A Cup Of Tea
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,313
- Reaction score
- 579
- Points
- 108
I use all my words for free
No ... you abuse them freely. It's not quite the same.I use all my words for free
I used science in a wider definition, incorporating all methods for gathering and understanding knowledge.
No ... you abuse them freely. It's not quite the same.
Gotta side with Jay on this one, in concept if not in tone. There is no width wide enough to call religion and science as in any way comparable. Those who attempt to do so do a great disservice to both science and religion.
ACOT said "I call for definition of knowing and believing. I'm not speaking for Thomas now, but knowing in your heart that something is out there is more akin to what you would call believing. I would put down the glasses you use for the natural sciences when observing faith, because it generally know, even to Christians(!), that the divine can't be proven.
Thus I question what is flawed in his reasoning. A theologian dose not set out to prove God, in the way that a biologist desires to prove evolution. "
To my understanding Thomas is indeed out to prove God exists. And that God exists in a very limited belief structure; that of the Judea/Christian faith. He uses scripture to defend his reasoning that he is correct. He certainly uses scripture to mock Wil's beliefs.
The flaw in his reasoning, I believe, is that he has made a personal choice to believe that scripture is of divine origin. If scripture is divine, then the scripture he quotes proves his reasoning. But he can defend his reasoning only by making that initial, personal choice.
Everything that follows depends on his belief that scripture is of divine origin. But this is not a fact. It is an opinion.
Thomas, my apologies up front for seeming to put so many of my words as if they were yours. It was necessary to explain my point of view, but it should be clearly understood that what I have written here is my interpretation of Thomas' reasoning.
OK. OK. You don't see it. Perhaps it's a cultural thing. Where I come from, negative stereotyping is considered offensive.Thomas, I guess I'll have to do some Catholic kicking and bashing...
So let me get this straight.I actually think your chants and idols are interesting, I find it very similar to what my Hindu friends do. But I also find it contrary to what the book says on the subject.
Courteous? All those hundreds of times, you sat there in silence, looking down in quiet condemnation? And you call that a courtesy?... when I courteously attend the services at the bequest of a friend for this event or that (christenings, weddings, funerals, holidays, hapen to be in town whatever) in the past i was a little put off by what I see as hypocrisy...
You don't suppose, as you see it everywhere, that it's not yours? That you carry it around with you wherever you go?The same hypocrisy that other denominations that I attended turned me away from religous services...
The point is Wil, the reality of 'archeologists, historians, scientists' trumps your dogma ... that's my point. Take Ehrman – at least he has the honesty to declare himself agnostic, and not invent his own religion and try and pass it off as authentic Christianity.As to arguing the mountains of evidence you provide, discussion of conjecture by the ancients and the fathers doesn't trump reality by archeologists, historians, scientists. Not in my book.
Not really. I've agreed with you on many things, but then I point our where the conclusions you jump to are not necessarily the only conclusion, and the reasons why ... but you ignore the reasons and stand by your assertions with the same vehemence as a Creationist — hence why I call you a fundamentalist.Hell, I'd love to hear your viewpoint, tis why I bring it up.
Absolutely, science will always be the poor relation of religion, in that sense — by its own axioms it cannot ask nor answer the questions that lie at the heart of religion.There is no width wide enough to call religion and science as in any way comparable. Those who attempt to do so do a great disservice to both science and religion.
Rubbish. So does Alice in Wonderland.A
When it comes to theology, however, then of course, theology is a science, like physics or geometry, and as a science it proceeds according to its axioms.
Not really. I can argue the case that God is a viable proposition and not at all unreasonable or irrational. Nor is God at odds with science, for example.To my understanding Thomas is indeed out to prove God exists.
Again, not really. If I argue the existence of God, it's from a universal metaphysic, not from the Christian faith. I would use the same reason that a Hindu, for example, would use to argue the existence of God.And that God exists in a very limited belief structure; that of the Judea/Christian faith.
