From: ian glendinning (psybertron@gmail.com)
Date: Tue Apr 19 2005 - 14:39:18 BST
Re Sent
Erin, Scott, Ant,
Spookily, Scott's last line in his most recent mail in the Kant /
Experience thread is
"Of course, [] is an a priori choice [in MoQ] , so the claim for
empiricism also goes."
Am I agreeing with you Scott ? Stranger things have happened, and as
you know I believe in synthesis - building on agreement.
Ian
On 4/19/05, ian glendinning <psybertron@gmail.com> wrote:
> Erin,
>
> This is the main debate in another thread too. (I've just clarified
> what I meant by "science wouldn't presume" in this thread, responding
> to Scott.)
>
> I think we (probably me included) are mixing up something to do with
> "empirical" and being part of primary pre-intellectual "experience".
> I'm sure empirical and experience are related only in the more "common
> sense" usage of the word experience - Dr Johnson Kicks Rocks etc. not
> some Pirsigian / Zen pre-intellectual experience of rock.
>
> I don't thing we should be using "empirical" in this MoQ space.
>
> Ian
>
> On 4/19/05, Erin <macavity11@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > IAN: Science wouldn't presume to say anything about "beauty" or
> > aesthetics,
> > It could say someting about "objective" qualities of the art work and
> > it's processes, if asked, but the person asking would be missing the
> > points of both art and science.
> > ERIN: Science wouldn't say the beauty or quality of a painting is empirical
> > but many MOQists do say that and that is what I thought Scott's point was.
> > If masses of people are "experiencing" transubstantion then why not call it
> > empirical...as militant MOQists say justifying their expansion of empirical
> > "ideas are real as rocks".
> >
> >
> >
> > ian glendinning <psybertron@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Scott, you said
> > The doctrine of transubstantiation does not declare
> > that something that science can measure has been changed. If you are going
> > to say that there is conflict because science cannot detect Christ in the
> > bread and wine, then you would have to say that art and science are in
> > conflict because science cannot detect the beauty of a painting.
> >
> > I say, I despair ...
> > This is the theistic fallacy of science, a caricature, but not science
> > itself.
> >
> > 99% of things in the world can not be proven (and 100% cannot be
> > disproven) by scientific test methods. Science is based on doubt,
> > supported by plausible explanation. Not - "I can't demonstrate that by
> > a test - so I'll explain it by divine magic."
> >
> > Science wouldn't presume to say anything about "beauty" or aesthetics,
> > It could say someting about "objective" qualities of the art work and
> > it's processes, if asked, but the person asking would be missing the
> > points of both art and science.
> >
> > As to the rest of this thread, I find myself returning to my plea from
> > a year ago that religion and global politics of war be banned from
> > this forum - they're far too complicated for either science or
> > doctrine-based causal explanations They depend primarily on whose
> > version of history you believe. That's in the memes.
> >
> > Back to basics please.
> > Ian
> >
> >
> > On 4/19/05, Scott Roberts wrote:
> > > Ant,
> > >
> > > Scott Roberts stated April 18th 2005:
> > >
> > > >Oh yes, and I'm still waiting for an example where science and
> > > >contemporary,
> > > >non-fundamentalist theism are in conflict. As I've said before, you're
> > > >about
> > > >50 to 100 years out of date.
> > >
> > > Ant:
> > > For starters, what about transubstantiation? i.e. the Roman Catholic
> > belief
> > > th! at the Eucharist (that represents the presence of Christ in the mass)
> > is
> > > literally the body and blood of Jesus.
> > >
> > > Scott:
> > > Where's the conflict? The doctrine of transubstantiation does not declare
> > > that something that science can measure has been changed. If you are going
> > > to say that there is conflict because science cannot detect Christ in the
> > > bread and wine, then you would have to say that art and science are in
> > > conflict because science cannot detect the beauty of a painting.
> > >
> > > - Scott
> > >
> > >
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