Can the Secularists be Trusted?

How should society be organised, if at all?

Moderators: AMod, iMod

Post Reply
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

@BigMike, use my response to Prom as my argument against you too:
Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:01 amYou believe the Sun will rise and fall.
You believe the Moon will be in roughly it's same orbit, not crashing into Earth.
You believe in Gravity, holding the ground together, and you to Earth.
You believe in Air and Oxygen, although you don't see it.
You believe water is wet, ice is solid, and steam is gas...along with that old Chimichanga that's not sitting well in your gut.

You believe a lot of things, which you "aren't aware of", because you presume they're given and consistent.

But none of these beliefs are necessarily true. They can change. The entire world can change, and defy your beliefs & expectations.
Secularists are just as 'belief-driven' as the Religious...the difference is mainly a matter of Doctrinal text. The Religious Right tend to put their morality and belief-systems into Writing (The Bible obviously), or the Secularists might claim the US Constitution as their 'Divine Text'. But the difference is very powerful and far-reaching. This puts the Religious at a disadvantage, having to defend their explicit, written Morality and Ethics against Secularists all the time. While the Secularists enjoy the advantage of 'not having an official text'.

This doesn't somehow clear Secularists or Secularism of belief-systems, morality, ethics, metaphysics...and it shows, on this forum and in this thread really, how Secularists / Leftists fool themselves into this Holier-than-thou, Haughty attitude, that 'Trust the Science, Trust the Experts' constitutes some type of holy persuasion. It doesn't.

In many ways, Science is far worse than Religion. Because of this very point and demonstration...Secularists ought to be much more aware of their own, subjective beliefs, how and why they value those beliefs.

It's far more a risk to write down what you actually believe, think, and want for the world (like the Religious do in their texts), compared to Secularism which leaves their beliefs hidden and evasive, not pinned down, therefore Unaccountable and easily Deceived.
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

Atla wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:20 amSo you subscribe to the secular belief in stable laws of nature?
Sometimes...how are the "Laws of Nature" unlike the "Laws of God" though?
User avatar
attofishpi
Posts: 13319
Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2011 8:10 am
Location: Orion Spur
Contact:

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by attofishpi »

Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:13 am
attofishpi wrote: Thu Dec 26, 2024 9:12 pm If I owned a shop and two people both equally suited to the job I need one of them for, i'd employ the one that is Christian over an atheist (for obvious reasons). :wink:
Please do extrapolate on why. And what kind of shop is it? I presume it isn't a strip club then...
Why? One of these people think there is the eye of GOD on them when they handle the cash.

Why wouldn't it be a strip club? Jesus didn't say "Don't allow my Dad's most perfect creation be on display, even if they go up and down poles."
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

attofishpi wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:26 amWhy? One of these people think there is the eye of GOD on them when they handle the cash.

Why wouldn't it be a strip club? Jesus didn't say "Don't allow my Dad's most perfect creation be on display, even if they go up and down poles."
A Christian strip-club...so the women would take only their shoes and socks off, get some hooting and hollering, tips, and call it a night?
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Atla »

Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:23 am
Atla wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:20 amSo you subscribe to the secular belief in stable laws of nature?
Sometimes...how are the "Laws of Nature" unlike the "Laws of God" though?
You can test the laws of nature for yourself, unlike the laws of God?
User avatar
attofishpi
Posts: 13319
Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2011 8:10 am
Location: Orion Spur
Contact:

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by attofishpi »

Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:29 am
attofishpi wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:26 amWhy? One of these people think there is the eye of GOD on them when they handle the cash.

Why wouldn't it be a strip club? Jesus didn't say "Don't allow my Dad's most perfect creation be on display, even if they go up and down poles."
A Christian strip-club...so the women would take only their shoes and socks off, get some hooting and hollering, tips, and call it a night?
Clearly you never met my ex, a Christian lass that considered working in a strip club. I have to admit I viewed her rather differently from that point on.
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

Atla wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:32 amYou can test the laws of nature for yourself, unlike the laws of God?
I'm pretty sure people test both...haven't the attacks and arguments against the Religious, don't those construe tests 'against God'??
BigMike
Posts: 2210
Joined: Wed Jul 13, 2022 8:51 pm

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by BigMike »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 4:38 am
BigMike wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 12:32 am Alexis, your response is a smokescreen of intellectual posturing, couched in vague platitudes and high-minded abstractions that do little to disguise the hollowness of your argument. You dress up your position with references to "symbolism" and "synthesizing approaches," but the substance is as shallow as the "shallow secularism" you seem so desperate to dismiss.
Dismiss? No. Acknowledge, understand are better terms. I don’t dismiss secularism and I do not dismiss the radical form of it that animates your approach.

