of an absurd request, anyway; of course I cannot scientifically explain emotions any better than a ten second google search, as I have not studied the matter scientifically. One might guess "The brain" is a good starting point, though.