KimberlyAnn wrote:Since this is a forum about Mormonism, have Popper's philosophies ever actually been used by any Mormon apologist to defend Mormonism? I can't imagine it would behoove any Mopologist to claim we can't really know if Mormonism is true or not, though I suppose they could use Popper to show it's impossible to disprove Mormonism, but wouldn't that be a mistake? It seems self-evident (at least to me) that the historical and doctrinal claims of Mormonism have been sufficiently falsified to cast enough doubt on the statement, "I know the church is true", that no one should believe the Mormon church to be true, though they cannot know without a doubt that it is not true.
Perhaps no one can know for a certainty that Mormonism is absolutely false, but it seems employing Popper's flawed, but still useful falsification renders Mormonism's truth claims beyond believability.
I think these are very good points, and probably what this whole thread is 'really' about!
I'd say one point is: Just because two people may agree on a 'system' of knowledge, doesn't mean that one or the other won't try and 'twist' it a bit. Or perhaps as much as they can. In fact, you can argue that it is inevitable.
But I'd say the more important point is that it's one thing to say: 'Science needs to work this way, or that way'.
It's another thing to say 'Science can only tell us so much', or 'Limiting yourself to science isn't that sensible'. THAT's what I hear a lot of from religious folks. Not about whether Popper had it right. Or Kuhn. Or Kant. Or whoever...
If your not 'limiting' yourself to scientific inspection, then does it really matter that much?
I mean, I've been spending a decent amount of time annoying Tal, so I guess I should be fair and annoy some Mormons too...
I would say that 'apologists' tend to use the scientific method only when it is 'convinient'. And when it isn't, it can be neatly discarded like a dirty rag.
If that's how science is to be treated, then it's not about whether Popper was 'dead on', or the 'problem of induction' being solved - or whatever else. As has been said many times, science has moved on steadily and consistently - regardless of not actually solving, once and for all, these kinds of philosophical disputes.
When it comes to Mormonism, I'd say it's down to whether you are justified in moving 'past' scientific investigation, or not. But I'm sure others see it differently! :D