I just now read that entire thread from beginning to end and nothing in it answers the question in this thread.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Sep 06, 2018 2:10 pmI disagree. Seems to me the 'magical thinking' you're talkin' about is at the heart of scientism (sumthin' I say several times, in different ways, in the other thread).
Scientism is, basically, epistemological extremism. It says that only the hard, natural sciences tell us anything about the real world. Therefore, if you want to be taken seriously, you had better be scientific and support your position with science. Consequently, disciplines such as philosophy and sociology try to look and act like the hard, natural sciences as much as they can. Consequently, both climate change alarmists and climate change deniers use science to support their position. Etc.
Scientism is kind of like Occam's Razor on steroids. It says that physics explains everything or will eventually explain everything so we shouldn't waste time and other resources on history, archaeology, philosophy, languages/linguistics, music theory, sociology, psychology, human geography, etc.
None of that explains why people assign magical, mythical, enchanted qualities to what amounts to nothing more than making observations, taking measurements, manipulating material, and constructing models with symbols.