I'm not mocking, I'm challenging. I think you'll find it's Wil who tends to mock the simple expression of faith.He uses scripture to defend his reasoning that he is correct. He certainly uses scripture to mock Wil's beliefs.
Quite right ... but that is not 'unreasonable'. The Catholic faith is not unreasonable. It's silly to say that it is. Unless one can prove beyond doubt, that Scripture is not divinely inspired.The flaw in his reasoning, I believe, is that he has made a personal choice to believe that scripture is of divine origin. If scripture is divine, then the scripture he quotes proves his reasoning. But he can defend his reasoning only by making that initial, personal choice.
I would say a matter of choice. I choose to believe, in the face of the date and the evidence.Everything that follows depends on his belief that scripture is of divine origin. But this is not a fact. It is an opinion.
Plato and Aristotle? Plotinus and Porphyry? Augustine and Aquinas? Lonergan and Ricoeur and Whitehead and Wittgenstein? Freud and Jung ... all of their thinking on the issue just 'silly attempts to dilute and distort science'?Rubbish. So does Alice in Wonderland.
These silly attempts to dilute and distort 'science' suggest nothing so much as performance anxiety.
It is just possible that you don't know that you've changed the goalposts, i.e., that your posturing stems from ignorance rather than dishonesty, but, for the record, we were talking about the proper definition of 'science'. If and when you choose to get back on topic we can chat ...Plato and Aristotle? Plotinus and Porphyry? Augustine and Aquinas? Lonergan and Ricoeur and Whitehead and Wittgenstein? Freud and Jung ... all of their thinking on the issue just 'silly attempts to dilute and distort science'?
I think not ...
I think you're working on too narrow a concept – all study is science.It is impossible, however, for me to accept that theology is in any way a science. Theology is a study certainly but it is not a science.
You can dismiss this if you like, but you'd be obliged to argue the case with every faculty of science and philosophy to do so.Article 2. Whether sacred doctrine is a science?
Objection 1. It seems that sacred doctrine is not a science. For every science proceeds from self-evident principles. But sacred doctrine proceeds from articles of faith which are not self-evident, since their truth is not admitted by all: "For all men have not faith" (2 Thessalonians 3:2). Therefore sacred doctrine is not a science.
Objection 2. Further, no science deals with individual facts. But this sacred science treats of individual facts, such as the deeds of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and such like. Therefore sacred doctrine is not a science.
On the contrary, Augustine says (De Trin. xiv, 1) "to this science alone belongs that whereby saving faith is begotten, nourished, protected and strengthened." But this can be said of no science except sacred doctrine. Therefore sacred doctrine is a science.
I answer that, Sacred doctrine is a science. We must bear in mind that there are two kinds of sciences. There are some which proceed from a principle known by the natural light of intelligence, such as arithmetic and geometry and the like. There are some which proceed from principles known by the light of a higher science: thus the science of perspective proceeds from principles established by geometry, and music from principles established by arithmetic. So it is that sacred doctrine is a science because it proceeds from principles established by the light of a higher science, namely, the science of God and the blessed. Hence, just as the musician accepts on authority the principles taught him by the mathematician, so sacred science is established on principles revealed by God.
Reply to Objection 1. The principles of any science are either in themselves self-evident, or reducible to the conclusions of a higher science; and such, as we have said, are the principles of sacred doctrine.
Reply to Objection 2. Individual facts are treated of in sacred doctrine, not because it is concerned with them principally, but they are introduced rather both as examples to be followed in our lives (as in moral sciences) and in order to establish the authority of those men through whom the divine revelation, on which this sacred scripture or doctrine is based, has come down to us.
Definitions of theology: ...
So theology is a study.
So astrology is a study.as-trol-o-gy: the study of how the positions of the stars and movements of the planets have a supposed influence on events and on the lives and behavior of peoplesource
So phrenology is a study.phre-nol-o-gy: the study of the conformation of the skull based on the belief that it is indicative of mental faculties and charactersource