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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!kellmeye
- From: kellmeye@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (kellmeyer steven l)
- Subject: Re: Lifestyle Choices and Secular Reasoning
- Message-ID: <C0B5vL.14I@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- References: <C07oBz.F74@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu> <1993Jan2.235727.5838@netcom.com> <C0Ax5F.9K6@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu> <1993Jan4.012951.29041@netcom.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1993 02:35:30 GMT
- Lines: 246
-
- howard@netcom.com (Howard Berkey) writes:
-
- >In article <C0Ax5F.9K6@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu> kellmeye@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (kellmeyer steven l) writes:
- >>howard@netcom.com (Howard Berkey) writes:
- >>
- >>>In article <C07oBz.F74@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu> kellmeye@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (kellmeyer steven l) writes:
- >>>>ecl@cbnewsj.cb.att.com (Evelyn C. Leeper) writes:
- >>>>
- >>>>>In article <1992Dec30.162502.6756@asl.dl.nec.com> dillhoff@aslws01.asl.dl.nec.com (Doug Dillhoff) writes:
- >>>>>> In article <1992Dec29.233922.2539@netcom.com> harp@netcom.com (Gregory O. Harp) writes:
- >>>>>>
- >>>>>All people are asking is that unless you can come up with some
- >>>>>*secular* reason for why their lifestyle choice is bad, you grant
- >>>>>them the same rights they are willing to grant you: the right to
- >>>>>live their life without persecution.
- >>>>
- >>>>Why is *secular* reasoning superior to religious reasoning?
- >>>>
- >>
- >>>Because not everyone gives a damn about religion. The majority of the
- >>>world population isn't Christian. (Although Catholicism is the
- >>>largest single religion). Besides, 'religious reasoning' sounds like
- >>>an oxymoron.
- >>
- >>Not everyone gives a damn about secularism either, but it appears to
-
- >Define secularism. If you mean Secular Humanism, I'd agree. If you
- >mean 'all secular activities' as it appears, I'd like to see someone
- >take a fourth derivative or find the roots of equations by religious
- >means.
-
- Point taken. Secular reasoning, in the context I discuss it, refers
- to reasoning which is about social issues and which specifically ignores
- any religious references.
-
- >>be forced on the great majority of the population whether they will it
- >>or no. Furthermore, anyone who has spent any amount of time studying
- >>the history of science would find your last statement to be absolutely
- >>absurd. The entire concept of a university was founded around advancing
- >>theological study. Indeed, the term "professor" began as a reference to
- >>one who was a "professor of the faith" and who studied it regularly.
- >>
-
- >It was a bad quip, but not absurd. Maybe I should've said 'modern
- >religious reasoning', for as you point out, a lot of learning was
- >preserved under the auspices of the church.
-
- >>Historians agree that western science was defined and structured by
- >>Christian concepts, beliefs, and attitudes.
-
- >Actually, the foundation of modern mathematics came from the Greeks
- >and the Arabs.
-
- True. The Arabs preserved nearly everything we know about Greek
- learning in the somewhat mis-named "Dark Ages".
-
- >> Without Christianity, western
- >>science, as such, would simply not exist.
-
- >A lot would have been lost during the Dark Ages, I agree. However,
- >almost all modern advances have been due to secular thought. By
- >modern I mean after 1650 or so, after the reformation. That basically
- >was the start of the decline of the church's influence.
-
- Ummmm, yes and no. Certainly the church's influence declined after the
- Reformation, but even as late as the mid-1800's, a natural philosopher
- was seen as doing "hands-on" theological work, i.e. he was discovering
- the nature of God's universe. Darwin very nearly became a preacher - he
- went on the Beagle voyage with the intent of joining the seminary on
- his return. Gregor Mendel was a Benedictine monk, and the monastery
- where he worked was *the* center of scientific study in Central Europe.
-
- It was only after the publication of Darwin's work, combined with Marx's
- "Das Kapital" that society began differentiating scientific knowledge
- from religious knowledge. Before the 1850, there was arguably no
- difference between the two in terms of cultural perceptions.
-
- >> It is only in the last
- >>100 years that science has developed this peculiar aversion to
- >religion.
-
- >Bzzt. Go to a library and look up the 'Age of Reason'. Hint: 16th
- >and 17th century. Well before 1776.
-
- Again, the rise of the 'Age of Reason' was and wasn't effective in
- differentiating scientific knowledge from religious knowledge.
- Certainly some individuals made this distinction (e.g. Voltaire, Rousseau)
- but it also was certainly not a distinction that was necessarily
- general. It was arguably only after the French revolution, and the
- destruction of the French Roman Catholic church which that revolution
- attempted, that secularism as such could be said to exist. Even then,
- this "secularism" was at least Deist in nature. The creation of true
- atheism is a *very* late construct.
-
- >>Certainly, one can point to instances in which religious authority
- >>fought certain concepts and ideas that later turned out to be correct.
- >>However, they performed no better or worse than did (or does) the established
- >>scientific community today in terms of accepting radically new, correct,
- >>ideas.
-
- >Galileo would have loved to hear that.
- >The scientific community has embraced more change in the last
- >300 years (since it became largely secularized) than in the previous
- >1700. Please justify your comment.
-
- Depends on how you define change. Thomas Kuhn would argue that
- while we have seen a great many more discoveries made in the last 100
- years than in the previous 2000, these discoveries were only "puzzle-piece
- fitting" i.e. there was no massive shift in the grand conception of
- how the universe works. Kuhn and others would argue that there have
- been only two major perceptual shifts in the physical sciences:
- the transition from a Ptolemaic to a Copernican view of the solar system
- and the transition from Newtonian to quantum dynamics physics.
