We agree on that, but I'm not sure you also acknowledge there can't be theistic science, either. That subject is beyond the reach of science.
Sure, I'll acknowledge that. You say you brought it up in a debate, and I had not heard that debate, just your radio show (via podcast).Frayed, it would be kind of you to acknowledge that I don't hide from my presupposition that God exists.
We both admit that the analogy you give above is silly...
So why don't you demonstrate how a strictly materialistic science can validate its own use of logic?
We agree on that, but I'm not sure you also acknowledge there can't be theistic science, either. That subject is beyond the reach of science.
All science is faith-based.
The validation of any rational thought, scientific or otherwise, requires that it be founded on the presupposition of the existence of the God of Truth.
There is only theistic science.
Otherwise, someone is simply being arbitrary, which is the antithesis of science.
There is no neutral ground.
For the atheist scientist's worldview cannot validate his use of reason.
All science is faith-based.
The New Testament says that faith is the evidence of things not seen. That is, faith is the appropriate response to the evidence. Accumulating evidence both helps strengthen the faith of believers, and brings millions of unbelievers to salvation in Jesus Christ, all by humbly acknowledging the the evidence for the God of Truth.What I don't really understand, then, is why you bother with trying to find evidence on the RSF shows. I think of evidence as the stuff we seek to show us the path to what we accept. If you start off with the presupposition, then I don't get the point of the evidence you present, such as it is.
Frayed Knot, since you don't believe in your leprechauns, then you are left with the challenge of justifying your claim that logic is valid.I don't see any difference in my story about magical leprechauns being necessary for logic, and your story that a god is responsible.
Without logic and intelligibility, his claim that science works is arbitrary.And how can science validate its use of logic? In the words of Stephen Hawking, "science works."
Frayed, what you can't do is also pretty useful. That's what led Kepler to discover his three laws of planetary motion.Maybe we can't construct a formal system proving it so (and I think this is a manifestation of Goedel's Incompleteness Theorem), but it seems to be pretty useful.
They are like people who say that they don't exist, all the while talking only because they exist; or those who deny that there is oxygen, all-the-while breathing oxygen while they are talking. Just because an atheist ignores the foundation of logic doesn't mean that logic has no foundation. Someone can fly on an airplane while denying the physics that keep it in the air.Most atheists work out logic puzzles the same way I do. God is never a part of it.
I think you are putting the horse after the cart. Regardless of what science can test or not (say, whether time can go backwards), science cannot function without logic and intelligibility, and atheistic assumptions cannot justify these; so when an atheist scientist is working, he is assuming truths that only the creationist's worldview can justify; when he stops working and starts posting on TOL, he's merely being inconsistent.Can't be. Science is completely unable to test the supernatural.
Do mathematical proofs exist?Science makes no claim to being "true" in the logical sense. It is merely useful in learning about things. No theory is thought to be "true" in the sense that mathematical proofs are true.
I agree that science works. Although with all the relativistic qualifiers put on that by evolutionists, I'm not sure that they can consistently or meaningfully claim that science works. The reason that science works is because there is truth.Science is unable to be anything but neutral. That's how it works.
Because his worldview cannot validate even the foundation of his entire undertaking, before he meets an undertaker he should find the courage to either admit his life's work is meaningless, or to reconsider his worldview.I'm not sure what you're trying to say here.
That assumption is faith. And that faith cannot be justified by atoms, but only by the creationist's worldview that a God of truth placed us in the orderly universe He created so that we can comprehend it.Assumption-based. On uniformitarianism.
That assumption is faith, and it is only justifiable if based on the God of Truth.Bob, the bottom line is that science doesn't have the kind of solid grounding that faith in God has. Just doesn't. It's a very pragmatic exercise, requiring no faith, just the assumption that nature is understandable and consistent.
Nature is revelation from God. It is general revelation. It reveals the existence and some of the attributes of the Creator.[Science] is completely different than religious belief (because that depends on a revelation from God)...
No man (nor scientist) is an island. Science lives and breaths the Creator's thoughts, regardless of whether it recognizes it or not.Science is out there on its own.
That statement can only make sense if there is absolute truth.If it works, we keep it.
That too.What's amazing is that it works better than almost anything else humans do.
