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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Path: sparky!uunet!rde!aee!gene
- From: gene@aee.aee.com (Gene Kochanowsky)
- Subject: Re: Religion & Physics Don't Mix
- Message-ID: <1992Nov9.200050.5489@aee.aee.com>
- Organization: Associated Electronic Engineers
- References: <1992Nov4.182157.17016@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU+ <73642@hydra.gatech.EDU+ <1992Nov4.225441.22809@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU+ <73753@hydra.gatech.EDU> <1992Nov6.145757.26607@aee.aee.com> <BxBpHs.DtF@unixhub.SLAC.Stanford.EDU> <1992Nov7.212535.312@aee.aee.com <BxF7qH.LEw@unixhub.SLAC.Stanford.EDU>
- Date: Mon, 9 Nov 1992 20:00:50 GMT
- Lines: 197
-
-
-
- >In article <1992Nov7.212535.312@aee.aee.com>, gene@aee.aee.com (Gene Kochanowsky)
- >writes:
- >|> sschaff@roc.SLAC.Stanford.EDU (Stephen F. Schaffner) writes:
-
- >|> > This is complete nonsense. There may be religious leaders who
- >|> >demand unquestioning acceptance of belief, but I've certainly never met one.
- >|> >As a matter of interest, how many have you actually asked? Most religions
- >|> >do indeed require some kind of intellectual commitment eventually, but in the
- >|> >varieties I'm familiar with that commitment is compatible with continued
- >|> >questioning.
-
- How can you live in this culture and not be constantly bombarded
- by religion of all kinds. They come to your door, they are on TV. You meet
- them at parties. They are on the internet. They send you mail. They are
- _everywhere_. I can throw rocks at a church from my house. And, of course,
- with the wide selection of religions availible in America today, it is possible
- to get any slant you want. There exist religions that have been packaged to
- appeal to many mass audiencies. At what point in time, of this constant readjusting
- of religion to suit the population in general, is it really no longer a
- religion, but just some sort of national feel good, anyone can join in campaign.
-
- If a given religion says that everything can be questioned. That you don't
- even have to believe in a God or creator or whatever. That you can make it up
- as you go along, is this a religion? If a religion has a set of beliefs and
- a model of how and why the world is as it is, but allows the members to
- question it and propose alternatives, if there is no critical review,
- burden of proof, is it not really just a psuedo-science, like Astrology and
- Acupuncture? If there is critical review, and empirical proof then isn't it
- now become a Science ?
-
- Are you trying to tell me that you are in a religion that is really a
- Science? Or is it that somehow you think Science is really religion? Or are
- you just totally confused?
-
- Those religions that are serious, require that the dispensers of
- religion at least have faith, because there is no proof. What a religion proports
- is beyond proof, this leaves only faith. There have been many fine postings
- in this vien that have demonstraited the difficulty of dealing with proof
- and omnipotent things. Also there is an interesting proof in symbolic logic
- that shows that from the set of all things (omnipotence) anything can be proven.
-
- -A, A > B
-
- > == is provable
-
- I contend that omnipotence is inherently a contradiction, that
- it intrinsically includes "the case and not the case", both alive and dead, both
- here and there, etc. Thus from it anything goes. Anything can be proven and
- nothing can be proven. What does this leave but faith.
-
- And don't tell me that you don't require something omnipotent in
- your religion. If you do not, then what is the differenct between your God and
- a UFO?
-
- >|> Or if you are a bible thumper try this quote for size:
- >|>
- >|> "proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing"
-
- > I doubt I've ever thumped a Bible, and I can't imagine a reason for
- >thumping a bible, but I'll bite anyway: where's the quote from?
-
- Try these on for size
-
- Prov. 3:5 Trust in the Lord with all thine hart; and lean
- not unto thine own understanding.
-
- Cor. 2:5 Your faith should not stand in the wisdom of
- men, but in the power of God.
-
- Eph. 6:16 Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith
- ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts
- of the wicked (Scientists).
-
- Heb. 11:1 Faith is the substance of things hoped for,
- evidence of things not seen.
-
- Heb. 11:6 But without faith it is impossible to please Him,
- for he who comes to God must believe that He is,
- and that He is a rewarder of those that seek him.
-
-
- >|> If there is any complete nonsense here, it is that a person can be truely
- >|> religious and scientific in his religion at the same time. It is absurd,
- >|> illogical
- >|> and speaks volumes of misunderstanding on the part of that person of what is the
- >|> basis of both science and religion.
-
- > Who said anything about being scientific in his religion? I expect a
- >scientist to scientific in her science, not in her religion. What I did object
- >to was the simple paradigm "science questions everything, religion questions
- >nothing". I don't think either part of the statement is true.
-
- I agree wholeheartly with your statement that Science should be for
- Science and not used in religion. I do question the last statement. At
- what point does a religion remain a religion, if there is questioning and
- revision allowed, and becomes pseudo-science or worse science itself?
-
- >|> >You simply can't do science without the
- >|> >"unquestioning belief" (usually unconscious) in the foundations upon which
- >|> >it is built.
- >|>
- >|> Yes, you are absolutely right. In the last hundred years there have been
- >|> no scientists that have questioned the science of thier time. Not Rutherford or Bohr,
- >|> or Einstien, or Shroedinger, not Feynman or Dirac. Gosh, it doesn't seem like any
- >|> scientist has questioned the science of the day..... NOT.
