Yet, religion has this bit of a problem in that it makes lots of claims that can not be shown to be true, can not be tested, and you get all sorts of people willing to kill other people due to their disagreements.pax wrote:Which is an unprovable assumption, and therefore not science. Science is severely limited by sensory perception and whatever instruments men can devise to enhance that perception. No one can put a thought in a bottle and conduct experiments upon it. Yet no one doubts that such a thing as a thought does indeed exist.bernee51 wrote:Not sure what you problem here is...a definition: Philosophical naturalism is the doctrine that the observable world is all there is.pax wrote:
That's easy. Science is merely the discovering of facts about the natural world. Philosophy is the reasoning upon those facts to produce a theory. I don't have a problem with any fact discovered by science. My problem is with people like yourself who cloak those facts in philisophical naturalism and then proclaim philisophical naturalism to be science. It's not. Get over it.
As we see over the years of historically recorded science, what one generation accepts as scientific truth is altered in the next generation. Sometimes the accepted dogmatic truth of one generation of scientists is even stood on its head by the successding generations of scientists.
A good example would be the impetus theory, which was dogmatic to the scientists who preceeded Newton, and even with Newton's proofs took a generation to be fully uprooted.[/quote]