Man as symbol-maker is an important point for a better understanding of Man.

The people I get the most from in the realm of bridging the conflict between religious views and “secular” views are, indeed, synthesizing minds. I value synthesis.
Let’s call it what it is: an elaborate dance around the fact that you can’t meaningfully engage with the core critique of your worldview. Secularism doesn’t need your approval or your condescending acknowledgment of its limitations.
I do not think you could (fairly) state what my worldview is. You seem to me too full of your own. OTOH, I think I could very easily state for you what yours is. Because it is quite simple. Reductionism reduces complexity to bits that are easy to express and to influence people with. And ideologies are often similar.

Secularism may not need my approval, but it can certainly be examined by qualified minds aware of the full gamut of the issues. And it is examined. And critiqued.
It stands as a framework grounded in reason, evidence, and empathy—not in the crumbling scaffolding of outdated religious dogma or the “symbolic content” you claim to grasp but clearly haven’t wrestled with on anything more than a surface level.
You are referring to your own position as “a framework grounded in reason, evidence, and empathy”, however I see many flaws in your position that in my view need to be addressed.
…the crumbling scaffolding of outdated religious dogma or the “symbolic content”.
This is an idea, a reality, that deeply concerns me and a problem I am involved with. It needs to be examined in depth.

A “scaffolding” can be described as descriptive order around something. You offer a “scaffolding” in the presentation of your understanding and conclusions.
You lament the "collapsed" religious models of the past and pine for some vaguely defined "proper religiousness," yet you offer no coherent vision of what that might entail. Instead, you retreat into an intellectual fog, pontificating about "layers of symbolic content" and "well-prepared intellects" as if that absolves you of the burden of making an actual argument. It doesn’t.
No. I see those “collapsed” systems as scaffolding sets that enabled entire realms of understanding and value-definition to come onto the scene. I don’t “lament” the collapse of old orders of view — like the Great Chain of Being — but I do not flippantly dismiss the meaning content in them.
And your defense of IC is laughable. "Better informed than many"? That's the faintest of faint praise, especially in a space where shallow, self-referential reasoning and unsupported assertions are commonplace. IC's arguments are just as flawed as yours—cloaked in a veneer of intellectualism but ultimately devoid of substance. His smug dismissal of secularism is no more thorough or "better grounded" than your attempt to deflect criticism with appeals to complexity and nuance you haven’t demonstrated.
It is not faint praise when the name of the game is to be informed.
So let’s drop the pretense: you’re not engaging in honest inquiry here. You’re propping up a worldview you’re too invested in to question, all while taking potshots at secularism because it challenges the foundations of your belief. If your ideas can’t stand on their own merits without hiding behind vague rhetoric and intellectual name-dropping, then maybe they aren’t worth defending.
Wait, I think you mean the inquiry I am involved in is not the sort that you favor, find needed, admire, etc.

If anything I value an “amphibious” approach to understanding intellectual history and the world of ideas.

Your position, your style, is far too brash, too certain of itself, too much tending toward domination and dismissal. You are “a sign of the times” in that sense.

But you are wonderful for what you stimulate as far as these recent conversations go. You are an “emissary of the age” in that sense.
Alexis,

If there’s a central point where you and I diverge—where your worldview and mine seem to be speaking entirely different languages—it’s in your persistent failure, whether deliberate or not, to fully grasp what is fundamental to my perspective: that human behavior, thought, and action are all rooted in deterministic processes, including the profound capacity for learning and memory. This isn’t a peripheral detail in my view; it’s the core. And it’s precisely this that you either misunderstand or resist engaging with.

You speak of man as a "symbol-maker," emphasizing the value of synthesis and the layering of symbolic content as a means to bridge the divide between secular and religious worldviews. Fair enough, but what you consistently overlook is the foundation upon which all of this symbolic and intellectual activity rests. It’s not transcendental, it’s not mystical, and it’s not free-floating. It’s physical. The human brain operates deterministically, shaping every thought, symbol, and conclusion through the interplay of neural processes, conditioned by experience and memory.

Here’s what I don’t think you’ve fully acknowledged: when I argue for a deterministic view, I’m not reducing humanity to something simple or mechanical; I’m explaining how complexity emerges from deterministic processes. The richness of symbolic content you value—the scaffolding of meaning you believe has collapsed—arises because humans have the capacity to learn, store, and adapt information. And here’s the critical point: that learning and memory are physical processes. Memories are encoded in the brain as changes in synaptic connections, strengthening some pathways and weakening others. These changes, in turn, alter future actions and perceptions.

