[MD] Dawkins a Materialist (is watching?)
david buchanan
dmbuchanan at hotmail.com
Wed Jan 10 09:25:54 PST 2007
Jos Laycock quoted Dawkins' "The God Delusion":
"Philosophers, especially amateurs a little philosophical learning, and even
more especially those infected with "cultural relativism" may raise a
tiresome red herring at this point: a scientists belief in evidence is
itself a matter of fundamentalist faith."
dmb says:
I agree with Dawkins on this point. Ken Wilber expresses the same sentiment
and Pirsig has stated that scientific assumptions are not the same as faith.
It seems to me that there has been a cadre of MOQers who are infected with
this sort of relativism. It probably wouldn't help to name names, but
anybody who's paid attention already knows anyway.
Jos Quoted Dawkins:
"All of us believe in evidence in our own lives, whatever we may profess
with our amateur philosophical hats on."
dmb says:
In the absence of any context, I'll just have to assume Dawkins is not being
sarcastic or ironic and offer an interpretation tentatively. It seems to me
that there is no way to discount the importance of evidence. I mean, the
belief that beiefs ought to be based on some evidence is, well... evident.
It might be an assumption in some sense of the word but the value of the
assumption is proven all the time. We have evidence for the value of
evidence. We've found that it works in so many different situations, every
day, all the time that doubting its value in our culture constitutes some
kind of insanity. Its a matter of simple pragmatism. The smell of rotten
eggs in put into natural gas so that when there is a leak we can have some
evidence of that fact and the failure to act upon that evidence will kill
you and your dog. I mean, of course we believe in evidence. How can you not?
How is can such an obvious thing be discounted? I never understood that
attitude, even if this is not Dawkins point.
Jos quoted Dawkins:
"Maybe scientists are fundamentalists when it comes to defining in some
abstract way what is meant by "truth", but so is everybody else, I am no
more fundamentalist when I say that evolution is true than when I say it is
true that New Zealand is in the Southern Hemisphere."
Jos commented on this quote:
...he seems to have misunderstood. Of course the cultural pattern that
defines what the "southern" hemisphere is, includes an understanding of the
geographical position of new Zealand, his statement of "truth" is
tautologous. What's weird though is that in another section on
"consciousness raising" he himself extols the benefits of globes showing the
south pole at the top being given to children in order to break down
unthinking acceptance of accepted conventional ideas?
dmb says:
Tautologous? Yes, it seems to me that "new zealand" and "the southern
hemisphere" have meaning and definition by virtue of our cultural patterns.
But this is also true of things like "evolution", "Truth" evidence" and any
other word you can think of. This is partly what I was getting at in saying
that the refusal to see the value of evidence is some kind of crazy. In our
world, in our culture, these terms have a definition and meaning and
represent some of the most evolved values in our culture. Words like truth,
reason and evidence are intimately connected with words openness, honesty,
fairness, sincerity and validity. These are not small things.
Jos said:
He never actually gives a proper rebuttal other than that "its obviously
wrong" or "your just playing at silly buggers" or "you can't really believe
this" etc etc. Earier in the book during his dismissal of Thomas Aquinas
proofs (no4 argument from degree) follows the same non-argument, which by
his own standards is a matter of belief not proof.
dmb says:
I'd like to hear the details of this part of his argument. I'd agree that
these fragments make it appear that he is just making bald assertions
without any real argument, but I can sympathize with the attitude. Like I
tried to explain above, some moves do strike me as obviously wrong, so wrong
that its almost difficult to think of any arguments that aren't already
completely obvious. Its like trying to explain to somebody why murder is
wrong. You just scratch your head and say, "but isn't it obvious?". Same
with reason, evidence and logic. Its obviously better that irrationality,
faith and illogic, isn't it?
_________________________________________________________________
Find sales, coupons, and free shipping, all in one place! MSN Shopping
Sales & Deals
http://shopping.msn.com/content/shp/?ctid=198,ptnrid=176,ptnrdata=200639
More information about the Moq_Discuss
mailing list