olavisjo wrote:
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Is naturalism true?
- Naturalism
- 2 : a theory denying that an event or object has a supernatural significance;
specifically : the doctrine that scientific laws are adequate to account for all phenomena
Not by that definition it's not true.
Where are there any scientific laws that are adequate to account for all phenomena?
I've been a physicist my entire life and never heard of any such thing.
I know that scientists are dreaming of a "T.O.E." (a Theory of Everything), but to the best of my knowledge they aren't even close to having any such thing in hand.
Moreover, there seems to be a lot of misunderstand even in the scientific community (or perhaps it's just in the public's misunderstanding of the scientific community).
Many scientists are working on theories of "Quantum Gravity" in the hopes of melding together gravity and quantum mechanics for a better understanding of what we already know.
But even that would not be a "T.O.E." Quantum Gravity still will not solve the mysteries of the Quantum world itself.
Even a model of Quantum Gravity would merely meld gravity into the quantum picture but it's not going to make the mysteries of Quantum Mechanics mysterious vanish.
So where are these "Scientific laws that are adequate to account for all phenomena"?
When I see those in hand, then and only then, will I consider a term like "Naturalism".
This idea that science has nature in a bag is a joke!
It's nowhere near being in the bag.
They thought they had nature in the bag with Newtonian physics and they were dead wrong. Why they are jumping the gun twice in a row like this is beyond me.
There are no "Scientific laws that are adequate to account for all phenomena"
That's baloney.