Re: Diversity, Inclusion, Equity
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 1:40 am
Will respond to one idea tonight; maybe others shortly. I strongly disagree with your concept of faith vs reason. The concept of reason is being convinced of truth based on evidence and rational inquiry. Faith is believe without evidence (i.e. in things unseen). At the extreme, evidence is the enemy of faith. The more outrageous the claim, the greater the faith required to believe it. Hence, irrationality can strengthen faith. Mr. Alan Watts commented on this.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Oct 29, 2020 3:10 am Side note: no problem about the format issues, KL. Once I saw it, I was able to sort it back out. Thanks for taking the time to respond.
Well, if you admit Secular Atheism is "a certain ideology...I recognize," then it's certainly not a "straw man." It may be the wrong "man" to describe your view...I can't say, because I wasn't trying to attribute it to you...but it is a very influential Western ideology, as you recognize...not a straw man at all.KLewchuk wrote: ↑Wed Oct 28, 2020 11:53 pm Sorry; think you are throwing up a straw man and false choice on this. "Secular Atheism" is a term for a certain ideology which you briefly describe and I recognize. However, Eastern philosophy does not focus on narrative in this way and is consistent with meaning, evolution, reason, and science.
As for Eastern Philosophy (I presume you mean Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism and their related systems), unfortunately for the East, they are not at all consonant with science. Science is a product of the West, and that's why the West had an Industrial Revolution while the East was still essentially backward. And it wasn't that there aren't enough intelligent people in India, China or environs, of course; we know THAT isn't true. Rather, the problem was that their cherished religions did not provide adequate grounds for thinking scientifically at all, and only once they started to shed them was science a thing they could conceive or start to practice. Clearly, they've done better since.
Why didn't they have what they needed to imagine science? Well, because most of those religions are polytheistic or agnostic, and don't even argue for linear time, let alone a single, coherent universe governed by a Creator who establishes law-like regularities. To anticipate those things, you've got to believe, like Bacon, in a single, coherent, law-giving God. After that, you can secularize it if you wish, and get Modernity. But you're never going to get it in the first place if you can't exercise the faith to believe the world could be, and should be, a place that is rationally governed and composed by physical laws.
Oh, the old contrast between truth and faith? That's a myth, I'm afraid.Here is a difference. If you are modern, you can critically investigate a narrative and ask, "is it true"? Certain Christians must take the narrative "on faith".
"Faith," contrary to Atheist legend, is not "believing what you know ain't true," or "believing without/contrary to evidence." For a Christian like, say, Francis Bacon, it means only to rest one's conviction on the best available evidence, and expect regularities because of the regularity of His character...which is what science is supposed to do, actually. It takes for granted an orderly, law-governed universe.
This is a big topic, but the old faith-science dichotomy is quite false, both historically and philosophically. The Scientific Method itself (the hypothesis-testing-conclusions procedure) was only created in the 17th Century, and by Bacon, who was not only the leading philosopher of science, but an ardent Christian theologian as well. One glance at his short essay, "Of Truth," for example, will show you that. https://www.bartleby.com/3/1/1.html
Which one?I see that PoMo does the same, the evidence does not support the narrative of power that they assert.
The view that all narratives secretly hide "the will to power" actually goes back to Nietzsche, who was Foucault's biggest influencer. And Nietzsche was an Atheist of the most ardent sort, but nowhere near young enough for Postmodernism. He died in 1900, before even Modernism even reached its zenith.You simply "believe" that the person doesn't exist and everything is a social relation based on power "praise be to Derrida and Foucault and Leotard (i.e. the holy PoMo Trinity).
But the other one, "the person doesn't exist"? I don't recognize that one from Postmodernism. Do you have a source for that one?