- >|>
- >|> And just maybe in the group of "space potato" scientist, as you call them,
- >|> might be the next Einstien, or Dirac. That person will be heavily criticized, and
- >|> scrutinzed, but, just maybe, if the person is right, the experiments will be done,
- >|> and will prove thier point. That person will become the producer of new science.
-
- >I'm afraid you've missed my point. I said nothing about questioning the science
- >of the day -- how conservative science should be is a practical question only.
- >I was pointing out that all scientists, as long as they're doing science, must
- >accept the conceptual foundations of science (doesn't sound very controversial,
- >does it?). Let me try an example. Suppose an experiment is reported in the
- >literature that suggests that conservation of energy does not hold under
- >some circumstances. What options are available to a scientist reading this?
- >He can dismiss it as a bad experiment or a statistical fluctuation (which would
- >probably be the case); if the evidence is strong enough, he might consider
- >changing the definition of energy (unlikely, but it's happened before).
- >Finally, if he's really bold, and he can't find a way to fit the new results
- >into the existing theory, he will consider the possibility that energy
- >conservation in fact doesn't hold, and that what we had taken to be a valid
- >conservation law was actually an approximate result of some more fundamental
- >theory (very unlikely, but as you point out, revolutions do occur). Mind you,
- >he may have no idea yet what that theory is, but he is confident one is out
- >there, waiting to be found. The one thing he does not do, as long as he is
- >acting as a scientist, is conclude that the world has stopped exhibiting law-
- >like behavior, and that no theory will ever be found to explain the new
- >result. This, I maintain, is an example of faith in operation. I happen to
- >think it's well-founded faith, but that's irrelevant. As in the case of
- >religious faith, you can continue to practice your science even if you harbor
- >some doubts about its foundations, as long as you don't let them affect the
- >way you do your work; once you actually start believing that the world
- >doesn't follow rules, or that the scientific literature is all cooked by the
- >government to keep the truths of Larsonian physics from the masses, you are
- >no longer doing science (the analogy with religious faith should be clear).
- > Now you may well believe that the assumptions made in doing science are
- >self-evident (I have the same inclinations myself), but it doesn't take much
- >reading in the literature of other cultures to realize that self-evident
- >beliefs are often historically conditioned. If you want a more contemporary
- >approach, try reading some sociology or philosophy of science: some of those
- >people don't think what we're doing is at all simple or self-evident.
-
- What you have illustraited is not so much a faith as a desire. If the
- Universe is not repeatable in some fashion (statistical repeatablity will do)
- then there is no chance for Science to succeed. However if it is found that the
- Universe is not repeatable in any sense, then I am sure it will be reported,
- in the journals, questioned, examined and put to the test.(Kind of an absurd
- idea but I am sure it would happen). There may be scientists that take repeatability
- on faith. There is no reason to do so, since if it is not true they are out
- of business. I am sure there would be some people who would continue to try
- to practice Science if this came to be, but at that time Science would
- definitly have become a religion or history or both.
-
- >|> The only sad thing about Mr. Shaffner's last statment is it shows a
- >|> confusion, a thought process that identifies Science as a kind of religion. When I was
- >|> in grad school, it was common for the students of the time to rigidly oppose any
- >|> idea that the Science being taught at the time could be wrong. This was independent
- >|> of any opposing idea, they had faith in what they were being taught. These grad students
- >|> were not scientist, they were preachers. Because of this, I am afaid for science in
- >|> the US, this is the sort of thing that could kill it.
-
- > Sorry, I don't think science is a kind of religion. I engage in both
- >pursuits, and I am well aware that they have different goals, methods and
- >motivations. One thing they do have in common, though, is that both offer an
- >interpretive framework for understanding the world. Whether the frameworks are
- >compatible depends in detail on which religious tradition you're talking about
- >(had the original claim been that, say, fundamentalist Christian creation
- >science and biology were incompatible, I would have done nothing but agree).
- >That they frequently are compatible is clear from the many scientists who are
- >and have been practicing believers in a variety of religious faiths.
-
- I fail to understand how the existence of Scientists that practice
- religion indicates that they are compatible. Next you will be telling me
- that Lawyers and the public good are compatible. Action of differing motives
- in the same person, makes no indication of compatibility or complimentarity.
- However it might be an indication of schizophrenia.
-
- Lastley I would like to nail this one last nail into the coffin, and
- you will hear from me no more. I live here in the bible belt of America, and
- have many friends and relatives of all faiths. I have said to them, and in
- church many times that it is all complete and utter nonsense. I have done
- this in the Ukraine, in some of the oldest churches in the world, in Paris
- in Moscow, in Canada. I have asked directly to the heavens in these places of
- demonstraited sanctity, "Strike me dead where I stand". I would have endured
- the fires of Hell forever just for that bit of proof. And yet here I write.
-
- Gene Kochanowsky
- --
- Gene Kochanowsky | "And remember ....
- Associated Electronic Engineers, Inc. | The better you look ...
- (904)893-6741 Voice, (904)893-2758 Fax | the more you will see."
- gene@aee.com | Miss Lidia
-