barrelomonkeys wrote:Gadianton wrote:I think someone can be entirely lazy and still easily make the judgement call that belief in science is far superior to belief in religion. Not everyone was born to be a scientist. Granted, those who bark loudly on the topic ought to know something of the subject matter. But most can easily observe the track record of both. One tell-tale sign that religion is on the run is the ever more popular effort to ditch any testable claims and pretend that there are two entirely separate "domains" and that the core elements of religion can't be investigated by science.
Which core religious claims can be investigated by science? What do you (or those that use this argument) mean by "core"?
b,
You bring up a good point. What do we mean by core? I left that intentionally vague as it depends on the apologist. I'm merely noting that a standard apologetic claim is that there are in fact, two domains that don't cross, and that when science makes the attempt, it becomes what they call "scientism". What I think is interesting is how those boundries tend to shrink for religion and expand for science.
A FARMS attempt I wrote a many part response to on my old blog is here:
http://maxwellinstitute.BYU.edu/viewaut ... thorID=538
My first introduction to the idea came from a somewhat old book years before I really had an interest called, "Beyond the postmodern mind" by Huston Smith.
The ways god can be salvaged in his core are endless. Runtu had a post a while back about an article by Terry Eagleton who, sharing with religion a mutual adversity to naturalism, reinvented God as a ham-fisted matter of continental philosophy out of bounds for science. In a case like this, 99.999% of people wouldn't agree on the definition of God given anyway.
Which is another point, funny enough. If God is an indestructable man living near kolob, then science in principle shares both an ontological and epistemological domain with religion. His operations are a matter of technology.
The most sterile and likely condidate for separating domains in some way falls along the lines of theological exercises in logic and semantics. Attempts to align God with "meaning" and "purpose" - stuff like that.