Icebreaker
I don't think any scientist would pretend that they have all the answers. If they do, they wouldn't be much of a scientist anyway. More like a "scientician".
So ,when you say "...any religious person is one..." you don't really mean 'religious person', you mean ... something else.Icebreaker said:There is a fundamental difference between "religious people" and "organized religion". My posts were referring to the latter.
I stand corrected.(for the record, fanatism is also correct)
"Least likely" and "more logical" according to whom? You?
faith P Pronunciation Key (fth)
n.
1.Confident belief in the truth, value, or trustworthiness of a person, idea, or thing.
2.Belief that does not rest on logical proof or material evidence. See Synonyms at belief. See Synonyms at trust.
If you're scientists, then act in the spirit of your discipline. Embrace unlikely ideas. No scientist would reject outright an idea that hasn't been conclusively disproven.
Flexor said:However, I do reject the concept of faith, as any intelligent being should, because it is illogical.
So you're saying if a person always makes the most logical choice, he will always be right? In my experience that does not seem to be the case, but maybe I am misinterpreting you.Flexor said:That said, a Christian may be right or wrong. An Atheist is always right.
Math Is Hard said:So you're saying if a person always makes the most logical choice, he will always be right? In my experience that does not seem to be the case, but maybe I am misinterpreting you.
Thanks for that clarification. That make sense. But only if we're talking strictly about that objective and not extending that to mean that the atheist is right about the non-existence of god, based on the fact that he is right about making the most-logical decision about the matter.Flexor said:My point was that you'd be right if your objective was to make the most logical decision.
A's decision may have been the logical one, but it has nothing to do with the truth of whether or not he would have won the lottery if he had actually played.Flexor said:B picked a series of numbers that he thought would win, and in the end, he was right. C picked a different series of numbers, also thinking they would win, and he was wrong. A's decision was that playing was against his odds. Wether he'd have won or not, A will always be right in this decision.
Really? Where I come from, 1 + 1 = 10 (guess what I do).Flexor said:According to anyone with enough intelligence to see it. Logic isn't an opinion, logic is how the universe is. 1 + 1 = 2 because it's logical. You can't argue that.
DaveC426913 said:Really? Where I come from, 1 + 1 = 10 (guess what I do).
DaveC426913 said:So ,when you say "...any religious person is one..." you don't really mean 'religious person', you mean ... something else.
And when you say "fanatism", you don't mean a person being a fanatic, you mean an organized religion as-a-conceptual-system, as distinct from the people in it, is a fanatic.
DaveC426913 said:The argument stands as is. Flexor claimed that 1 + 1 = 2 and that there was no argument with that. Yet, it was trival to point out an alternative answer that was perfectly logical, yet had a completely different outcome.
DaveC426913 said:The most basic tenets you hold so dear (such as logic will always get you the correct answer) too easily come crashing down when you get arrogant. Once you get a variety of people involved, you begin to see your own blindspots (such as what base counting system you use).
Too many people think they have all the answers. (Hey, that sounds familiar!)
DaveC426913 said:The argument stands as is. Flexor claimed that 1 + 1 = 2 and that there was no argument with that. Yet, it was trival to point out an alternative answer that was perfectly logical, yet had a completely different outcome. The answer I've presented is 10 - not 2. Your understanding of my answer is a matter of how well you understand where I'm coming from.
I now claim that 1 + 1 = 3. Am I bonkers? Your conclusion would be drawn from your own myopic (no insult intended) view of the world, not mine. Or are you open enough to accept that I may know some things you don't?
Now reapply this to the religion argument.
DaveC426913 said:Note also that you are not your label. Principles, belief systems and philosophies are not intolerant, it is individuals that are intolerant.
DaveC426913 said:>When in doubt, choosing the most logical answer is always the most intelligent thing to do.
Ah, intelligence, now that's different. A slippery quantity that one. Can you define it?
DaveC426913 said:>and faith is always the least.
Would you suggest that a young man following the advice of his parents despite his own fears and ignorance is the least intelligent thing to do?
DaveC426913 said:I hate to use this cliche, but this discussion is really bringing it home in spades: for many people, science is a religion, and its believers are just as fanatical, faith-driven, intolerant and self-righteous as any other religion.
As scientists we have to rise above this, and be tolerant of other viewpoints despite our subjective beliefs. We have to recognize, more than anyone, that we don't know what we don't know.[/B]
DaveC426913 said:>>>and faith is always the least [intelligent thing to do].
>>Would you suggest that a young man following the advice of his parents despite his own fears and ignorance is the least intelligent thing to do?
>Firstly, is that really faith?
Yes.
> following his parent's advice is the logical answer here,
Agreed. Having faith in one's parents is the most logical course of action.
[/b]
>Firstly, is that really faith?
DaveC426913 said:I have to say, I am glad you are giving me more time than you give other people. You stopped to examine the ways I might be right. You didn't just tell me I'm wrong and dismiss me.
Sure, I'll educate you.
