Pidge,
Science has a better description of how things are than the old phlogiston theory.
And indeed better than any claim of fact with no means of investigation and testing.
And arrived at it through scientific means.
Science employs “scientific means”? Er, yes.
Any extension of this beyond the scientific…
No-one is doing that.
..is scientism…
Depends what “extension” you had in mind, but unless it’s the claim that all phenomena are necessarily amenable to the scientific method then no it isn’t.
…and empiricism…
Science is necessarily empiricist.
…neither of which can be established by science.
Scientism isn’t a claim anyone I know of makes, and of course empiricism is validated by science. That’s why we have aeroplanes and medicines.
You make an irrelevant statement.
Wrong again.
Gravity or pixies? What the fuck is that all about. Like incarnating Leprechauns, Pixies holding the cosmos together is another of your confections. Another straw man which no one but you or someone with a more creative imagination than you has thought of.
Ah of course – there’s me forgetting that you have no concept of the analogy. Sorry, my bad.
I was merely trying to explain to you parsimony in terms I thought you’d be able to grasp. Clearly the effort failed.
Parsimony is not about whacky vs sensible, or supernatural versus natural it’s about simplicity of solution but more importantly necessary entities.
Actually it’s about which proposition requires the fewest assumptions, but as ever you’ve missed the point about that.
Another grand misunderstanding that religion rules out naturalistic explanations or always prefers supernatural ones instead. That is not the case except for fundamentalism perhaps.
Nope, no idea what you’ve even trying to say here and nor does it relate to anything I said. It’s simple enough though: either the religion to which you happen to subscribe thinks some phenomena to be “supernatural” or it doesn’t. And if it does, by that term you mean either the definition “outside the scope of science to explain” or the definition “outside the laws of nature”. For some reason you’re refusing to tell us which version you opt for though, so what you actually think about that is anyone’s guess.
In fact, believing that is an article of faith for fundey New atheists.
I suppose it would be if anyone did (and if there was actually such a thing as a “fundey New Atheist” (sic)) but as that’s just another of your straw men and your invented bogey man respectively we can safely ignore it.
So anyway, as despite your coyness on the matter as you seem to believe in a god outwith the laws of nature able to flit in and out of material form at the drop of a hat, do you have any good reason at all to deny me the same claim for my belief “leprechauns”?