As Einstein said, the most incomprehensible thing about nature is how comprehensible it is. Thanks to God, even if science can't tell us that.
Barbarian, even if atheists disagree or just don't think about it, if there is no God then all of their efforts to logically and intelligently observe reality are arbitrary nonsense, whereas if there is a God, then their use of logic and reason and their intelligence can produce some results that are actually valid.
They are like people who say that they don't exist, all the while talking only because they exist; or those who deny that there is oxygen, all-the-while breathing oxygen while they are talking. Just because an atheist ignores the foundation of logic doesn't mean that logic has no foundation. Someone can fly on an airplane while denying the physics that keep it in the air.
There is only theistic science.
I think you are putting the horse after the cart.
Regardless of what science can test or not (say, whether time can go backwards), science cannot function without logic and intelligibility, and atheistic assumptions cannot justify these;
Do mathematical proofs exist?
I think that people who resist God's creation become so esoteric that they confuse themselves.
I think it's a relativistic cop out for evolutionists to insist that special creation is false, that evolution is a fact (just Google whether evolution is fact or theory)
and then say that science makes no claims of absolute (or logical) truth.
I agree that science works. Although with all the relativistic qualifiers put on that by evolutionists, I'm not sure that they can consistently or meaningfully claim that science works.
Because his worldview cannot validate even the foundation of his entire undertaking, before he meets an undertaker he should have find the courage to either admit his life's work is meaningless, or to reconsider his worldview.
That assumption is faith.
And that faith cannot be justified by atoms, but only by the creationist's worldview that a God of truth placed us in the orderly universe He created so that we can comprehend it.
That assumption is faith, and it is only justifiable if based on the God of Truth.
Nature is revelation from God. It is general revelation. It reveals the existence and some of the attributes of the Creator.
No man (nor scientist) is an island.
In the collection in Out of My Later Years, Einstein wrote that, "science can only ascertain what is, but not what should be," necessarily excluding from its domain "value judgments of all kinds." Thus science could not even prove that the Holocaust or slavery were wrong. And on wondering why mathematics corresponds so well to the universe, in 1921 Einstein asked, "How can it be that mathematics, being after all a product of human thought which is independent of experience, is so admirably appropriate to the objects of reality?" And in 1936 Einstein famously wrote that, "the eternal mystery of the world is its comprehensibility." Then in 1944, remarking about atheist Bertrand Russell, he described the ability to get from matter to ideas as a "gulf–logically unbridgeable," which some scientists and linguists refer to as Einstein's Gulf. For while matter can be arranged to represent data, information itself is not material.
That assumption is faith, and it is only justifiable if based on the God of Truth.
Nature is revelation from God. It is general revelation. It reveals the existence and some of the attributes of the Creator.
No man (nor scientist) is an island.
In the collection in Out of My Later Years, Einstein wrote that, "science can only ascertain what is, but not what should be," necessarily excluding from its domain "value judgments of all kinds." Thus science could not even prove that the Holocaust or slavery were wrong. And on wondering why mathematics corresponds so well to the universe, in 1921 Einstein asked, "How can it be that mathematics, being after all a product of human thought which is independent of experience, is so admirably appropriate to the objects of reality?" And in 1936 Einstein famously wrote that, "the eternal mystery of the world is its comprehensibility." Then in 1944, remarking about atheist Bertrand Russell, he described the ability to get from matter to ideas as a "gulf–logically unbridgeable," which some scientists and linguists refer to as Einstein's Gulf. For while matter can be arranged to represent data, information itself is not material.
Barbarian, even if atheists disagree or just don't think about it, if there is no God then all of their efforts to logically and intelligently observe reality are arbitrary nonsense, whereas if there is a God, then their use of logic and reason and their intelligence can produce some results that are actually valid.
The word "truth" is overloaded with semantic baggage, so I don't think it's very useful. We start with the idea that there is an external reality; that this external reality is not just a product of our imaginations, that it's the same for everyone. It's also apparent that humans have some capacity to observe this external reality, although our observations are not complete and our brains commonly make errors.The reason that science works is because there is truth.
=The Barbarian;2699919]Could you enlarge on that a bit? It would be great if God could be logically obvious to everyone, but that doesn't seem to be the case.
Barbarian observes:
Most atheists work out logic puzzles the same way I do. God is never a part of it.
