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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
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- From: crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU (Cameron Randale Bass)
- Subject: Re: Religion & Physics Don't Mix
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.020150.8786@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- Sender: usenet@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU
- Organization: University of Virginia
- References: <1992Nov17.032437.2544@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1992Nov17.213226.11458@reks.uia.ac.be>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 02:01:50 GMT
- Lines: 144
-
- In article <1992Nov17.213226.11458@reks.uia.ac.be> gustin@nat2.uia.ac.be (Emmanuel Gustin) writes:
- >crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU (Cameron Randale Bass) writes:
- >
- >: Science is not about everything that is 'true'
- >: in this world. It involves a very restricted subset of all of
- >: the possible 'realities' in this 'world'. Now while I believe that
- >: all scientists should obey certain tenets of morality and ethics,
- >: that is a belief that is completely independent of science.
- >:
- >: As for creating moral problems, moral issues are outside of science.
- >: Science doesn't create moral problems *within* science.
- >: How could they be otherwise, since there seems to be no way to
- >: assign scientific 'value' to morality. Moral problems come in
- >: the context of societies, and must be solved within that context.
- >
- >Read what I wrote, not what you think I should have written. I didn't
- >write that science is about everything that is 'true' in this world; I
- >wrote that what science considers 'true', is to be considered 'true' in
- >this world. I didn't write that morality and etics are part of science. I
- >think that science has important consequences for morality and ethics. I
- >did not even write that moral issues are 'inside science'. I insist that
- >they can be *created* by science (Ever heard of genetic engineering?) and
- >are very much inside religion.
-
- Good. If they are outside, why are we discussing them here?
-
- >: There are any number of religions that could claim that large
- >: elements of what you consider 'reality' are illusory. Outside of
- >: science, you'd be hard-pressed to defend your 'reality' as any
- >: different from theirs. Maybe you are living in *their* reality and all
- >: of our physical laws are simply illusions.
- >
- >1. But a scientist has to select a religion that accepts physical
- > laws, or create a new religion, or explain his beliefs in a
- > scientifically acceptable 'reality'. And this scientific reality is
- > quite hard to ignore even for the non-scientist.
-
- A scientist has to do nothing of the sort.
-
- >2. Are you saying that the 'reality of science' is not qualitatively different
- > from any (other) illusion? Then science is at most some kind of religion.
- > Would be nice for you, has one clearly cannot believe in TWO religions
- > at the same time.
-
- Yes, 'the reality of science' runs by a fundamentally different
- set of rules. It is not a religion. The question of whether science
- is an illusion or not is not answerable within science so is
- completely moot within science.
-
- The number of religions that one can believe in at one time seems
- moot as far as science is concerned, as are my feelings on religion
- outside of science.
-
- > One difference is that what you call (obviously with disgust) '*their*
- > reality' has to be based on dogmatism, something one TRIES to avoid in
- > science.
-
- Why with disgust? It is just a recognition that the game is
- played by different rules outside science. 'Other' reality can
- be based on whatever one wants it to be based on.
-
- >: >: Also, 'clearly not true' is in the eye of the beholder.
- >: >
- >: >But that is what science is about: gathering knowledge the truth whereof
- >: >is NOT in the eye of the beholder, but accepted by everybody.
- >:
- >: Ohno. Back to 'science is truth' again.
- >:
- >: Since I liked Ben Weiner's words on this topic I'll leave that
- >: aspect of it alone. I will only point out that 'clearly not
- >: true' is not restricted to science, and does not necessarily
- >: have a scientific answer.
- >
- >Okay, science is not truth itself -- for many reasons. But science
- >always TRIES to PROVE things, and it often DOES.
-
- Science proves nothing. See our most recent thread on Popper.
-
- >Example: '2+2=5' is 'clearly not true'. This is a scientific question with a
- >scientific answer, and even religious people have to accept that 2+2=4.
-
- Where did you get the idea that 2+2 = 4? Take two protons (rest mass
- assumed to be 1) and another two protons (again rest mass of 1),
- put them together and you get a helium atom with a rest mass somewhat
- less than 4 (in our assumed units). Sometimes 2+2=4, sometimes it
- doesn't.
-
- You are confusing mathematics with science.
-
- >'Did God create the universe?' is not a scientific question, and does not
- >have a scientific answer, thus everybody is free to have is own opinion on
- >the latter question. I can imagine that long ago (primitive people often
- >know only 1, 2 and 3) there was a religion that said, amongst more
- >important things, that 2+2=5. It obviously disappeared when mathematics
- >were invented.
- >
- >One can be sorry for it, and it of course has lots of disadvantages, but
- >'general acceptance' is the way science often works. It is not the way
- >religion works.
-
- Actually, that is usually the way religion works too, ultimately.
- However, what difference does the sociology of religion make for
- the purposes of this discussion?
-
- >: Show me that the universe was not created ex nihilo
- >: 4 seconds ago, with the genesis of my response created in my brain.
- >: Show me how that can be inconsistent, madness or not.
- >
- >I like this one. It doesn't matter wether the universe is X billion years
- >old, or a X billion years old universe has been created '4 seconds ago':
- >there isn't any difference. In both cases, universe IS X billion years
- >old. It doesn't make sense to define a time scale outside the universe!
-
- Doesn't make sense for whom?
-
- >(Who or what would you expect to experience this extra-universal time?
- > God? Many religions hold the view that He is not subject to time.)
- >
- >I know the argument was used by some creationists -- they were just
- >wasting their precious time.
-
- Within science, I agree with you. Outside, it seems consistent,
- no matter what my opinion of the concept.
-
- >Can someone supply a (scientific) definition of madness? We are going to
- >need it. You wrote that doing things for religious reasons is
- >madness, and I disagree. I stated that saying things that are
- >'clearly untrue' is madness.
-
- No. I wrote that certain things done in the name of religion
- certainly wseem a bit mad in the right context.
-
- >: It is inappropriate to judge theology by the rules of science.
- >
- >Except when theology enters the realm of science.
-
- My point exactly.
-
- dale bass
- --
- C. R. Bass crb7q@virginia.edu
- Department of Mechanical,
- Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering
- University of Virginia (804) 924-7926
-