I start off by saying either A (using different variables here to reduce possible confusion) does or does not exist.
And there is the problem. You can also say “I don’t know” or “I have no opinion”. Yes, I am personifying science a tad, but the stance science as a whole takes on something can be likened to a person taking a stance on something.
Let’s say... I am science.
God is not empirical.
I (as science) can only know about empirical things.
Since God is not empirical, I cannot know anything about God.
So I cannot know anything about God.
Therefore I can say neither “God does exist” nor “God does not exist”.
Therefore I cannot deny passively or actively the existence of God. Neither can I confirm it.
So before we even start using science, we can assume God is not going to ever be invoked by science.
Yes. This is correct. But that does not mean that science actively or passively denies the existence of God.
I think the issue here is we are trying to turn science into a person with beliefs or views, and saying that science has this view or that view.
Anthropomorphizing science to relate the axioms used in preforming it to a person and their beliefs is in fact a valid tactic that gets the point across. But science is not an actual person, you are correct.
What I originally stated is that science works from the view point of no God, because, being that God is non-empirical and that science is only empirical, we can see that science cannot ever use God as an answer unless the nature of God changes.
But science does not work from the viewpoint of ‘no God’, science works from the viewpoint of ‘no position on God’.
No duh. Anyone who believes that evolution can create universes (outside of works of fiction, of course) is wrong.
Especially because evolution only deals with life after its formation. How life changing could be responsible for creating the universe I haven’t the foggiest.
Also, I had several pages in a thread a short while ago where I talked about the idea of ‘useful information’ and conservation of information, etc.
Boiled down, it works likes this:
According to the Law of Information, the sum total of information in the universe is either constant or decreasing. (opposite of entropy, which is either constant or increasing). Entropy is a special kind of information measurement that is inversely proportional to the information change in the system (i.e. entropy up, information down). Furthermore, the amount of information changed when entropy changes is VASTLY larger than the amount from normal information, i.e. that dealt with in computers or the like. Furthermore, ‘information’ in the terms of the Law of Information is not equivalent to the everyday usage of the term.
So we have two choices. Either so called ‘biological’ information (which is never defined by the by) does or does not follow the Law of Information. If it does NOT, the entire point is moot.
If it DOES, then the fact that the information is generated and changes by chemical reactions that follow the 2nd law of thermodynamics means that due to the reaction, the total entropy of the system increases. Since if total entropy increases, total information DECREASES, even if ‘meaningful biological information’ sprouts up where there was none before, more information in other forms was lost in the same reaction that created the biological information, so the point is STILL moot.
Metherion