• fkn@lemmy.worldM
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    1 year ago

    on the basis of the forms and types of evidence being mobilized

    I actually do think this is part of the problem. For me, we haven’t even gotten to the question of evidence. Religious “knowledge” is based around non-falsifiability of certain doctrines and axioms. Even within their own epistemological frameworks they have non-falsifiable arguments. This is fundamentally at odds with scientific process which must be fundamentally falsifiable.

    Religious disagreements are fundamentally different than scientific disagreements. From an epistemological core they are different. Either things are falsifiable or they are not. I would go so far as to argue that religious arguments typically are epistemologically unsound for this reason, regardless of evidence.

    • fisk@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Religious “knowledge” is based around non-falsifiability of certain doctrines and axioms. Even within their own epistemological frameworks they have non-falsifiable arguments.

      Agreed! Vaguely. I’m not sure I’m sure of that - but only because I personally just don’t know enough religion to confirm.

      …scientific process which must be fundamentally falsifiable.

      Disagreed, following on from Kuhn and Lakatos (not exactly a high-quality source, but it’s a reasonably to the point overview of the criticisms of falsifiability).

      In a broadly over-general way, people who adhere to both science and religion attempt to make sense of their experiences as everyday practice. Both lay-persons and experts (across both science and religion) attempt to mobilize what they understand as the shared practices by which valid knowledge is produced. Those shared practices can be different across science and religion - but not always, note the adherence to formal academic practices and traditions among Western religious experts, and the study of religion in academia - but they are both epistemic practices differently structured, if often incommensurable.

      • fkn@lemmy.worldM
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        1 year ago

        Frankly, this is a terrible argument.

        There are two distinct things happening here.

        1. This argument blurs the line between theoretical and practical application. It fails to address the problem that even theoretically the religious position is fundamentally different from the scientific position and it posits that the practical application of the theoretical position for science is equivalent to the practical application for the religion, which is even farther apart than the theoretical in my opinion.

        2. It misattributes the scientific and religious positions in the practical and theoretical stance. Theoretically science doesn’t discover “truth”. It provides evolving frameworks for observed phenomenon to occur. Your argument, as I understand it, functions exclusively in this area here, where it conflates the experienced lives of individuals with the theoretical underpinnings of religion. Religious theory may claim to try to explain observed phenomenon, but it is incapable of altering it’s premise thus it must alter or ignore observed phenomenon to fit the theory.

        This is fundamentally different. Practical application of bad “science” may also do this, but it is widely held that this isn’t good science.

        Finally we get to the practical/practical case, which is where a very pithy point can be made. Practically both science and religion make mistakes, and we shouldn’t denigrate religion for the same practical mistakes science makes (or has made).

        Which is also just an absurd argument. Just absurd. We should absolutely, 100% hold both accountable for there mistakes and roast them both in the fire. Every single thing science has done that is terrible should be hung out to dry. We should also hold every single terrible thing religion does out to dry as well.

        I can’t even wrap my head around how absolutely absurd the argument is that we shouldn’t absolutely roast this bullshit when we see it.