hundredmillionlifetimes
Banned
Scientific Ecstasy?
In contrast, let me open with Borderpolice's sign-off by trivially drawing attention to the title of this thread, "critiques of science" (as opposed to "worshippers of science" etc) related to which a discussion of religious discourse is especially relevant, particularly when there are those who seek to elevate science to the status of an exclusivist religion (Dawkins etc, and some posters here, apparently).
{ But perhaps, for levity's sake, I should have started with this piece of Jack Torrence-style - realist poetics interluding - amusement:
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no ploy makes Jack a dull boy.
All work and no play makes Jack a dull toy. [An otherwise Realist poet, Jack was noted for his arbitrary grammatical innovations ...]. }
First, it is belief in such things as a "thing-in-itself" that is identical with belief in (a transcendent) God. I assumed - clearly mistakenly - that making such an elementary metaphysical point would have been trivial here.
Second, I made no direct mention of pantheism; I said that for many religious, God=Immanence. Spinoza is an obvious candidate, for whom God=Nature, Substance, but he was no pantheist: he believed, not that God is all around, is everywhere [very popular among many hippy scientists, incidentally ("It's cosmic, man!")], but that God is Everything , that there is nothing that is not God. Kant, of course, believed Spinoza to be an atheist because of such a conception of God, a conception of God not as a personal or transcendent being, but as radically other (and therefore, forever inaccessible, much like the Ocean in Stanislaw Lem/Andrei Tarkovsky's Solaris, one of the best filmic portrayals) substance (nature). So you and some other posters here believe this Kantian position, that the only notions of God that are permitted are the transcendent, supernatural, supernatural ones. You're defining what God must be despite not believing in such a God in order to effortlessly reject such a notion: a strawgod
I drew attention earlier to a nineteenth-century view of evolution/progress, a prescriptive naturalism quite prevalent among scientists (and many others besides), including posters here, and one that is based on a classical, dogmatic empiricism which summarily rejects all that cannot be directly "perceived" by the senses. Ironic in this context, as it was Kant who first argued the limitations of such empirical fundamentalism: by demonstrating that all human experience is constitutively mediated - what we take for experience is ineluctibly pre-screened through a cognitive apparatus which pre-determines and structures all perception. Naive empiricism necessarily limits/reduces our perception of the world, and science itself has also discovered this, destroying naive empiricism in the process [Just because something is imagined doesn't mean it isn't true ...]
You mean there is disagreement about the concept, just as there is disagreement about science? So, because discourse about religion (just as with science) is a chaotic, unruly, disorderly, incoherent riot of competing interpretations, we really must not take it seriously? (A "meta-concept" would be more coherent, more superior? And not just yet another addition to the chaos? ) What's the alternative, then, apart from a narcissistic, solipsistic retreat into that other, supremely late capitalist God, his holiness the Ego, the self?
There is no consensus about religion, yes, just as there is no consensus about science. And there never will be. Because there is no such thing as a "community of religious" or a "community of scientists". Why should there be, why the need for such "consensus", apart from a (political, metaphysical) need for order in a chaotic world?
["fairly abstract and presumably a little hard to comprehend for the uninitiated, so let me simplify it for a lay audience": Is it really necessary for you to so openly parade your condescending, patronising, and pompous disposition on a forum where you don't actually know anything about the backgrounds or knowledge of posters/lurkers? And this from someone who can't distinguish between immanence and pantheism? This from a lapdog of the Big Other God of self-appointed and imagined AUTHORITY?]
Appealing again to your GOD of AUTHORITY. Pantheists are atheists because "most religious" say so (presumably by a show of hands, or maybe they appointed a Supreme Court Ecclesiastical Judge to decide the issue forever more!) Gee, whatever will poor 'auld Buddhists ever do if they are brought before your Supreme Judge!
[And as Tryptych points out, you're conflating immanence with "thing-in-itself" transcendence]. Really what you are doing here is rejecting all of metaphysics, an absurdly fundamentalist and destructive position which even most scientists could never do, including the chap in a state of metaphysical ecstasy at the top of this post ...]
I'm not a pantheist, and you're position is very clear. Rather you should be asking yourself how your authoritarian God of scientific empiricism compares with supernatural fantasy. All those Gods are dead ...
Let me close this post by requesting to talk less about gods and more about science.
In contrast, let me open with Borderpolice's sign-off by trivially drawing attention to the title of this thread, "critiques of science" (as opposed to "worshippers of science" etc) related to which a discussion of religious discourse is especially relevant, particularly when there are those who seek to elevate science to the status of an exclusivist religion (Dawkins etc, and some posters here, apparently).
{ But perhaps, for levity's sake, I should have started with this piece of Jack Torrence-style - realist poetics interluding - amusement:
I am unable to recognize my position here. Maybe you confuse my position with somebody else's?
I am unable to recognize my position here. Maybe you confuse my position with somebody else's?
I am unable to recognize my position here. Maybe you confuse my position with somebody else's?
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no ploy makes Jack a dull boy.
All work and no play makes Jack a dull toy. [An otherwise Realist poet, Jack was noted for his arbitrary grammatical innovations ...]. }
borderpolice said:hundredmillionlifetimes said:???????????? Because the "thing-in-itself", truth, objectivity, final reality, structure and order, IS God, is ALWAYS God. And this, despite the fact that many (ostensible) atheists believe in truth, objectivity, etc.
