Maths has different assumptions and ways of approach from science, Not all of maths is described by the physical.
None of maths is described by the physical - it can be used in examples to help understand the physical, because maths is a tool that can be used to model the physical, not the other way round.
Similarly Art operates differently from science.
Art, though, like maths, but unlike religion, doesn't try to make claims about how the world works. Hence they aren't like for like comparisons.
Ditto philosophy which is based on logic and reason and evidentialism is but one school
So is religion. But, as I've said before, theology is the Emperor's New Clothes of philosophy.
But that's just your opinion isn't it?
No, that's a logical conclusion. If something has no measurable effect on anything, in what way can it be said to exist at all? If it doesn't exist, it doesn't really matter.
f it's not Physics then it doesn't matter...
Who said anything about physics? There are innumerable ways to measure things that don't involve physics - not just other 'hard' sciences like chemistry or biology, but everything down the chain through sociology, geography, history, psephology... the list goes on.
Why then do you get upset by the persecution of one set of people by another.?
Because I'm part of a group of people. Empathy. Do you need the idea of a god in order to care? Is that who you want to be?
Why do I get upset by antitheistic humbug if it isn't physics?
I'm not entirely sure why you get upset about anything, or where you see this antitheism, but the answer to neither of those is physics. It's psychology (which is, arguably, applied neurology but our neurology's not sophisticated enough to operate at that level. And, of course, neurology is just applied physics, but we need a really big computer to do that modelling and we currently don't have it).
Morality is not physical.
Really? You don't get a rush of blood sometimes, when you see injustice? Your stomach doesn't churn in horror? You don't get a cold sweat at the worst depravities of humanity? Sounds physical to me. Of course, those are physiological effects which result from moral judgements, but it means at the very least the systems are linked. Where's the non-physical bit? Where's the demonstration of that? This is the opposite of your last claim - this isn't a claim looking for an effect to demonstrate its reality, this is an effect for which you're leaping to an unwarranted cause, ignoring the demonstrable in favour of the fabulous.
If you think it is then show me a morality.
Of course, I can't interpret it for you, and the resolution might not be sufficient, but it's in there somewhere. If you've a better demonstration have at it.
How much does it weigh?
It's a pattern of energy, it doesn't have mass, and therefore doesn't weigh.
Dust to dust, ashes to ashes. A great ancient insight.
A deepity.
Unfortunately a scientific description of what happens in death or birth has no consolatory power or joy, but I can marvel at both
For you it doesn't; perhaps because you're so desperately looking to the sky that you're failing to appreciate the wonder around you. I'm sure there's a fable or two about that.
ah it is is it?
Yes. Whether or not you like what people do with a tool is a different question to whether or not the tool exists and works.
When did I say that.
You didn't, I was highlighting the contrast with religion, which I pointed out hadn't achieved anything - hence, was a failed enterprise.
I have nothing against science but I'm finding your scientismic piety quite embarrassing.
If I were you, and I kept having to hide behind ad hominems instead of arguments, I'd be pretty embarrassed too. Thankfully for me, that's not the case.
The reason can be external or intrinsic,
There's lucky.
So if you claim the universe is the necessary entity then the reason is intrinsic to the universe.
If I ever claim that, I'll be sure to bear that in mind.
So the God of the gaps is dead...
Can something non-existent be dead? Isn't that a little like asserting that if atheism is the lack of belief then a rock is an atheist? Can an imaginary friend die?
which leaves the God of philosophy, The almighty, the creator of nature gaps included, the ultimate, the fundamental the necessary entity.
Woven entirely out of threads of imagination and ignorance, paraded through the streets to the gasps of those who choose not to pay attention.
The God of the agnostic who holds that God might exist.
God might. All you need is a scintilla of a reason to think that might be the case, the slightest hint of some sort of basis for the claim...
Is the physical all that is real? If that's how you define reality.
Who knows? If there's something else, though, we need a new system to demonstrate it. Until then, what's the difference between a non-physical entity which has no effect, and nothing?
Can the necessary be detected. Not if it means the observed is affected by the observer IMHO.
That sounds like the start of a methodology. Now all you need is the bit where you have something that CAN demonstrate the non-physical, rather than just excuses for why we can't but are supposed to accept the claim anyway.
Finally in terms of special pleading. " The universe just is and there's an end to it takes some whacking..
No, in terms of special pleading you have to go way, way further than Russell's slightly glib pronouncement before, somewhere in the distance, you see the vague, dusty footprints where William Lane Craig's take on the Kalam Cosmological Argument has walked away over the horizon.
............perhaps he means that the universe is the necessary entity?
Perhaps he does. Perhaps he expanded on that, somewhere. I don't know, I've never been that interested to spend the time reading his work.
O.