ScottySatan
Well-Known Member
Us philosophers make the precise same argument against the institution of science.
Not everything is accessible to the scientific method, and that is why we have other methods
such as hermeneutics, phenomenology, logic, and metaphoric literature as well as mysticism.
For example, just because I may witness a crime, does not mean that I can prove it
to a formal pedantic institution. That crime I still know to be real. But science that does not appreciate
its own limited philosophical context, will claim that the crime does not exist because it cannot be proven
to the institution.
It is true, that many people turn to dogmatic religion, often for instant explanations, but in recent centuries,
that is the role played by the institution of science, which itself often replaces empiricism and logic
with sheer belligerence and arguments from economics. Plenty of people get paid to to do all sorts
of things, and the more society progresses, the more people are paid redundantly.
The methods of hermeneutics, phenomenology, logic, metaphoric literature and especially mysticism
have all demonstrated that Gnosis of God is a real and lucid experience, which has motivated
the minds of the greatest thinkers, almost without exception.
I totally agree that there's a place for non-science in this. But your OP gave us a scientific context so that's what I went with.
I agree with you about the beligerence and stuff about lots of scientists, but not science itself. It looks like there's a strong link between skepticism (essential in today's science paradigm) and cynicism (usually bad in today's science paradigm). Someone with a healthy dose of one has a healthy dose of the other. But we are advancing in spite of ourselves.
I don't agree that there is anything that science can never ever figure out. We've been wrong about that too many times. That's my take-home message.