Vlad,
Golly Blue I can't believe you have made an elementary howler like that.
There are matters which science cannot deal with (source BTEC Level 3 Applied science).
It gets worse for you since any scientific conclusion doesn't actually exclude the possibility of God being involved in some way through his will, purpose etc.
The only “howler” is yours. Of course there are phenomena that cannot be explained by the methods of science. That’s why people
do science – to discover more. Jumping straight to, “that’ll be the supernatural then” as you do is just your basic, common-or-garden god of the gaps fallacy.
Since you are being so dense Hillside. Your accusation is firmly based in promissory scientism. The belief that science will solve everything............that's a fallacy.
I see that you still don’t do irony. I’ve made perfectly clear that anything
might be – for all I and you know, there may even be stuff out there that you call “supernatural” (whatever that means). Your problem though is that just asserting its existence doesn’t make it exist. I notice by the way that you (and Hope too) have casually elided "claims of the supernatural" with "the supernatural" as if its existence was agreed, only some silly people hadn't realised it yet. Big cheat.
Me:
4 is incoherent.
5 is at least a response of some kind, but your problem isn’t finding a method that I would recognise, it’s finding a method of any kind. “Intuiting” something isn’t a method – it’s just a feeling, and anyone can have them about anything at all. Not only does your claim give nothing to anyone else to make them think you might not be wholly wrong about that, it gives you nothing either for you to test your feeling against the possibility of mistake, delusion etc.
6 is a straw man. No-one claims that philosophical naturalism is the established truth. This is where you keep going off the rails because of your failure to comprehend what it does entail.
Philosophical naturalism is the belief that there is no means to test or examine or verify claims of the supernatural. It does not assert that there is necessarily no such thing as the supernatural (that’s just your straw man version of it) but it does say that those claims are incoherent unless they can be verified and so can safely be ignored. Methodological naturalism is just the application of that, for example in the working methods of science.
The resulting findings are a provisional truths, but no-one claims the absolute truth. Thus the claim that jumping out of the window will make you hit the deck shortly after can be tested, and when you do indeed hit the deck – and so does everyone else who tries it – then gravity is accepted as a provisional truth.
By contrast, someone else may claim that if he jumps out of a window a god will lower him safely to the ground. The problem though is that, unless he submits to have the claim falsified, then all he has is a claim. Now that claim may be true - as may any other clam anyone else thinks they “intuit” – but that helps you not a jot.
What you’re actually saying here is effectively, “OK, I’m guessing but so are you”. It fails because it’s dishonest, (equivalent to one four-year-old saying to another, “you smell” and the other replying, “well you’re fat” as if that were in some way relevant), and because it fundamentally fails to understand that naturalism provides enough inter-subjective commonality of experience to enable a probabilistic assessment of truth, whereas claims of the supernatural offer nothing at all.
You’ve been corrected on your going nuclear approach several times now, but here once again is the Stephen Law's essay that will explain it to you:
http://stephenlaw.blogspot.co.uk/2011/09/going-nuclear.html
You:
How do you do it Blue? What's the methodology for getting from methodological naturalism to philosophical naturalism?
It’s the other way around, I’ve just explained it to you and I posted a link for you so you could understand it better. What more do you want?
Either address the argument or walk away, but enough already with the wilful obtuseness.
Because naturalism arbitrarily rules out the supernatural.
No, it’s
indifferent to it because there’s no definition of it, no evidence for it and no method to establish whether it’s real or just a natural phenomenon we’ve yet to figure out.
How can it possibly explain God for instance if he ''shows'' up.
I thought superstitionists like you thought he had “turned up” already – what happened to omnipresence?
Anyway, how could a naturalistic method explain
any non-naturalistic phenomena that
might be –your god, other gods, unicorns, Jack Frost, whatever? It couldn’t, but that helps you not a jot with your central problem: how on earth would you know that any of these things
had turned up at all, rather than that something had happened for which you just had no other explanation (the god of the gaps fallacy of which you’re so fond)?
Since you positively assert natural causes you need to come up with convincing evidence that supernatural experiences have a natural reason.....with no final appeal to philosophical naturalism.
Again, you fail to grasp how the burden of proof works. If you want to assert the existence of the supernatural, then it’s for you to demonstrate it. That gives you two problems: first, you need to show that you’ve considered and refuted all known natural possible causes (something about which you seem to be remarkably indifferent by the way); and second you need to explain why your “experience” wasn’t a natural phenomenon that you’ve misattributed to the god of your choice pending a natural explanation becoming available (the god of the gaps daftness you keep peddling).
Unless you can do these things, then “supernatural” is just overreaching.
Look, face it – your schtick here has been found out. It goes like this:
1. Realise that, despite countless requests for it, you have no method to distinguish the thing you think you intuit from mistake, delusion, false attribution etc.
2. Rather than address that, lay waste instead to
any method of establishing probable truths in the hope that the relativism of, “OK, I’m guessing but so are you” will somehow help you.
3. To achieve Step 2, misdescribe naturalism as the conviction that the natural is all there ever could be, then keep attacking that straw man.
4. Wait until everyone else gives up in frustration at your dishonesty, evasion and obtuseness.
5. Declare victory.
It’s your call – either address the rebuttals or continue with the schtick. If, as I suspect, it’ll be the latter there’s nothing more to say really.