Maksutov wrote:There is no conflict between science and religion. There is a conflict between bad religion and reality, between fake science and reality. And yes, reality is still an operative concept. There are objective things that can be agreed upon unless one seeks infinitely self regressing solipsism and wants to stagger through a world of shadows, muttering circular statements like a Samuel Beckett character. I have no certainties. I recognize the profound limitations of our sensorium and cognitive apparatus, let alone the organic cultural materials that influence many of our perceptions. We exist in a spatiotemporal context, children of a time and a place, unavoidably.
See, now I sort of want to agree with you, but for sake of consistency, I won't. "Bad" is a modifier that is hard to argue with. How it is applied is debatable, but you are absolutely right, Bad Religion (excepting the band) is bad.
Where I think you and I get caught up is applying the word. Fake science is just lying, right? I mean, if I claim something to be true, but have not shown evidence of study, or cannot apply it in away way, than I'm just lying. However, sometimes my daughter has bellyaches, (she is 9 and has paresis paralysis). She comes to me sometimes to help the pain go away when all the other meds aren't doing the job. I do a Mr. Miyage (Karate Kid) technique of rubbing my hands together and making them hot, than apply them to her belly. After about 3 minutes, she says thanks and goes away. The other day she asked, "Dad, how does this work?" I said, "Fairy Magic." She smiled, nodded and left it at that.
Now, your average scientific dude would call BS. No way does putting your hands on someone make their pain go away. But. . . . if anyone wants to take the time and actually observe, they will see that it does. Many nursing homes are actually hiring "Healing Touch" specialist to work with their aging residents because. . . . . it actually makes them feel better. If it works, than it works. If we don't understand why, then why should we claim too? Just because we don't understand why touch can help others doesn't mean that it doesn't. Now, these Healing Touch Specialists do not replace doctors, or medication, but they do have an observable benefit, which if you observe, is the application of science.
Why does my technique work on my daughter? There are doctors of psychology who might try to explain it, and they might be right, and they might be wrong. But, it works. Maybe it is purely psychologically, maybe it is fairy magic. Do I really care? Not really. If her believing gives me the ability to heal her, how is that different from when Jesus told people, "because of your faith you are healed?" See where I am going here? I don't accept that Modern American Medicine fully understands the abilities of the human body. Miracles do happen, but what we don't know is why.
I am just blessed to no end that my daughter can come to me with some confidence that I can make her pain go away. I have the best doctors insurance can buy, but sometimes it isn't enough. I'm not neglectful by thinking I can heal her of her disease, but I am also not above allowing her to believe that I can help her. Until the day my magic fails, it works. I would not go to the neighbors and ask for money so I can help their kid. It probably wouldn't work anyway, though I have used the trick on others with some reward.
My point in all of this, pseudo-science isn't completely worthless. Faith is far more powerful than most drugs we can make. By that, I mean, our brain has the most sophisticated pharmacy man can imagine, it can produce almost any conceived combination of chemicals that the body can use. What makes it work the way it does, we really don't understand. But if I touch my child and say "be healed," and the brain takes that as a signal to release all the right chemicals, who am I to deny its possible?