BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 4:22 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 3:57 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2024 6:59 pm
Why is it that religious adherents, who often champion their beliefs as rooted in truth, so vehemently reject scientific facts when those facts conflict with their worldview? Take determinism, for instance. Science tells us that everything—from the formation of galaxies to the workings of our brains—is governed by immutable physical laws. There’s no room for free will in this framework. Every thought, every action, every choice we believe we make is a product of these deterministic processes.
Science doesn't actually tell you that. An assumptive belief called "Materialism" insists that that is the case, without any evidence and prior to all inquiry. It just rules by fiat that anything that is not strictly a matter of the five senses, not reproducible under controlled conditions, and so forth, will be ruled to be unreal, even before any investigation starts.
Determinism is a product of Materialistic assumptions, but not of Science. Science has no particular opinion on whether or not non-physical entities exist (such as selves, characters, identities, morals, values, consciousness, reason, love, spirituality, will, volition, truth etc.). Rather, science
assumes that reason and logic and truth, as well as the conscious self (the experimenter) already exist, and proceeds from there to define itself as the study of physical, chemical and biological events that can be tested under controlled and reproducible circumstances, with a view to discovering the truth about those things. Science does not say those are the only things that exist; it only says, "Those are the only things we can deal with
as 'science.'"
Moreover, as a matter of historical record, science itself came out of a particular Theistic worldview. The very inventor of the scientific method (Bacon) was himself an ardent theologian, who wrote just as passionately about that as about science. Newton was a Deist. Many of the great scientists, indeed the majority, held to one or another "religious" belief, such as Judaism, Christianity or Deism of some kind...and so do many scientists today.
So the proposed division between science and religion isn't factually true at all. And that's the first problem here. But the second is that science itself does not back Determinism. So there's nothing "impossible" about free will, except in the assumptive beliefs of Materialists.
Immanuel, your response reflects a common misconception about determinism and its relationship to science.
There isn't one. Determinism is a product of Materialist presumptions, not science.
Determinism doesn’t rest on an "assumptive belief" in materialism. Rather, it emerges from observable, testable principles that describe how the universe operates. Every interaction—from subatomic particles to galaxies—follows laws of cause and effect. The consistency of these laws forms the bedrock of scientific inquiry.
You don't know what a "scientific law" is, obviously.
https://www.livescience.com/21457-what- ... c-law.html. It's just a description of an observed general regularity: it's not some kind of cosmic fiat about what is and isn't possible, far less what is and isn't real.
However, determinism isn’t an arbitrary imposition; it’s a conclusion drawn from centuries of evidence showing that physical processes, including those in our brains, adhere to the same principles that govern the natural world.
It's not, actually. It's just an unwarranted jump from
"Physical science seems to describe the physical regularities well," to
"Therefore there is nothing that exists except physical regularities."
Your historical point about scientists like Bacon and Newton having theistic beliefs is true, but irrelevant to the discussion of determinism.
Not at all irrelevant to your claim that science and religion are at loggerheads. They're not. Science is clearly a product of a particular sort of Theistic worldview.
Finally, your suggestion that free will is "possible" outside of a deterministic framework fails to address how free will would function without breaking the laws of physics.
Again, you misunderstand what is meant by "scientific law." There is nothing in the description of a physical regularity that shows that that regularity cannot be altered -- especially by the interposition of a different "law," which makes the first description incorrect.
It's like if you were to put $5 in a drawer, in coin. You come back later, and it's $2. And you say to yourself, "Good heavens; $5 has turned into $2, and the laws of mathematics have been violated."
No, they haven't. Your wife borrowed $3. Nothing spooky, weird or unscientific happened at all.
For a choice to be "free," it must somehow originate outside the chain of cause and effect.
Well, material cause and effect, yes: but the question you're begging is whether or not volition itself
is a cause. In other words, can volition initiate a causal chain?
Your wife's volition initiated the causal chain by which $5 became $2. Causality didn't fail. Maths didn't fail. Instead, something other than physical and mathematical causality, a
volitional causality, interrupted your expectations. That's all that happened.