NS,
It doesn't matter which level you approach it on…
It matters a lot I think. The goldfish in a bowl models his reality – his “truths” if you like – on the basis of what he observes and (inasmuch as goldfish can reason) his reason. His belief “little plastic castle” is true for him on that basis, as it’s also true for any other goldfish that want to test his claim. Whereas his clerical chum asserting “goldfish god” offers nothing for him to get his teeth into (assuming that goldfish have teeth).
Similarity we model our reality using the tools available to us, but that’s not to say that we’re not just another layer of reality (different types of “goldfish”) with whole worlds or reality beyond our ken.
That’s all that’s being said here: we can reliably model answers just as the goldfish reliably models “castle” because those answers provide solutions that work, which is as good a definition of “true” as we have.
…and you are getting confused with invalidating the claims of theists, which is not something we are disagreeing on, and your own epistemic claims.
Perhaps, but the former entail absolutes whereas mine are provisional but ok…
That things appear to happen in a way that can be measured is fine. Again we don't disagree but what is actually happening I.e. are those things that happen what we classify as natural is not something that can be demonstrated by a method that makes that assumption.
Sorry, but you’re going to have to tease this out a little as it doesn’t scan. What do you mean by “actually” here? I’m not sure that we can ever know “actually” can we – how would we eliminate the goldfish problem for example?
I make no claim to an “actually” in any case, so I have nothing that would rely on it to demonstrate. All I do say is that, even when the epistemic bedrock is uncertainty, logical models that rest on it and that provide working solutions still give us “true enough to be useful” truths nonetheless.
Indeed the distinction itself, as already covered, between natural/supernatural is meaningless unless iris looked at from the idea that there any such thing as the supernatural. That's why I keep on mentioning Sriram's take that whatever happens and however it is caused is all part of the same process. Making a philosophic claim of an epistemic kind as regards natural is making a category error unless you think that the supernatural makes sense in some way.
I’ll have to unpick that:
“Indeed the distinction itself, as already covered, between natural/supernatural is meaningless unless iris looked at from the idea that there any such thing as the supernatural.”
But the meaninglessness (ie, inability to produce truths) of the term “supernatural” is
itself the distinction! There’s nothing to model – and that’s what differentiates truth claims about the supernatural from truth claims about the natural. As soon as you try to examine the former term it dissolves. Natural vs supernatural is a non-white noise vs white noise issue.
“That's why I keep on mentioning Sriram's take that whatever happens and however it is caused is all part of the same process.”
How can explanations that are not even wrong be part of the same process as those that can be tested and found to be either right or wrong (albeit resting on….etc)?
Claims of fact that are found to be true or not true are fine, but claims of the supernatural aren’t part of that process at all – they’re inherently not truth
apt.
"Making a philosophic claim of an epistemic kind as regards natural is making a category error unless you think that the supernatural makes sense in some way."
The only philosophic claim of an epistemic kind is that the natural is all we know of that we can reliably access and test (albeit… etc). The term “supernatural” doesn’t need to be meaningful at all for that purpose – “all we know of” just means “all we know of”. It’s complete in itself, and it doesn’t entail consideration of the supernatural for its force (a rejection that would, as you say, require the term “supernatural” to be meaningful). That’s the point – the universe appears to consist of various components that don’t (or didn’t) require some kind of intelligent intervention, so there’s nothing else to consider.