This is not a reduction to simplicity; it’s an explanation of complexity at its most fundamental level. Yet you seem to resist this view, instead favoring what you call a “synthesizing” approach—one that invokes abstractions and symbolic frameworks without reconciling them with their deterministic underpinnings. You value the scaffolding, the symbolic richness, but you don’t seem to grasp—or perhaps you dismiss—the mechanism that builds and sustains it.

So I’ll ask you directly: do you acknowledge that learning and memory are physical processes, encoded in the brain as changes in synaptic connections? And if you do, how do you reconcile this with your resistance to determinism? You claim to value complexity and nuance, but the nuance here is clear: what we learn and remember today physically changes us and deterministically influences what we do tomorrow. How does this contradict determinism? What part of this do you find insufficient in explaining human behavior or the construction of meaning?

Your critique of secularism, your concern for collapsed religious scaffolding, and your emphasis on symbolic content all strike me as attempts to hold onto frameworks that feel richer or more human than the deterministic view I present. But I’m not dismissing humanity or richness; I’m explaining how it arises, why it works, and why it’s consistent with a deterministic worldview. If you think this view lacks substance or value, then you’re failing to engage with its profound implications: that even in a deterministic world, we learn, adapt, create, and act in ways that matter—not because we’re free from causality, but because we’re so deeply and wonderfully bound by it.

Your unwillingness to address this directly—your deflections into abstractions and critiques of my “brash” style—suggests that what you truly resist isn’t my worldview but the challenge it poses to yours. If you can’t engage with the fundamental role of learning and memory in shaping human behavior, then you’re missing the very foundation of what you claim to be synthesizing. And that’s the gap between us: I’m not dismissing complexity; I’m explaining its roots. You, meanwhile, seem determined to keep those roots obscured.
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

attofishpi wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:32 amClearly you never met my ex, a Christian lass that considered working in a strip club. I have to admit I viewed her rather differently from that point on.
Lol, sounds like the Mormons where I'm from.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Atla »

Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:48 am
Atla wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:32 amYou can test the laws of nature for yourself, unlike the laws of God?
I'm pretty sure people test both...haven't the attacks and arguments against the Religious, don't those construe tests 'against God'??
Stop playing dumb already. You can test the laws of nature and always find them to be correct.
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

Atla wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:51 amStop playing dumb already. You can test the laws of nature and always find them to be correct.
In my experience and understanding, the Law of God requires a person to change, or at least improve, his or her moral and ethical conduct in life...there are better and worse ways to "live life". The objectively 'Best Way' leads to God or Heaven. That's the challenge and "test" of the religious-right.
Will Bouwman
Posts: 1334
Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2022 2:17 pm

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Will Bouwman »

Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:05 amThere are infinite factors that go into every Belief-system. That you and all the other Secularists overlook these "facts", demonstrates to me that very few, or none of you, are really serious about your 'Sciences'.
I can't speak for all the other secularists, but many of us take science to be fundamentally a pragmatic endeavour. It is, for example, an observable, verifiable fact that stones fall to Earth if you drop them. The science comes in when you measure things like the mass of the stone, the distance it falls and the time it takes. Repeat the experiment with different objects and heights, see if there is a pattern in the data; if so devise a formula that accounts for the pattern you have discerned. Use that formula for any purpose to which it applies, and to any purpose to which it doesn't apply, use another formula. If it pleases you to do so, make up a story about why stones fall as they do; it won't make any difference to the behaviour of stones.
BigMike
Posts: 2210
Joined: Wed Jul 13, 2022 8:51 pm

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by BigMike »

Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:23 am @BigMike, use my response to Prom as my argument against you too:
Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:01 amYou believe the Sun will rise and fall.
You believe the Moon will be in roughly it's same orbit, not crashing into Earth.
You believe in Gravity, holding the ground together, and you to Earth.
You believe in Air and Oxygen, although you don't see it.
You believe water is wet, ice is solid, and steam is gas...along with that old Chimichanga that's not sitting well in your gut.

You believe a lot of things, which you "aren't aware of", because you presume they're given and consistent.

But none of these beliefs are necessarily true. They can change. The entire world can change, and defy your beliefs & expectations.
Secularists are just as 'belief-driven' as the Religious...the difference is mainly a matter of Doctrinal text. The Religious Right tend to put their morality and belief-systems into Writing (The Bible obviously), or the Secularists might claim the US Constitution as their 'Divine Text'. But the difference is very powerful and far-reaching. This puts the Religious at a disadvantage, having to defend their explicit, written Morality and Ethics against Secularists all the time. While the Secularists enjoy the advantage of 'not having an official text'.

