ImmortalFlame
Woke gremlin
The question is simple: why does water wet? Just admit that science can't answer the question.
Why would I "admit" something that I don't know?
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
The question is simple: why does water wet? Just admit that science can't answer the question.
Why would I "admit" something that I don't know?
Well can it?
Possibly?
That's kind of like asking "could humanity ever make a piece of string long enough to circle the Universe"? Probably not with today's technology, but how are we to say what is possible with greater technology, or greater string, or a better understanding of the Universe?
Quantum physics already raises some pretty astonishing questions about what the nature of reality actually is, and whether it is an objective truth or merely the result of our perceptions acting upon a wave of countless probabilities. There's no reason to assume it couldn't solve these and other mysteries at some point in the future.
I refer you to my post in the "Can science prove..." thread:
I didn't ask how. I asked why.
"Possibly?" is not answer.
Why is salt, salty?
Thanks for giving me my next question.
This is for you:
[youtube]Y68mGbvZZZg[/youtube]
(To continue)Why is salt, salty?
Nietzsche's assumptions about the limitations of science are meaningless, just as his assumption of any form of ultimate truth is meaningless. He cannot possibly assess the potential of what science (or any other methodology) can achieve, and is therefore simply blankly asserting that science cannot find the answers to the questions he is asking without proper consideration for the fact that he has no understanding or prior knowledge of how far science is capable of going in understanding the Universe.
It's like the string problem I proposed earlier. It's reasonable to assume we can't currently make a piece of string that wraps around the Universe, but it is not reasonable to assume that we could never do it no matter what advances in technology, string or our understanding of the Universe may bring us. Instead, he merely asserts that science "can't" do these things, and therefore suggests it is somehow a "limitation" of science. I've never found this particular claim to be very convincing, because it can only be made from a position of ignorance. Nietzsche simply couldn't possibly have the ability to tell us what the ultimate potential of an objective view of the Universe can tell us, and his position ultimately boils down to "be critical of science and don't just accept it at face value", which is something so blatantly obvious it barely needs stating.
So can science tell us what the meaning of life is?
I believe you would have to refer to Monty Python for that answer.
So science cannot answer the question why does water wet?
Nietzsche's assumptions about the limitations of science are meaningless, just as his assumption of any form of ultimate truth is meaningless. He cannot possibly assess the potential of what science (or any other methodology) can achieve, and is therefore simply blankly asserting that science cannot find the answers to the questions he is asking without proper consideration for the fact that he has no understanding or prior knowledge of how far science is capable of going in understanding the Universe.
It's like the string problem I proposed earlier. It's reasonable to assume we can't currently make a piece of string that wraps around the Universe, but it is not reasonable to assume that we could never do it no matter what advances in technology, string or our understanding of the Universe may bring us. Instead, he merely asserts that science "can't" do these things, and therefore suggests it is somehow a "limitation" of science. I've never found this particular claim to be very convincing, because it can only be made from a position of ignorance. Nietzsche simply couldn't possibly have the ability to tell us what the ultimate potential of an objective view of the Universe can tell us, and his position ultimately boils down to "be critical of science and don't just accept it at face value", which is something so blatantly obvious it barely needs stating.
Did you even read what I just wrote?So can science tell us what the meaning of life is?
Maybe to the former (although it could be suggested that science can advance human morals, but that's a whole other discussion), but I see no reason why we should assume that science cannot discover the meaning behind life.Have you ever read Nietzsche? He is right, science is a tool to discover the material universe and nothing more. It cannot teach us values, and it cannot teach us what life means.
But both are potential methods for learning it. Both are proposed as methodologies used to try and discern the truth about reality. I see no reason whatsoever to assume that science (nor religion, nor any other methodology) therefore cannot potentially lead us to an answer to such questions as why the Universe exists. You don't seem to be refuting my arguments, just re-stating Nietzsche's argument which, as I explained, is basically a form of argument from ignorance. He's asserting something that there is no good reason to assert, and it is meaningless to do so.Only the individual can do that not religion nor science.
Did you even read what I just wrote?