No it is not, unless you equate god and the thing in itself. But then your claims are semantic trivialities. I am well aware of the pantheistic position but reject it, because i don't see the cognitive benefit of this semantic equivocation. Hence my question, which, incidentally, you have not answered. So let me ask again: Exactly what value does it have to identify the thing in itself with god?
First, it is belief in such things as a "thing-in-itself" that is identical with belief in (a transcendent) God. I assumed - clearly mistakenly - that making such an elementary metaphysical point would have been trivial here.
Second, I made no direct mention of pantheism; I said that for many religious, God=Immanence. Spinoza is an obvious candidate, for whom God=Nature, Substance, but he was no pantheist: he believed, not that God is all around, is everywhere [very popular among many hippy scientists, incidentally ("It's cosmic, man!")], but that God is Everything , that there is nothing that is not God. Kant, of course, believed Spinoza to be an atheist because of such a conception of God, a conception of God not as a personal or transcendent being, but as radically other (and therefore, forever inaccessible, much like the Ocean in Stanislaw Lem/Andrei Tarkovsky's Solaris, one of the best filmic portrayals) substance (nature). So you and some other posters here believe this Kantian position, that the only notions of God that are permitted are the transcendent, supernatural, supernatural ones. You're defining what God must be despite not believing in such a God in order to effortlessly reject such a notion: a strawgod
I drew attention earlier to a nineteenth-century view of evolution/progress, a prescriptive naturalism quite prevalent among scientists (and many others besides), including posters here, and one that is based on a classical, dogmatic empiricism which summarily rejects all that cannot be directly "perceived" by the senses. Ironic in this context, as it was Kant who first argued the limitations of such empirical fundamentalism: by demonstrating that all human experience is constitutively mediated - what we take for experience is ineluctibly pre-screened through a cognitive apparatus which pre-determines and structures all perception. Naive empiricism necessarily limits/reduces our perception of the world, and science itself has also discovered this, destroying naive empiricism in the process [Just because something is imagined doesn't mean it isn't true ...]
[*] I believe that there is no coherent concept of god. Believers use that term in many different ways, that cannot be abstracted into a simple concept encompassing all of this.
You mean there is disagreement about the concept, just as there is disagreement about science? So, because discourse about religion (just as with science) is a chaotic, unruly, disorderly, incoherent riot of competing interpretations, we really must not take it seriously? (A "meta-concept" would be more coherent, more superior? And not just yet another addition to the chaos? ) What's the alternative, then, apart from a narcissistic, solipsistic retreat into that other, supremely late capitalist God, his holiness the Ego, the self?
[*] This lack of consensus about what gods are is not accidental, but a direct consequence of the evolution of religion over the millenia, and directly related to its social function.
There is no consensus about religion, yes, just as there is no consensus about science. And there never will be. Because there is no such thing as a "community of religious" or a "community of scientists". Why should there be, why the need for such "consensus", apart from a (political, metaphysical) need for order in a chaotic world?
[*] Nevertheless one can discern some degree of similarity in a significant part of religious discourse. Current theorising of religion summerises this bit as "the re-entry of the distinction between immanence and transcendence into immanence". This is fairly abstract and presumably a little hard to comprehend for the uninitiated, so let me simplify it for a lay audience: gods are paradoxica/incomprehensible things about which we cannot in principle say anything, but we talk about them anyway. Defusiing this foundational paradox is an important task in the reproduction of religion and achieved in various ways, like for example rituals.
["fairly abstract and presumably a little hard to comprehend for the uninitiated, so let me simplify it for a lay audience": Is it really necessary for you to so openly parade your condescending, patronising, and pompous disposition on a forum where you don't actually know anything about the backgrounds or knowledge of posters/lurkers? And this from someone who can't distinguish between immanence and pantheism? This from a lapdog of the Big Other God of self-appointed and imagined AUTHORITY?]
[*] It is empirically undeniable that pantheists are considered atheists by most religions. Hence those that have the best authority to decide on what gods may be (the believers) reject your equivocation. This puts your equivocation in a pretty weak position, hence my question: exactly what are the cognitive benefits of equating god and thing in itself/immanence/the universe. Why not equate god and love (as is quite fashionable now), of god and potatoes?
Appealing again to your GOD of AUTHORITY. Pantheists are atheists because "most religious" say so (presumably by a show of hands, or maybe they appointed a Supreme Court Ecclesiastical Judge to decide the issue forever more!) Gee, whatever will poor 'auld Buddhists ever do if they are brought before your Supreme Judge!
[And as Tryptych points out, you're conflating immanence with "thing-in-itself" transcendence]. Really what you are doing here is rejecting all of metaphysics, an absurdly fundamentalist and destructive position which even most scientists could never do, including the chap in a state of metaphysical ecstasy at the top of this post ...]
[*] Let me elaborate on the previous point: you claim that my position (which you don't understand) is unable to account for non-theistic religions; counterquestion: how does your pantheisitic position account for the majority of world religions that stipulate personal, supernatural gods?
I'm not a pantheist, and you're position is very clear. Rather you should be asking yourself how your authoritarian God of scientific empiricism compares with supernatural fantasy. All those Gods are dead ...