Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

BigMike wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 2:18 pm If something were truly self-evident, it would not need a "wider class of men" to affirm it—it would be immediately and universally recognized by all rational minds, independent of culture, tradition, or intellectual lineage. The concept of self-evidence means that no justification is necessary; its truth is inescapable upon contemplation. If what you are pointing to requires a certain literacy, background, or initiation into a specific intellectual tradition, then by definition, it is not self-evident—it is learned, interpreted, and contingent on external frameworks. The moment you require others to be "more literate" to grasp it, you have already conceded that it is not self-evident at all.
Self-evident was your term, I put it in quotes.

In any case. I certainly believe in (recognize, value, appreciate, respect) hierarchies of knowledge. I think I am in this sense “elitist”. I know that term has a bad connotation.
If what you are pointing to requires a certain literacy, background, or initiation into a specific intellectual tradition, then by definition, it is not self-evident—it is learned, interpreted, and contingent on external frameworks.
This is a complex and nuanced topic and is quite interesting.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Atla wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 8:10 pm I'm part of the causal chain. My present choices are determined by past things. Future things are determined by my present choices.
It is just there, in the self-consciousness you demonstrate that you have, and use, where you can intervene as a creative act. Thus, you have a notable agency within a largely determined chain.

Your “present choices” — your present awareness and consciousness — is the unique feature.
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henry quirk
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by henry quirk »

show the mechanism
I can't show you your organizing principle any more than I can show you a quark.
you’re not arguing against determinism
Again: in all our back & forth, across multiple threads, I haven't offered up any criticism of, or argument against determinism (cause & effect; the regularity of the world). How poor is your memory that you don't know this? I haven't even offered a full-blown defense of libertarian free will/agent causation (though, again, what I have offered is more substantial than anything you brought to the table).
you are making an untestable metaphysical claim
Oh, I think it, you, are quite testable. Is Big Mike a free will? Let's cobble together a test to answer the question.
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iambiguous
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by iambiguous »

henry quirk wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 2:15 pm
iambiguous wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 3:28 amwhy on Earth would you not be willing to invest the time in what, if IC is correct, could result in you yourself being born again.
Why are you worried about the speck in my eye? Look after the plank in your own (you're supposedly fractured and desperate to reintegrate yourself: why aren't you investin' the time to get yourself born again?).
No, no, you miss my point. I want to be "born again". Sure, there are atheists who pat themselves on the back for having what they construe to be the intellectual honesty and courage to reject God and religion and face oblivion head on.

I used to be one of them myself. On the other hand, now, with oblivion just around one or another corner, I'm here to explore the narratives of those who have managed to sustain their own belief in God. And, again, over the years, I have known many religious folks I had the utmost respect for. But in all cases their faith was predicated on an existential leap on par with Kierkegaard. Or because they genuinely accepted the Bible as the Word of God.

And here's IC claiming that beyond a leap of faith or "because the Bible says so", mere mortals do have all the historical and scientific evidence they need to know that in fact the Christian God does exist.

So, yeah, I try to encourage others to explore the videos because the more that do the greater the possibility someone will grasp this historical and scientific evidence just enough to convince me it's worth pursuing further.
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by henry quirk »

No, no, you miss my point. I want to be "born again".
No, I got your point. As I say, you're...fractured and desperate to reintegrate yourself.
So, yeah, I try to encourage others to explore the videos because the more that do the greater the possibility someone will grasp this historical and scientific evidence just enough to convince me it's worth pursuing further.
Here's the thing: I'm not fractured, so I got no call to explore the videos. I'm not the guy to lend you an assist.
BigMike
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by BigMike »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:29 pm
Atla wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 8:10 pm I'm part of the causal chain. My present choices are determined by past things. Future things are determined by my present choices.
It is just there, in the self-consciousness you demonstrate that you have, and use, where you can intervene as a creative act. Thus, you have a notable agency within a largely determined chain.

Your “present choices” — your present awareness and consciousness — is the unique feature.
Alexis, how exactly does self-consciousness—a mass-less, charge-less, non-physical entity—intervene in anything? What force does it exert? What mechanism allows it to alter physical states? If it has no causal power, then it’s just along for the ride, not an agent of intervention.
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iambiguous
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by iambiguous »

henry quirk wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 10:49 pm
No, no, you miss my point. I want to be "born again".
No, I got your point. As I say, you're...fractured and desperate to reintegrate yourself.
Yeah, I can live with that.

But here you are believing in a God that has long since skedaddled. You're not even able to convince yourself "here and now" that there is an afterlife.

