Have given examples, you just ignored them.
I know you are not going to change your mind. You are not going to see the oxymoron being in your being upset over science being a religion (it is NOT) while calling for science to more religious.
God is NOT hidden for those that can see Him. Your Biblical interpretations are a bid odd in my view. And outright nuts,when it comes to FET. But you have a right to your opinion, so have at it. However I still have hope that your heart will be opened, and your blindness cured. I pray for it. God's creation of the Universe is AWESOME. And God gifted us with the tools to see it all the way back to the beginning. The heavens shout the Glory of Creation and the love of God for us.
Frankly, I don't have time to debate a mind closed to the glory of God.
You make the claim "You posit science is working to hide God and supplant religion". I do no such thing. As said, I explain that many believe this is the case, and I am speaking to all the possible reasons that flat earthers believe in.
You claim I say: "then say what is needed is for science to become a religion". I do not. I say Science is a religion.
In these cases your fallacy is misrepresenting my argument and attacking
strawmen.
Your argue my heart is closed to religion; I'm upset science is a religion. Neither of these are true. I'm simply stating the facts as I see them. None of this is relevant. My personal position does not change the position of the argument. Whether my eyes are closed to religion or God does not affect the argument either way and you are simply
attacking the man.
Here are the points I argue:
Compared Science and Religion:
- They advance in similar ways, including mysticism
- They both attempt to explain the world
- Both use logic, sense experience, and knowledge available at the time to do so
- Both require use of unprovable points to maintain consistency
- Both often have those who follow rotely and dogmatically to further its advancement
This is how I evidenced them:
1. They Advance In Similar Ways, Including MysticismI cited many examples. You then
cherrypick a few of them that come about through dreams here:
Your idea of mystic seem to cover every form of inspiration. The mind is never asleep, it is always working on problems, even if the person is unaware of the effort.
I am a writer, I was blocked for an idea. One way to help with that, is to write a random sentence. I stared at that sentence for a long time. NOTHING. Around 2:30 in the morning, I was wide wake with a short story based on the sentence. Now I am now 40k words into a book length story. it was NOT mystical or supernatural, it my my subconscious mind working on it while I did other things.
I see no reason for those working in science to be any different than the rest of us.
You make an argument that has nothing to do with the point: "I see no reason for those working in science to be any different than the rest of us." Indeed I don't either.
So you attack a
strawman argument after
cherrypicking it out of the sea of evidence I provided.
Recognizing I had not defined mysticism so we can know what I"m talking about I go ahead do so:
William James, an expert on Religious Experience defines Mystical Experience as the Following: (and supports this definition over many lectures at Cambridge now in print in the Variety of Religious Experiences)
Transient — the experience is temporary; the individual soon returns to a "normal" frame of mind. It is outside our normal perception of space and time.
Ineffable — the experience cannot be adequately put into words.
Noetic — the individual feels that he or she has learned something valuable from the experience. Gives us knowledge that is normally hidden from human understanding.
Passive — the experience happens to the individual, largely without conscious control. Although there are activities, such as meditation (see below), that can make religious experience more likely, it is not something that can be turned on and off at will.
Indeed the large majority of the experiences I listed fit the bill. Not all, since I did provide this definition after the fact. Certainly we can't dismiss all of them. For example, Tesla and Roger Penrose's, or many of the others which are explicitly religious or mystical in nature.
You have no response and instead sit on your cherry picked strawman from your previous point.
2. They both attempt to explain the worldThis point appears to not be contested.
3. They both use logic, sense experience, and knowledge of the time to do soThis point appears to not be contested.
4. Both require use of unprovable points to maintain consistencyI supply the following evidence:
- Thomas Kuhn points out that 'normal' science requires faith as an indispensible tool, as the majority of 'normal science' requires it to define the puzzles which are solved
- Planck points out that faith is necessary in science
- The Existence of a Principle of Induction must be Taken on faith and is unprovable (due to infinite regression via Hume, Popper, et al.)
- Godel showed us we can't have a formal system that is coherent, and yet science is attempting to be that - this requires faith to practice science
Your reply:
"Science, is NOT faith"
Fallacy of DefinitionI avoid doing math, experimentation
Ad hominem I deny medicine electronics, chemistry
Ad hominem I have Hellenologophobia - the worst on the planet
Ad hominem And finally something somewhat legitimate at least a Bible Quotation About Faith "Faith shows the reality of what we hope for; it is the evidence of things we cannot see."
5. Both often have those who follow rotely and dogmatically to further its advancement- Thomas Kuhn points out that 'normal' science requires faith as an indispensable tool, as the majority of 'normal science' requires it to define the puzzles which are solved
Again, not contested.
Now to your arguments:
- Religion and science are two distinct issues - Soul and Physical Universe respectively
- Science relies on validation through experimental results versus and with Mathematical Validation; presumably religion does not
- Importance is put on Accuracy of Prediction in Science
- Religion and Science should and will remain separate
- The Bible defines faith as "Faith shows the reality of what we hope for; it is the evidence of things we cannot see."
Can we agree these are your points? I'm more than happy to change my mind, but I doubt you have the ability to argue your point well enough to change anybodies mind. I've changed my mind over issues many times in the past here when I found them untenable. Before I continue, I'd like to know you are still in the discussion and would like me to address your point. Like you, if your mind is too closed to be changed - I have little interest arguing over a discussion I've clearly won.
I have supported my claim with facts, reason, citations, and common sense.
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhhhhh!!
[inhale]
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHH!!!!
Sigh...
Whatever you say John.
Glad to see you bringing your normal level of reason and logic to the conversation as a counter-point. Like the child who cannot address an argument, you simply put your fingers in their ears, laugh, shit your pants, then claim triumph.[/list]