Brian2
Veteran Member
No it does not.
Maybe it does not. But it seems to reflect a faith in the philosophy of science about the possibility of a dualism at play.
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No it does not.
Our physical existence that can be falsified by 'objective verifiable evidence.'
Not necessarily, but as far as defining the 'Natural World' it works.
I suppose one can say we have evidence of the explanatory power of the the scientific method, which proceeds on the basis of methodological naturalism, in making sense of the physical world. But it is clearly true that methodological naturalism is an axiomatic principle, employed before any evidence-gathering commences, and then justified retrospectively by the successes that science has had.
No. Not a chance. The whole key to science's success, since its birth after the Renaissance, is insistence on looking for natural explanations. Years without success are neither here nor there. Science can research and wait for the pieces to come together. It never moves smoothly, but always in fits and starts.Do you think that science may change and allow for the unnatural after years with not success in finding the natural solution to certain problems?
I'm afraid our perceptions are disparate enough that translations are very difficult. My view is that I answered what was asked. I will try to improve my translation skills. For the time being, I'm sorry that I am unable to assuage.I don't see how this answered the question.
I'm also not seeing a practical example. Which I asked specifically for extra clarity.
No, and 'faith' does not apply to the sciences involved with consciousness, nor any other science..
If only a naturalistic answer can be given by science to the question of consciousness then that shows faith in naturalism or if you like, lack of faith in the possible spiritual basis of consciousness.
Again, I didn't make an argument and I haven't reached any conclusions from ignorance or otherwise. I asked a question.
If you read through the OP you'll get to the point where I state that I'm confident that science will solve the problem of consciousness. I'm asking whether my confidence is akin to faith.
Or we simply start at different positions and come at it from different angles.
Someone who's absolutely convinced that "souls" exist and that they are independent of the human brain, will obviously look at "consciousness" in very different ways compared to someone who doesn't believe such "souls" exist.
Well, consider the picture above.
Would your machine see a yellow flower, or a white one with a red center?
It's not without evidence.
Science has a large and impressive track record of successfully solving such problems.
It's a tool of which the purpose is exactly that: solving such problems.
Consider the 3rd possibility: We can't explain it and leave it at that.
That would be better than coming up with a naturalistic answer that is biased and labelling it as the truth for the world to believe.
No. Not a chance. The whole key to science's success, since its birth after the Renaissance, is insistence on looking for natural explanations. Years without success are neither here nor there. Science can research and wait for the pieces to come together. It never moves smoothly, but always in fits and starts.
But tell me, do you have any examples in mind? It seems to me there are fairly few fields in which there have been no successes in the last half century or so.
That are no truth for the world in practice. There are different beliefs, that works. You have yours and they work for you. I have other beliefs and they work for me.
As long as you don't claim truth over me or I do that for you, we can try to work something out.
It has not got a track record of solving problems which directly impinge on the spiritual realm
nor of even recognising such problems or the spiritual realm as possible.
All science can do it try and see what it comes up with, even if any answer would be biased and be an educated guess of naturalism.
That would be better than coming up with a naturalistic answer that is biased and labelling it as the truth for the world to believe.
That are no truth for the world in practice. There are different beliefs, that works. You have yours and they work for you. I have other beliefs and they work for me.
As long as you don't claim truth over me or I do that for you, we can try to work something out.
I did not have anything in mind but imo there are areas of science (to do with what has happened in the past and in which 'success' has been achieved) which appear to me to be educated guesses based on the naturalistic methodology and so it becomes questionable as to whether the answers arrived at are real science, as in real knowledge. What I am talking about is in other areas which seem to encroach into the religious realm. Abiogenesis, beginnings of the universe, mechanisms of evolution.
If only a naturalistic answer can be given by science to the question of consciousness then that shows faith in naturalism or if you like, lack of faith in the possible spiritual basis of consciousness.