richardMdBorn wrote:JAK
My sentence above: “You mentioned several examples to Richard which are part of Christian doctrine and which, if factual, render science false.
Most don’t actually regard science as false. However, if the miracles which they wish to claim, in fact occurred, such “happenings” would render science false or unreliable. If some supernatural entity could at will, and willy nilly divide a sea, raise people from the dead, etc., science would be unreliable/false. So while such people may not actually articulate the view that science is unreliable, they pray that it will be unreliable as they attempt to manipulate their God to intervene in natural law (science). Whether it’s “conditioned reflexes” or a conscious affirmation of religious doctrine may be murky.
Is Newtonian Mechanics false? It doesn't work for high speeds or subatomic particles, but for most everyday measurements it suffices. Thus, it's pretty accurate for velocities which are low compared to the speed of light. Why can't miracles be considered in a similar manner. God intervenes sometimes in the world, but normally the laws of nature apply?
Note that relativistic effects are important for GPS. NTS-2 carried atomic clocks which were less than one percent different from the result predicted by relativity theory.
Hi Richard,
In response to your comment, let me make a few points.
Of primary significance is this:
No evidence for
gods or for
God has been established.
Your question:
God intervenes sometimes in the world, but normally the laws of nature apply?
It’s not a question, it’s
a claim. The question mark at the end should be a
period.
And, you demonstrate my earlier analysis. If one leaps to the unreasoned conclusion: “God intervenes sometimes...,” one then necessarily renders
science unreliable. A key word here is “sometimes.”
When is that? It’s willy nilly
whenever some
God pundit wants to make a claim.
Example: People
pray for a result. If it happens, they claim,
God answered my prayer. Anecdotally, an acquaintance believing she had cancer
prayed that
God would make it
non-cancer. It was non-cancer. She
claimed God did it. Others, however make the
same prayer with the opposite result. It’s cancer.
God is
irrelevant. No evidence has established
God. However, much has been
established in
medical science. Medical science
knows cancer when it sees it. There are treatments. They, too, are medical science.
God is irrelevant.
Further, just how can such a
God claim be tested or evaluated? It’s a subjective
assertion by
God myth-makers.
To state that “normally the laws of nature apply” is weasel language. What’s “normally”? It’s whatever some
God-maker wants to make up (such as you imply that you make up).
Hence, under your claim,
neither God nor
science can be relied upon.
We have ample reliable evidence for
science. We have no evidence for any of the
multiple God claims.
Therefore, your statement/question is ill-conceived. Further, it comes out of religious dogma,
not out of science.
Most
prayers (regardless of the religion) are attempts to
manipulate an invented
God.
The
God of Islam is multiple as well. And the invented
gods of Christianity are so numerous as to be incalculable. As a result, we have more than 1,000 groups which call themselves
Christian but which have different notions of just what
Christian means. Otherwise, there would be
Christian unity. But we know that
Christians compete in “The Battle for God” (a book title by Karen Armstrong).
Classical Mechanics is sufficiently complex as to be reviewed in this and other analysis. (WikipediA)
Accumulation of scientific knowledge is far-reaching. No well-informed person of science would contend that there is no more to be discovered. Science builds on previously accumulated information.
Scientific Method relies on
skeptical review.
God claims short-circuit skeptical review in favor of irrational leap to myth conclusion. Such conclusion is unreasoned, undocumented, and unreliable.
Richard stated:
Why can't miracles be considered in a similar manner.
“Miracles” are
claims absent evidence. They vary from claimant to claimant. Such claims are dissimilar to the accumulation of information and application of that information based on reason (science).
Miracle claims are a leap to conclusion generally inherently linked to ancient religious myths.
JAK