The difference is, we can unambigously demonstrate physics by scientific methods.
Can't be. Science is completely unable to test the supernatural.
Seems to me you're putting Descarte before the horse.
Barbarian observes:
Science makes no claim to being "true" in the logical sense.
It is merely useful in learning about things.
No theory is thought to be "true" in the sense that mathematical proofs are true.
Yes. The difference is, in math, we make the rules and can therefore deduce the truth or falsehood of a proposition. In science, the rules aren't given to us, and we use particulars to infer the rules. This makes science totally unable to claim absolute truth, or to consider what might be beyond the physical universe.
It's a fact. Directly observed, in fact. But it is also a theory, which is the strongest thing in science. Only after a hypothesis is confirmed by evidence does it become a theory. Laws are like theories, but weaker things, because they only predict, while theories predict and explain.
Barbarian observes:
Science is unable to be anything but be neutral. That's how it works.
Science can't really be anything. It's scientists who are either creationists or evolutionists. Both look at the same evidence but come to different conclusions. Why? Because they both have different worldviews. What it comes down to is which worldview is rational and has a rational foundation. Atheist is irrational and arbitrary.
There is no such thing as neutral ground. One can't defend a hill if he gives up the hill. And the idea that evidence must be observed neutrally is itself a worldview. Actually, Jesus said there is no neutral ground. "He who is not for me is aganst Me." He who does not gather, scatters."
Most atheists I know, say you have to make your own meaning. This seems to satisfy them. But a meaningless universe can still be logical and predictable.
Most atheist also say that morality can be relative. But they can't live in the real world and be relativistic. For when they cross the street, either a truck is coming or a truck is not coming.
But the universe is not meaningless. It is logical and predictable only because it was created by a logical God who created it to be predictable. A logical and predictable universe is not possible in an atheist worldview.
Barbarian observes:
Assumption-based. On uniformitarianism.
Inference. All evidence shows it to be true. It's like walking over an old bridge. You just saw someone no heavier than you do it, so you make the inference that it will hold you, too.
like the atheist, you have no logical reason to believe that the future will be like the past. Now if you had a Bible verse where God said, "I will uphold this bridge with the word of My power." then you would have a foundation on which to stand when you say the bridge will not collapse. How do I know that the bridge will not collapse? Answer from atheist: It has not collapsed in the past. But I can claim I will never die. If you ask, How do you know you will never die. My answer: Well, I never died in the past.
If that's faith, then uniformitarianism is based on faith.
Faith in God's word that He will not break his promise to not change the laws of physics is faith with a rational foundation. Faith that the bridge will not collapse just because it has not collapsed in the past is more faith than I have because it is groundless. I don't have enough faith to be an atheist.
I believe with all my being that He did. Did you know that Stephen Jay Gould once speculated in an essay that God made us because He wanted someone with whom to share it?
Still, that faith is not required to do science.
Answered above.
Tom
*sigh* not this old "logic requires god" PRATT... I was hoping it wouldn't coax a reply from Tom "talking to a brick wall" Mabank... *sigh*
It's not even relevant to the topic, why not create another thread about it?
:thumb:
Fear of the righteous God is the key to understanding.
And a creation science book can claim that, except it is *wrong*. Firstly, as I keep telling you and Bob you need a *population* to hold genetic diversity/information. You can't get to lots of different organisms from TWO individuals in 4000 years without miracles being invoked. Even if wild animal species had the genetic diversity of dog breeds (which they absolutely do not) You still couldn't do it in 4000 years starting with two.I took a closer look at the Baraminology model from one of my husbands Creation Science books. In short, though, the branches on each tree in the orchard are the result of loss of genetic information, not the gaining of information.
Oh so you think that the "horse kind" including, donkeys, horses and zebras all evolved from two individuals in the 4000 years since the flood? You realize that there are many species of zebra which have different chromosome numbers (anywhere from 32 - 46)? Horses and donkeys have 64 and 62 respectively. So you're accepting that chromosome number change is apparently easy and can occur in a mere 4000 years? That ain't dog breeding Inzl, that is ridiculous hyperevolution.The term Baramin is just a another word for kind. There is the dog kind, the horse kind, the apple kind etc. This model is definitely six day creation, young earth based.