Just like you're going to go off and get educated on the principles of the religions you purport to understand, right? Your willingness to listen to me about the number 3 indicates a belief that I have something to add that will clear things up. But if you prejudge the value of my message (1 and 1 = 3? What an idiot), you don't bother sticking around to understand.
How scientific.
Your data is out-of-date by centuries, as are your resulting conclusions. Get new data. How many people have you talked to that follow someone who is vengeful, jealous, enjoys smiting, and has a strange predilection for stoning to death as a punishment?
Scientists have gotten things awfully wrong in the past too.
We recognize change, we demand to be judged on who we are today, not centuries or millenia ago.
(Well, radical nationalism isn't a religion in the terms we are discussing.
We are specifically discussing religions that involve a belief in a supernatural creator.) That lewaves one example - Mormons. And yes, it is good get get specificrather than going with generalizations such as "all religions".
Dayle Record said:"Science" did Nagasaki, "Science" did Hiroshima.
Flexor said:Science created the bomb. The american army dropped it. If I pick up a gun and shoot someone, is it the gun's fault, or mine?
DaveC426913 said:Incredible. I could not have made my case better than you just did.
When an atrocity happens as a result of science, it's the fault of the people, never the fault of science.
When an atrocity happens as a result of religion, it must be the whole
structure that's corrupt, never the fault of the individuals.
A stupendous example of hypocrisy.
Oh, definitely you.Flexor said:Again, I ask you; If I pick up a gun and shoot someone, is the gun responsible, or am I?
No, wars are fought over wealth and power. Religion and science are merely pawns. The Inquisition wasn't about whose God was right, it was about economics.Flexor said:Wars are fought over religion, not over science.
And again, I put to you: If it's the people committing crimes, whatever their rationale, do you fault the system, or the people who bend it to their own purpose? Pick one and stick with it.Flexor said:Religion is a motive, not a weapon. Science didn't destroy nagasaki and yieroshima, the americans did. And no, religion itself didn't fight the wars and kill hundreds or millions. People did - but they did so because of religion. Can you name a single war that was caused by science?
Systems that don't have ethical checks and balances are in (principle) anti-human and a negative thing. Science does not provide a human-centred self-check. That is the field of other disciplines to decide.
Now, before you blow a gasket, I'm not suggesting scientists are unethical, or that they do not do self-checks, I'm saying that when they do that, they put on a different hat. It must be that way. Science as a discipline does not concern itself with human factors.
DaveC426913 said:>Science champions progress. Religion champions caution. Change - in and of itself - is not a good thing. Change requires reflection and consideration of the consequences. Traditions ensure that things don't change so fast that they get away from us.
Science says 'Hey, look! I've figured out how to get the cork out of this genie's bottle!' I'm going to pull it out and examine the contents.' Religion says 'Whoa there, that's not so good an idea.'
Icebreaker said:Saying that "religion is a complement of science" is only the politically correct thing to do. Science is only trying to be nice. Science doesn't need religion.
Systems of belief do not have behaviors. It is people that are ethical/unethical.arildno said:And wherever have you gotten the idea that religion is ethical?
guevaramartyr said:quite to the contrary, change is always good, even if it comes in the form of war...
DaveC426913 said:1] When I said 'you', it was of the 'you all' form, not you specifically.
The New Testament. God's gotten a makeover, he's hip and cool and down wit da new generation. Not so much on the pillars of salt, big on the love and forgiveness.
As pointed out before and since, it does result in the incineration of hundreds of thousands of civilians. I know, it wasn't the fault of science, it was people. That's my point. You don't blame a system, you blame the people who abuse it.
The field of science doesn't?
So, a system that puts forth apparent paradox's must be fundamentally flawed? Like, say Quantum Mechanics and Relativity?
Systems that don't have ethical checks and balances are in (principle) anti-human and a negative thing. Science does not provide a human-centred self-check. That is the field of other disciplines to decide.
Science champions progress. Religion champions caution. Change - in and of itself - is not a good thing. Change requires reflection and consideration of the consequences. Traditions ensure that things don't change so fast that they get away from us.
Don't think of religion as the enemy of science, think of it as its complement.
DaveC426913 said:No, science isn't the thing doing the 'needing'. Science is merely a tool. The Human Race is doing the needing.
We need a pro-change force and a pro-'it-ain't-broke' force acting as complements of each other. Religion acts to hold back consequences of unfettered science, while science eggs on the stodgy dogmatism of the religion.
Pretend Einstein (or Netwon) and the Pope (or Buddha) are the Human Race's "shoulder angels".
genes don't compel you to have sex, your brain releases a chemical into the bloodstream every time you have a thought about sex or see something that triggers your thought about sex.Icebreaker said:No, it's called supression and choice. Just like the fact that your genes compels you to have sex, whether you choose to, capable of, or not to.
What I was attempting to say is that conscious,subconscious thought and your bodies addiction to the protien that is released when you have those thoughts that compel you to have sex.Icebreaker said:And your DNA is the blueprint for your brain.
DaveC426913 said:But if you read what I wrote, you'll see my claim is that change in and of itself is not good unless it provides some benefit (perhaps merely as a side effect, but still...).