by jimwalton » Wed Nov 06, 2019 2:14 pm
> I said that science and theism have more in common than science and naturalism.
That is absolutely correct. The principles and foundations we find in theism (regularity, order, balance, beauty, predictability, personality, purpose, intelligence [informational data], and morality, to name a few) are the same principles and foundations we find in the natural world. What we are told about natural processes (random, mutations, chance, selection, inexplicable sequences [such as non-life to life, amino acids and RNA to DNA]) are not as well aligned with what we see (order, predictability, etc.) as theism is.
> Do you think science is making up evidence?
Of course not. I never said or implied that, nor do I believe that science is making up evidence. Science is a fantastic discipline and source of knowledge, and usually very reliable (science changes its mind a lot as it learns more).
> There is no single piece of evidenced that points to theism.
There are many evidences that point to theism, the teleological argument, for one.
- That the universe is so fine-tuned for life points more to an intelligent, purposeful source than a random, chance, selective, and mutational one.
- That personality (human & animal) came from a personal source (God) rather than an impersonal one (time + matter + chance) is good abductive reasoning.
- That informational data came from a previous informational (intelligent) source is more likely than that it arose from a random information source (chemicals).
- It is more likely that we see purpose in the universe and life as coming from a purposeful source rather than from random processes.
Everything we see points more strongly to a powerful, intelligent, purposeful, personal source than to a chance, random, impersonal, purposeless one. That the universe is so finely-tuned on a knife's edge of constants in order to support life points to the greater likelihood of theism than of naturalism.
> Science follows the evidence. Theism does not.
Both do. I'm an evidentialist. We look for evidence, and follow it where it leads. If we're looking at causality, we ask what is a sufficient cause for what we see. Science gives a partial answer, theism gives a sufficient one. If we're look at teleology, science gives a partial answer, theism gives a sufficient one. The case is stronger that consciousness came from consciousness than from non-consciousness. The case is stronger that informational data came from previous informational data than from non. The case is stronger that personality came from previous personality than not. In every case, if we objectively and honestly follow the evidence, theism is the stronger answer every time. Every time.
> Science follows the evidence. Theism does not.
I'll tell you what—how about if you write your case for naturalism for me. Give me your case and the substantiation for it. You follow the evidence. Then give it to me. I'll be glad to read it, and then we can discuss this further.
> I said that science and theism have more in common than science and naturalism.
That is absolutely correct. The principles and foundations we find in theism (regularity, order, balance, beauty, predictability, personality, purpose, intelligence [informational data], and morality, to name a few) are the same principles and foundations we find in the natural world. What we are told about natural processes (random, mutations, chance, selection, inexplicable sequences [such as non-life to life, amino acids and RNA to DNA]) are not as well aligned with what we see (order, predictability, etc.) as theism is.
> Do you think science is making up evidence?
Of course not. I never said or implied that, nor do I believe that science is making up evidence. Science is a fantastic discipline and source of knowledge, and usually very reliable (science changes its mind a lot as it learns more).
> There is no single piece of evidenced that points to theism.
There are many evidences that point to theism, the teleological argument, for one.
[list][*] That the universe is so fine-tuned for life points more to an intelligent, purposeful source than a random, chance, selective, and mutational one.
[*] That personality (human & animal) came from a personal source (God) rather than an impersonal one (time + matter + chance) is good abductive reasoning.
[*] That informational data came from a previous informational (intelligent) source is more likely than that it arose from a random information source (chemicals).
[*] It is more likely that we see purpose in the universe and life as coming from a purposeful source rather than from random processes.[/list]
Everything we see points more strongly to a powerful, intelligent, purposeful, personal source than to a chance, random, impersonal, purposeless one. That the universe is so finely-tuned on a knife's edge of constants in order to support life points to the greater likelihood of theism than of naturalism.
> Science follows the evidence. Theism does not.
Both do. I'm an evidentialist. We look for evidence, and follow it where it leads. If we're looking at causality, we ask what is a sufficient cause for what we see. Science gives a partial answer, theism gives a sufficient one. If we're look at teleology, science gives a partial answer, theism gives a sufficient one. The case is stronger that consciousness came from consciousness than from non-consciousness. The case is stronger that informational data came from previous informational data than from non. The case is stronger that personality came from previous personality than not. In every case, if we objectively and honestly follow the evidence, theism is the stronger answer every time. Every time.
> Science follows the evidence. Theism does not.
I'll tell you what—how about if you write your case for naturalism for me. Give me your case and the substantiation for it. You follow the evidence. Then give it to me. I'll be glad to read it, and then we can discuss this further.