Oh, well. Maybe down the road when you are considerably closer to what may well turn out to be oblivion, you'll think to yourself "what the hell, I've got little or nothing to lose and a whole lot to gain if IC is correct."

Thus...
So, yeah, I try to encourage others to explore the videos because the more that do the greater the possibility someone will grasp this historical and scientific evidence just enough to convince me it's worth pursuing further.
Here's the thing: I'm not fractured and desperate, so I got no call to explore the videos. I'm not the guy to lend you an assist.
More to the point [mine], what is IC doing to assist you when he claims to know that the Christian God does in fact exist, that there is substantial evidence to confirm this, that you are an ally of his here politically and, finally, that the last thing he wants is to imagine you burning to Hell for all of eternity without at least making a serious effort to bring you to Christ.
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by seeds »

BigMike wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 11:03 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:29 pm
Atla wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 8:10 pm I'm part of the causal chain. My present choices are determined by past things. Future things are determined by my present choices.
It is just there, in the self-consciousness you demonstrate that you have, and use, where you can intervene as a creative act. Thus, you have a notable agency within a largely determined chain.

Your “present choices” — your present awareness and consciousness — is the unique feature.
Alexis, how exactly does self-consciousness—a mass-less, charge-less, non-physical entity—intervene in anything? What force does it exert? What mechanism allows it to alter physical states? If it has no causal power, then it’s just along for the ride, not an agent of intervention.
Good grief, how many times do I need to answer that question for you as I did in the post linked below,...

viewtopic.php?p=750365#p750365

...before it finally registers in your software, and you stop asking it?
_______
Alexiev
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by Alexiev »

BigMike wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:45 am

Alexiev, this is where your argument completely
Alexiev, this is where your argument completely collapses under the weight of its own misunderstanding. Your claim that "existence governs the principles" is an empty abstraction that doesn’t actually mean anything. It’s just wordplay meant to make a simple concept seem more profound than it is. Let’s strip away the rhetorical nonsense and get to the core of the issue.

Scientific principles don’t just "describe" reality as if they are arbitrary human inventions; they are derived from consistent, repeatable observations of how the universe actually works. The conservation laws and the four fundamental interactions—gravity, electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear force—aren’t just convenient descriptors; they are the framework within which everything happens. They are not external "laws" imposed on the universe; they are the fundamental constraints that shape what is physically possible.

You are repeating the obvious. Everyone knows that this is the current scientific orthodoxy. Everyone also knows (as I wrote earlier) that if anyone could provide examples disproving this orthodoxy, the "principles" would change -- just as they have many times in the past. Doubt is the beginning of wisdom, as Einstein demonstrated when he doubted time is a constant.

My objections are not "poetic". They are logical. Inductive scientific evidence does not constitute proof. Any freshman logic course could so inform you.
let’s address your ridiculous mischaracterization of my position as "quasi-religious." You’re implying that accepting the fundamental structure of the universe as governing reality is akin to saying "the law precedes the universe." But I never said the laws predate existence itself—only that they define the structure within which all existence operates. That’s a massive difference, and one you’re either unwilling or incapable of understanding
.

I'm doing no such thing. Instead, I'm saying that your faith in current scientific orthodoxy is unjustified by the history of science, just as religious orthodoxy is unjustified. You are so invested in your rather pedestrian and insignificant theory that you fail to doubt or question. This failure is illogical and unscientific.
If you want to challenge this, do what no one arguing your side ever seems able to do: point to a single verifiable, reproducible example of something occurring outside of these fundamental principles. If you can’t, then all you’re doing is throwing up vague, pseudo-philosophical nonsense to avoid confronting the reality that everything—everything—obeys the deterministic structure of nature.

So, let’s be clear: either these principles govern existence, meaning nothing happens outside their domain, or you provide actual evidence of something that does. If you can’t, then what you’re really doing is engaging in intellectual smoke and mirrors—pretending that poetic abstractions are an argument when they are, in fact, nothing but empty noise.
You keep repeating yourself as if you have never read or understood anything I've written. Nobody could demonstrate that time was relative, until 115 years ago. Was time a constant until it proved otherwise? Or was the scientific orthodoxy incorrect?

I wouldn't object to your theories about determinism except that your pompous expectation that they are valuable is nonsense. What good is Determinism if it doesn't help us determine things? Of course scientists often can accurately predict: bravo! However, since we can't predict what choices individuals will make, determinism is worthless and irrelevant regarding "choice", even if, someday, this might change.
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by BigMike »

seeds wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 11:57 pm
BigMike wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 11:03 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:29 pm
It is just there, in the self-consciousness you demonstrate that you have, and use, where you can intervene as a creative act. Thus, you have a notable agency within a largely determined chain.