-
- Considering the persecutions scientists have visited upon one another
- (e.g. Newton against damn near anyone he disagreed with) and the
- number of times scientists' biographies end with "he died penniless
- and in disrepute among his peers" (Cantor, I believe, committed suicide
- due to the pressures of his peers' ridicule and Lister died in a
- poorhouse) you can hardly assert that the Church was unusual in its
- treatment of those with dissonent views of the universe's structure.
-
- >> To say that religous reasoning is an oxymoron, or that secular
- >>reasoning is somehow superior, is to profess an ignorance so profound that
- >>it boggles the mind.
- >>
-
- >I disagree about modern religious reasoning. See my above comment.
-
- I don't know which religions you are talking about. In terms of the
- Roman Catholic church, I think you'll find them remarkably accomodating
- to both the spirit and the facts of scientific study. They simply
- believe that both the inquiry and the facts derived should be understood
- within the context of a God-centered universe. According to the alleged
- spirit of scientific inquiry, no scientist should have any quarrel with
- such contextualizations, since scientists are ostensibly only concerned
- with the mining the facts from the storehouse of the universe, and are
- unconcerned with wider implications.
-
- >>>Andrew Jackson had a lot to say about avoiding religious arguments
- >>>pertaining to legislation.
- >>
- >>What makes Andy an authority?
- >>
-
- >Jeez, I know you guys don't like democrats, but I would think that the
- >President whose motto was 'Less Govt. is Good Govt.' or something
- >similar should at least be credible to you. :-)
-
- I've always been a little equivocal on Andy. I still haven't decided
- if I like his presidency or not.
-
- >>>> [loads of opinionated attacks on secular reasoning deleted]
- >>
- >>>Look, whatever your opinion of secular reasoning, religiously
- >>>justified 'reasoning' has a pretty poor history as well. The Catholic
- >>>church is responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths alone. Look
- >>>at Hezbollah for a good example of religious 'reasoning'.
- >>
- >>>-Howard
- >>
- >>
- >>Certainly, many deaths have been done in the name of religion. I will
- >>merely point out that more people have died in "secular" wars than in
- >>any combination of religious wars you care to name.
-
- >Thanks for conceding my point. I wasn't trying to start a death toll
- >contest; I was pointing out that religions didn't have that clean of
- >a slate either. Not by a long shot. And alost all wars in modern
- >history have had religious justifications on both sides. Like Napoleon
- >said, 'God is always on the side with the biggest guns'.
-
- Napolean was hardly a churchman :) I tend to think that people will kill
- each other no matter what, and they'll use whatever is the most
- convenient acceptable cultural reason to do so. In an age in which
- atheism was literally unthinkable, all action was justified through
- religion. Now that atheism is thinkable, action tends to be justified
- via economics, or biology or some other damn fool thing. Whatever the
- genocidal maniac thinks will sell to the masses.
-
- >>I would furthermore argue that this violence is much harder to justify
- >>and continue using Christianity as the foundation than it is using
- >>secular reasoning.
-
- >Really? Define Secular Reasoning. If you mean "all non-religious
- >philosophy", then you are totally wrong. Read Peter Singer or other
- >modern utilitarian philosophers if you don't believe me.
-
- >Note that they don't exclude religion, but rather provide an ethical
- >framework where a religious crutch isn't necessary.
-
- I'm not a huge fan of utilitarianism. Seems like another crutch to me.
-
- >> Genocide is much simpler to reason away to your
- >>fellow man than it is to the unwinking eye of God, as Hitler, Stalin,
- >>Hussein, and Pol Pot have already shown.
-
- >Actually, Hussein is alive and well. Probably happy as a pig in shit.
- >It's only those he religiously duped into following him who have
- >suffered. He is far from a Secular leader in any sense of the word.
-
- That's very definitional. Certainly he paints himself as a follower of
- Mohammed - hard to get troops in that part of the world otherwise - but
- does he honest-to-Allah believe? I would bet no money on that.
- From the people's point of view, he may not be secular - from his....
- that's another story.
-
- >Hitler convinced millions that they were the chosen master race, a
- >very similar idea can be found in many religions. (The "Saved", etc.)
-
- Or Darwin. The very idea of a biologically superior race is purely
- secular. One of the problems with secularism is that it damns so
- thoroughly. One can convert and become saved, but how does one dispose
- of a genetic inferiority? You might argue that the savages Columbus
- found were thought to be inferior by many. I would point out that the
- Church did not agree. Furthermore, the argument was whether they were
- animals or men whereas Hitler et.al. admitted the humanity, but claimed
- it was inferior.
-
- >What were you trying to say in that sentence? Some how God chose to
- >Smite those leaders down? How come He missed Hussein, then?
-
- Not at all. I was pointing out that genocidal maniacs today don't
- justify their slaughters to themselves by arguing that they are doing
- God's work. I seriously doubt that Hussein believes he is doing
- Allah's work by wiping out the Kurds or invading Kuwait. Certainly
- Hitler, Stalin, Lenin, Pol Pot, and our Chinese friends don't (didn't)
- justify their actions that way. IN these terms, secularism has provided
- not only the ideology (utilitarianism and self-interest) but the
- techniques (de-contextualized scientific mass-slaughter methods)
- which permit the horrors we see today.
-
- >-Howard
-
- >--
- >::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
- >Howard Berkey howard@netcom.com
- >Did you hear about the dyslexic devil worshipper?
- >He sold his soul to Santa. -Herb Caen
- >... .. ... ... .. ... ... .. ... ... .. ... ... .. ... ... .. ...
-
- Steve Kellmeyer
- --
-
- Steve Kellmeyer
- kellmeye@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu
-