paarsurrey
Veteran Member
Science has its limitations. Can it exceed them?
Please
Regards
Please
Regards
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No.Science has its limitations. Can it exceed them?
Please
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As a whole, no.Religion has its limits. Can it recognise them?
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It may be able to continually expand and understand all. In the meantime, there is no justification in my mind for the sometimes arrogant attitude of many against claims of the paranormal nor for the philosophy of 'scientism'.Science has its limitations. Can it exceed them?
Please
Regards
Are you talking about self imposed limitations or those imposed by the character of nature? In the first case, yes. In the second case, no; although, some limitations are only because of a lack of our ability to overcome them, which may change.Science has its limitations. Can it exceed them?
Please
Regards
"... so that they will not understand one another's speech."…
But now we do.
Now we do what?
Understand each other's speech.
"Because the things you mentioned will never be done by science."OK - so what do you mean by "can it exceed them"? Because the things you mentioned will never be done by science. But that doesn't mean that morality, aesthetics, the application of science and the occurrence of supernatural explanations are not amenable to scientific investigation and/or explanation.
Personally, I think the limiting factor in science doing what it is meant to do (i.e. explaining the world in terms of the natural processes that make the world what it is) is the insistence of scientists (not all, and not science itself) of looking for reductive answers to everything. But we are slowly moving away from that and looking at systems and complexity and emergence...etc. The more ecological the scientific lens becomes, the more I think it will get closer to a "true" picture of reality. Investigating what "atoms" do in isolation is all well and good as an underpinning of our understanding, but beyond the near vacuum of interstellar space (where nothing happens) "atoms" (whatever they really are) rarely, if ever, exist in isolation. Its what they get up to when they get together that makes a world.
In the end, I suppose, the best possible outcome would be a science that describes accurately and in detail what an entire universe does when all the bits are joined together. Of course we'll never actually be able to do that - if we did we might very well "know the Mind of God" as Hawking put it - but I also think the idea that reality is ultimately reducible to a set of relatively simple equations (some kind of elegant "Theory of Everything") is almost certainly wrong. As somebody once said, it is absurd to imagine that the Ten Commandments or the Mona Lisa could derived from the standard model of particle physics.
So science is destined, for as long as there are true scientists (honest, curious and intelligent people), to continue probing the natural world for natural answers to add incrementally to our partial understanding of reality and our place in it. And that process will probably ultimately know no limits (in the sense that it would, at least in theory, be able to explain anything and everything that happens in terms of natural laws and forces) - but it still won't make moral judgements or admit supernatural causation as a valid scientific explanation.
Science has limits: A few things that science does not do:
Science has limits: A few things that science does not do
- Science doesn't make moral judgment
- Science doesn't make aesthetic judgments
- Science doesn't tell you how to use scientific knowledge
- Science doesn't draw conclusions about supernatural explanations
Right? Please
Regards
Science has limits: A few things that science does not do:
Science has limits: A few things that science does not do
- Science doesn't make moral judgment
- Science doesn't make aesthetic judgments
- Science doesn't tell you how to use scientific knowledge
- Science doesn't draw conclusions about supernatural explanations
Right? Please
Regards
And...? I am even more confused by your question now that I seem to have given you the answer! So far, you contention seems to be that science has limits (OK, it does, so what?) and that it is not used to make moral judgements...etc. (agreed, that's not the purpose of science). But your argument seems to me on a par with stating the perfectly obvious - something akin to saying "the principles of the internal combustion engine are not explained by animal physiology" (unless its my old jalopy which kind of behaves like a cross between a paraplegic donkey and a flatulent snail - but that's another story). "The point" so far seems to me to be entirely redundant pleonastic tautological prolixity (now analyze my last four words and you'll see exactly what I mean about yours )."Because the things you mentioned will never be done by science."
And that is the point.