Your “present choices” — your present awareness and consciousness — is the unique feature.
Alexis, how exactly does self-consciousness—a mass-less, charge-less, non-physical entity—intervene in anything? What force does it exert? What mechanism allows it to alter physical states? If it has no causal power, then it’s just along for the ride, not an agent of intervention.
Good grief, how many times do I need to answer that question for you as I did in the post linked below,...

viewtopic.php?p=750365#p750365

...before it finally registers in your software, and you stop asking it?
_______
Why don't you just stop answering "that question", then? I'm equally tired of your answers.
BigMike
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by BigMike »

Alexiev wrote: Fri Jan 31, 2025 12:13 am
BigMike wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:45 am

Alexiev, this is where your argument completely
Alexiev, this is where your argument completely collapses under the weight of its own misunderstanding. Your claim that "existence governs the principles" is an empty abstraction that doesn’t actually mean anything. It’s just wordplay meant to make a simple concept seem more profound than it is. Let’s strip away the rhetorical nonsense and get to the core of the issue.

Scientific principles don’t just "describe" reality as if they are arbitrary human inventions; they are derived from consistent, repeatable observations of how the universe actually works. The conservation laws and the four fundamental interactions—gravity, electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear force—aren’t just convenient descriptors; they are the framework within which everything happens. They are not external "laws" imposed on the universe; they are the fundamental constraints that shape what is physically possible.

You are repeating the obvious. Everyone knows that this is the current scientific orthodoxy. Everyone also knows (as I wrote earlier) that if anyone could provide examples disproving this orthodoxy, the "principles" would change -- just as they have many times in the past. Doubt is the beginning of wisdom, as Einstein demonstrated when he doubted time is a constant.

My objections are not "poetic". They are logical. Inductive scientific evidence does not constitute proof. Any freshman logic course could so inform you.
let’s address your ridiculous mischaracterization of my position as "quasi-religious." You’re implying that accepting the fundamental structure of the universe as governing reality is akin to saying "the law precedes the universe." But I never said the laws predate existence itself—only that they define the structure within which all existence operates. That’s a massive difference, and one you’re either unwilling or incapable of understanding
.

I'm doing no such thing. Instead, I'm saying that your faith in current scientific orthodoxy is unjustified by the history of science, just as religious orthodoxy is unjustified. You are so invested in your rather pedestrian and insignificant theory that you fail to doubt or question. This failure is illogical and unscientific.
If you want to challenge this, do what no one arguing your side ever seems able to do: point to a single verifiable, reproducible example of something occurring outside of these fundamental principles. If you can’t, then all you’re doing is throwing up vague, pseudo-philosophical nonsense to avoid confronting the reality that everything—everything—obeys the deterministic structure of nature.

So, let’s be clear: either these principles govern existence, meaning nothing happens outside their domain, or you provide actual evidence of something that does. If you can’t, then what you’re really doing is engaging in intellectual smoke and mirrors—pretending that poetic abstractions are an argument when they are, in fact, nothing but empty noise.
You keep repeating yourself as if you have never read or understood anything I've written. Nobody could demonstrate that time was relative, until 115 years ago. Was time a constant until it proved otherwise? Or was the scientific orthodoxy incorrect?

I wouldn't object to your theories about determinism except that your pompous expectation that they are valuable is nonsense. What good is Determinism if it doesn't help us determine things? Of course scientists often can accurately predict: bravo! However, since we can't predict what choices individuals will make, determinism is worthless and irrelevant regarding "choice", even if, someday, this might change.
Alexiev, your entire response boils down to vague skepticism for its own sake, without actually offering an alternative or a counterexample. You’re just throwing out science was wrong before as if that automatically invalidates current knowledge. That’s not an argument—it’s a cop-out.

Yes, scientific understanding evolves. But it evolves through evidence, not through aimless doubt. The principle of relativity didn’t emerge from someone just insisting that time might not be constant—it came from empirical inconsistencies in Newtonian mechanics that led to testable, repeatable discoveries.

So, let’s get to the heart of your deflection:
- If fundamental scientific principles have changed, it’s because we found empirical reasons to change them—not because someone just philosophized them away.
- If you want to challenge determinism, point to a single empirical event that violates the conservation laws or the four fundamental interactions.
- Until then, your “doubt” isn’t the beginning of wisdom—it’s the end of engagement with reality.