This doesn't somehow clear Secularists or Secularism of belief-systems, morality, ethics, metaphysics...and it shows, on this forum and in this thread really, how Secularists / Leftists fool themselves into this Holier-than-thou, Haughty attitude, that 'Trust the Science, Trust the Experts' constitutes some type of holy persuasion. It doesn't.

In many ways, Science is far worse than Religion. Because of this very point and demonstration...Secularists ought to be much more aware of their own, subjective beliefs, how and why they value those beliefs.

It's far more a risk to write down what you actually believe, think, and want for the world (like the Religious do in their texts), compared to Secularism which leaves their beliefs hidden and evasive, not pinned down, therefore Unaccountable and easily Deceived.
Wizard22, your response is an incoherent mishmash of false equivalencies and baseless accusations that reveal more about your misunderstanding of secularism and science than any legitimate critique. Let’s break it down for you—since clearly, precision isn’t your strong suit.

You equate the empirical observations of science—gravity, the Sun rising, oxygen’s role in respiration—with "beliefs" in the same sense as religious doctrines. That’s not just wrong; it’s absurd. Science isn’t belief-driven; it’s evidence-driven. The predictions of gravity and the behavior of celestial bodies aren’t matters of blind faith—they’re the result of rigorous observation, experimentation, and reproducible results. The fact that you lump this together with religious dogma only demonstrates your inability (or unwillingness) to grasp the distinction.

Your claim that secularism operates on "hidden beliefs" is equally misguided. Secularism isn’t hiding anything. It openly advocates for reason, empirical evidence, and ethical principles grounded in human well-being—principles that don’t require supernatural authority or "divine texts." You’re projecting the opacity of your own belief system onto secularism, simply because it doesn’t conform to your worldview.

And your assertion that science is “worse than religion” is laughable. Science holds itself accountable through peer review, replication, and falsifiability—concepts that religious texts don’t even attempt to address. If anything, religion’s reliance on unquestionable dogma, rather than scrutiny or evidence, makes it the far riskier enterprise.

You say religious beliefs are at a disadvantage because they’re “written down,” but the truth is that they’re at a disadvantage because they demand unearned authority and discourage questioning. Secularism, by contrast, evolves as new evidence emerges. That’s not a weakness—it’s a strength.

So, spare us the sanctimonious ranting. If you’re going to wade into these waters, at least try to understand what you’re criticizing. Otherwise, you’re just flailing in the shallow end, making noise without making sense.
Wizard22
Posts: 3283
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:16 am

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by Wizard22 »

Will Bouwman wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 11:54 amI can't speak for all the other secularists, but many of us take science to be fundamentally a pragmatic endeavour. It is, for example, an observable, verifiable fact that stones fall to Earth if you drop them. The science comes in when you measure things like the mass of the stone, the distance it falls and the time it takes. Repeat the experiment with different objects and heights, see if there is a pattern in the data; if so devise a formula that accounts for the pattern you have discerned. Use that formula for any purpose to which it applies, and to any purpose to which it doesn't apply, use another formula. If it pleases you to do so, make up a story about why stones fall as they do; it won't make any difference to the behaviour of stones.
Is that what you think the difference is between the Secular "Sciences" and the Religious "Faiths", behavior of stones versus behavior of humans?

Obviously Physics becomes very, very complex when you consider Biology, Autonomy, Agency. A rock is one thing; a human is another.

Animals and Organisms have willpower, hence, Beliefs.
BigMike
Posts: 2210
Joined: Wed Jul 13, 2022 8:51 pm

Re: Can the Secularists be Trusted?

Post by BigMike »

Will Bouwman wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 11:54 am
Wizard22 wrote: Fri Dec 27, 2024 10:05 amThere are infinite factors that go into every Belief-system. That you and all the other Secularists overlook these "facts", demonstrates to me that very few, or none of you, are really serious about your 'Sciences'.
I can't speak for all the other secularists, but many of us take science to be fundamentally a pragmatic endeavour. It is, for example, an observable, verifiable fact that stones fall to Earth if you drop them. The science comes in when you measure things like the mass of the stone, the distance it falls and the time it takes. Repeat the experiment with different objects and heights, see if there is a pattern in the data; if so devise a formula that accounts for the pattern you have discerned. Use that formula for any purpose to which it applies, and to any purpose to which it doesn't apply, use another formula. If it pleases you to do so, make up a story about why stones fall as they do; it won't make any difference to the behaviour of stones.
Well said, Will! Your focus on the pragmatic foundation of science is spot on, especially when paired with its remarkable predictive power. The formulas derived from observable patterns, like those describing falling stones, don’t just explain—they predict future behavior with precision. That’s the strength of science: it gives us tools to understand and navigate the world, grounded in evidence rather than stories.
Post Reply