Yesterday at 08:05 AM Jerry Smith said this in Post
#135
As I stressed before, the statement in question ("only material causes account for material events") is a statement of conclusion drawn logically from premises that are themselves valid under the epistemological framework of metaphysical naturalism or philosophical materialism.
Jerry, what is the difference between premises that can't be substantiated by empirical evidence and statments of faith? All you've done is push your statements of faith back to where I said they were: you have declared the ultimate nature of reality -- only material causes -- without any data to say that this really is the ultimate nature of reality.
Philosophical materialism or metaphysical naturalism
is atheism. Both of those deny the existence of any supernatural entities or forces!! What you are doing is trying to justify atheism as not a faith by referring back to atheism as a faith. It's not exactly circular reasoning, but something just as invalid.
Since that epistemological framework is a perfectly valid one,...
Both positions, metaphysical naturalism, and metaphysical supernaturalism, exist at the level of epistemology, which must be considered prior to methodological concerns.
Epistemology is figuring out how you know what you know. Neither metaphysical naturalism (MN) nor philosophical materialism (PM) is epistemology. Both of them start out with a priori statements of what what you know, not methods to figure out what is reliable knowledge.
"Epistemology is the branch of
philosophy that studies knowledge. It attempts to answer the basic question: what distinguishes true (adequate)
knowledge from false (inadequate) knowledge? Practically, this questions translates into issues of scientific methodology: how can one develop theories or models that are better than competing theories?"
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/EPISTEMI.html
As
faith or belief, PM and MN are valid. I don't know of any way to show absolutely that they are wrong. But they are neither knowledge nor epistemological systems.
No one is discussing faith as the abandonment of reason. We are discussing faith as a premise in an epistemological framework, as a means of knowledge that does not rely on reason.
Then you have all the wrong terms. Now, the faith the the universe does not contain supernatural entities or forces is the premise in both MN and PM. Yet you say that both of these rely on reason.
If you are really talking about faith as a premise in an epistemological framework, then science does indeed have statements of faith. These statements are about the nature of the physical universe essential to do science in the first place. They are that the universe is: 1. rational, 2. accessible, 3. contingent, 4, objective, and 5. unified. These are
assumptions (statements of faith) about the nature of the universe. So far, we have found nothing to indicate these assumptions are wrong, but the assumptions themselves cannot be reached by science.
nothing that science says can in principle have any bearing on the structure of those frameworks.
Thank you. You have just said that metaphysical naturalism is a faith.
You seem to feel that no idea that cannot be derived from science can have any status other than that of "faith".
I'm saying that ideas without knowledge are beliefs/faiths. Specifically, I am also classifying knowledge that is not intersubjective and objective among beliefs/faiths.
Theism offers conclusions, if you will, about the nature of the physical universe. Butler gave those. They are logically derived from the premises of his "epistemological system". What's more, they are also derived from the personal observations of millions of people. You call that faith. You also give "conclusions" about the nature of ultimate reality. But your "conclusions" are themselves premises about ultimate reality. What's more, they are based on what you consider the absence of evidence. Now, we know that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. So, you don't have the epistemological basis Butler has, and I'm not supposed to call that faith?
Science tells me that I will be injured by putting my hand in the fire, but (according to your view) it gives me no more certainty than the belief that, because my hand has magical properties, I will be able to put it in the fire and instead of being injured, my hunger will be sated. Both, under your view, are positions of faith.
According to your view the idea that science tells us something true about the world is faith.
Huh??

How in the world can you say above that
You seem to feel that no idea that cannot be derived from science can have any status other than that of "faith". which means that science is not a faith and then try to twist this that what we find by science is a faith?
What
you are saying is that knowledge derived from philosophical premises is as reliable as the knowledge gained from objective, intersubjective data derived from the physical universe.
Now, why and how does science tell you that putting your hand in the fire will result in injury? By the formulation of a theory based on objective, intersubjective experience. That is the theory: fire causes injury. Putting your hand in the fire tests that theory. The theory has been tested enough that we accept is as (provisionally) true.
At the extremes we find religious epistemologies that take great certainty from faith, and atheistic epistemologies that give very little or no credence to beliefs that stem from faith.
Faith itself is belief that does not derive from reason.
Ah, I see that atheists love to redefine terms even more than creationists. Your first statement only makes sense if you presume the conclusion: atheism is not a faith. But since that is the subject under discussion, you can't take it as a given.
I would say instead that we have a continuum of faiths from one extreme that faith in the existence of deity is taken with great certainty through a middle position of agnosticism where the existence of deity is not known to the other extreme where the non-existence of deity is taken with great certainty. Both extremes rely equally on faith, since neither have the intersubjective, objective data that knowledge that fire will injure you has.
Now, I totally disagree with that last statement: Faith itself is a belief that does not derive from reason. The basic statments of faith underlying science do derive from reason, for instance. So does my faith in the abilities of political candidates. Based on my observations of their actions and their statements, I reason what they will do once in office. But, I don't
know that they will behave that way, do I? I simply have faith when I vote that they will behave that way.
I don't find your definition of "faith" anywhere in the dictionary. That's what I meant by your making up new defintions. The relevant defintions of faith in Merriam-Webster are:
"
b (1) <B>:</B> firm belief in something for which there is no proof (<B>3</B> <B>:</B> something that is believed especially with strong conviction"
Notice "no proof", not "not derived from reason".
Since we are trying to decide if atheism is a faith, I insist that we use the agreed upon definitions and not try to make up your own so that you can gain your point within your own definition.
Faith is empthatically not any belief that is not a conclusion from empirical investigation. Faith is any belief that is not a conclusion from reason[/i].
See above. Don't change the definition.
You completely miss the point: it is reason, not science, and not faith, that allows you tobelieve that PDGF has anything to do with mitosis in smooth muscle cells.
I never said it was faith. That is your misrepresentation of what I said. It is objective, intersubjective experience and the epistemology of science that allows me to conclude that PDGF is a material cause of smooth muscle cell mitosis.
Hume first realized that all knowledge is based on personal experience.
But we don't disbelieve only in those hypothetical forms of Santa and Leprauchans which have been specifically falsified. We disbelieve in all forms of Santa and Leprachauns, except those which have positive evidence for them.
Yes, you may "disbelieve" (believe they do not exist) in all forms but as you said, that is your belief/faith that all forms of Santa and leprechauns do not exist. Not your knowledge. That is the whole point of the discussion, Jerry. To make you realize where your knowledge ends and your beliefs begin. Thank you again for showing that believing something doesn't exist is a positive faith.
Continued in next post. Read that one before you answer, please