And as for your last bit of hand-waving—determinism is irrelevant if we can’t predict choices? That’s a complete misunderstanding. Determinism isn’t about human-level predictability; it’s about cause and effect being absolute at all levels. Just because we don’t have the computational power to predict every neuron firing in your brain doesn’t mean they aren’t determined by prior states. Your inability to predict something doesn’t make it free.
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by Atla »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:29 pm
Atla wrote: Thu Jan 30, 2025 8:10 pm I'm part of the causal chain. My present choices are determined by past things. Future things are determined by my present choices.
It is just there, in the self-consciousness you demonstrate that you have, and use, where you can intervene as a creative act. Thus, you have a notable agency within a largely determined chain.

Your “present choices” — your present awareness and consciousness — is the unique feature.
Prove it :)

Maybe in more than 4 circular dimensions where the world is deterministically happening around you in the QM-observer sense. (The observer is a higher dimensional circularity than the 4d world around it and has some apparent free will.) But there's no way you can prove it or disprove it.
Last edited by Atla on Fri Jan 31, 2025 1:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
Alexiev
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by Alexiev »

BigMike wrote: Fri Jan 31, 2025 12:37 am [.

[
Alexiev, your entire response boils down to vague skepticism for its own sake, without actually offering an alternative or a counterexample. You’re just throwing out science was wrong before as if that automatically invalidates current knowledge. That’s not an argument—it’s a cop-out.

Yes, scientific understanding evolves. But it evolves through evidence, not through aimless doubt. The principle of relativity didn’t emerge from someone just insisting that time might not be constant—it came from empirical inconsistencies in Newtonian mechanics that led to testable, repeatable discoveries.

So, let’s get to the heart of your deflection:
- If fundamental scientific principles have changed, it’s because we found empirical reasons to change them—not because someone just philosophized them away.
- If you want to challenge determinism, point to a single empirical event that violates the conservation laws or the four fundamental interactions.
- Until then, your “doubt” isn’t the beginning of wisdom—it’s the end of engagement with reality.

And as for your last bit of hand-waving—determinism is irrelevant if we can’t predict choices? That’s a complete misunderstanding. Determinism isn’t about human-level predictability; it’s about cause and effect being absolute at all levels. Just because we don’t have the computational power to predict every neuron firing in your brain doesn’t mean they aren’t determined by prior states. Your inability to predict something doesn’t make it free.
Once again, Mike, you are blathering aimlessly. Why would you argue that an inability to predict choices doesn't make ihem undetermined? I've never suggested otherwise. Neither have I ever said determinism is clearly incorrect. You appear to be incapable of reading my posts. I never claimed to "challenge determinism".

Good grief! How many times must I tell you this? It's like shouting into the void. I won't bother repeating myself again, because you appear to be incapable of understanding anything I write.

Thanks, though, for explaining that science evolves through evidence. Without you to inform us, who would have guessed?
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henry quirk
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by henry quirk »

But here you are believing in a God that has long since skedaddled. You're not even able to convince yourself "here and now" that there is an afterlife.

Oh, well. Maybe down the road when you are considerably closer to what may well turn out to be oblivion, you'll think to yourself "what the hell, I've got little or nothing to lose and a whole lot to gain if IC is correct."

More to the point [mine], what is IC doing to assist you when he claims to know that the Christian God does in fact exist, that there is substantial evidence to confirm this, that you are an ally of his here politically and, finally, that the last thing he wants is to imagine you burning to Hell for all of eternity without at least making a serious effort to bring you to Christ.
And there you go again: worryin' about the speck in my eye instead of lookin' after the plank in your own.
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iambiguous
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Re: Why Do the Religious Reject Science While Embracing the Impossible?

Post by iambiguous »

henry quirk wrote: Fri Jan 31, 2025 1:30 am
But here you are believing in a God that has long since skedaddled. You're not even able to convince yourself "here and now" that there is an afterlife.

Oh, well. Maybe down the road when you are considerably closer to what may well turn out to be oblivion, you'll think to yourself "what the hell, I've got little or nothing to lose and a whole lot to gain if IC is correct."

More to the point [mine], what is IC doing to assist you when he claims to know that the Christian God does in fact exist, that there is substantial evidence to confirm this, that you are an ally of his here politically and, finally, that the last thing he wants is to imagine you burning to Hell for all of eternity without at least making a serious effort to bring you to Christ.
And there you go again: worryin' about the speck in my eye instead of lookin' after the plank in your own.
Well, with objective morality at stake on this side of the grave and immortality and salvation at stake on the other side, what's that got to do with specks and planks?

And I could not possibly care less about you here in regard to your posts. You're just one more run-of-the-mill objectivist to me. Instead, I'm looking for anyone who will take up IC's challenge to me to watch those videos.

After all, perhaps the evidence is there and I'm just not able or willing to grasp it.

Anyway, think it over. If you change your mind, welcome aboard: viewtopic.php?t=40750
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