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Is science faith-based?No. Oh, you want details? OK then. If you read any antiscience screeds, at some point or... |
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#160
By
MaartenVergu
on
31st October 2015, 11:00 AM
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That's a good question. Is science faith-based?
Yes, you can not observe without a theory. Norwood Russell Hanson (1924–1967) was an American philosopher of science. Hanson was a pioneer in advancing the argument that observation is theory-laden, that observation language and theory language are deeply interwoven. |
#162
By
Jango
on
26th November 2015, 06:37 PM
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Is science faith-based?
Yes, more so than not around parameters of what is and is not possible. 'Yesterday's science fiction is today's science fact!' The rigidness of their demand for evidence sometimes takes it on faith that they have gotten the whole picture, but this tends to be seen more in the social sciences. Scientists swarm attack like any other group once their faith has been doubted or questioned. |
#163
By
ThatOneGuy
on
29th November 2015, 05:31 PM
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Absolutely not. It's the complete opposite of faith based. It deals with evidence.
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#164
By
ThatOneGuy
on
29th November 2015, 05:32 PM
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You don't see scientists huddling together chanting "Darwin was right....Darwin was right....I know in my heart Darwin was right..."
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#165
By
TheAdversary
on
4th December 2015, 07:19 AM
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For me, the scientific method follows from scepticism backed by self-evident pragmatism. I exist in a world that I do not understand, but if I'm hungry,
I need to eat. If I question this, I will suffer and eventually die. The scientific method is simply the best way to obtain knowledge about the world that works and actually helps me, as opposed to superstition, which doesn't. But in the end, I'm still stuck with making (implicit) assumptions about the world, even though they are working assumptions and might change. To completely get rid of assumptions altogether requires pure scepticism, complete ignorance, unknowing etc. however you want to call it. And that's insanity, so I allow myself to sink back into pragmatism, and run under the assumptions that have worked well in the past, with the full awareness that still anything I assume might be wrong. Maybe I'm being deceived by Descartes' Malicious Demon or I'm plugged in the Matrix. How can I know? How can I know anything at all? But I've noticed a beautiful woman having an interest in me and all my questions vanished ![]() |
#166
By
Magrat
on
12th December 2015, 10:22 AM
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I homeschool my children. The only co-op within an hours drive from us is Christian based. Therefore, we use Apologia science materials in our studies.
I will give Apologia props for at least attempting fairness. There are topics I address separately or supplement, but overall they are the least offensive of Christian materials. You may be interested to know how they present science. The texts stress repeatedly that science cannot prove anything. Evolution and creation are presented somewhat equitably, both with comments stating we weren't there and have no definitive, non-questionable proof. In the higher level courses less and less creationism is referenced. I am telling you this because apologia is the most popular Christian homeschooling curriculum. There is a ray of hope. ![]() |
#167
By
Wrong Number
on
7th January 2016, 07:44 AM
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This is just another attempt at creating a false equivalency. "You have your truth and I have mine, so it's a wash." "You believe in evolution and believe in my god did it, so it's a wash." "You have faith in science and I have faith in my god, so it's a wash." Just dishonest nonsense.
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#169
By
Designated Hitter
on
28th July 2016, 10:44 AM
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Yes. Everything is based on faith. Nobody knows everything about anything.
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#170
By
Emma Thompsom
on
1st August 2016, 12:38 AM
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Nice post
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#171
By
jeffreyw
on
30th November 2016, 11:07 AM
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I wouldn't say science is based on faith, I would say it is based on specific assumptions about nature.
For instance astronomers assume that all stars shine. Yet, clearly there are objects in the galaxy that do not shine, so they cannot be stars. Yet, it is never asked, "what if stars stop shining, what would they look like?" Well, they would look like the objects that no longer shine! Unfortunately astronomers call those "exoplanets/planets"! Science is not faith based, but it can take assumptions on faith, thereby blocking the effective study of nature. |
#172
By
Hopeful Parallel
on
5th December 2016, 02:18 AM
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I agree Science involves a study based on experiments not faith.
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#173
By
Navigator
on
14th December 2016, 01:53 PM
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No. Science is just the process of explaining what is observed through examining the evidence. How those observations and explanations are then interpreted can involve faith, but science as a method of device is not based on faith but on experimentation involving physical things as well as theoretical concepts re physical things.
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#174
By
Navigator
on
18th December 2016, 04:31 PM
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Science is not faith based.
What is faith based is the way scientists might interpret their observations to suit their subjective bias. So it depends on the subjective bias of anyone about anything to do with observations of what is being experienced as reality as to whether the interpretations are faith based or neutral in regard to anything which remains open to interpretation. |
#175
By
John Jones
on
29th January 2017, 12:51 AM
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#176
By
stevea
on
25th February 2017, 12:24 PM
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I think that is exactly what you see when ppl who do not understand the science of a particular topic regularly make assertions. I have 4 STEM degrees, yet I've been lectured by ppl whom I suspect could not pass a HS science test, that I am wrong and science is on their side ("X is true", "it's been proven", "the science is settled", sort of talk).
'Science' when used as an appeal to authority, rather than understood, is reduced to a mere religious belief system. |
#177
By
dudainconsistente
on
18th April 2022, 04:18 AM
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So: is there no metaphysical postulate in science? Are universals objects of science? Is there no resistance to the change of paradigm, nor has there been any retraction in journals of the field (peer review)?
I think Phil has made a plot mistake. Although that does not imply that the average theist incurs in an erroneous comparison of the efficacy between models. |
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