There may be methodological aspects of empiricism that are of value sure but they have a track record in er, empiricism.
Yep.
You seem to be recasting all other attempts at understanding as failed science.
Not in general, but on the particulars of demonstrating the reality or falsity of god-claims, they had been inconclusive.
You seem to see things as only comprehensible by science and that is scientism par excellence.
There are any number of notions that can be demonstrated by pure logic, there are mathematical proofs of concepts (some of which underpin the workings of empirical validations), so I don't think that's the case. When it comes to the idea of gods, though, I see an empiricism that demonstrates you don't need the idea to realise the reality we see and a bunch of attempted rationalisations that just don't work.
Yes there was 9/11 where people of our kind were Killed and we felt it keenly, but then there were the Killing fields in Cambodia at the hands of atheist Utopist Pol Pot where people who weren't like us were killed by a mad atheist.
9/11 didn't highlight the dangers of religion because the perpetrators were religious, I suspect the majority of the victims were religious as well. 9/11 highlighted the dangers of religion because the perpetrators were explicitly motivated by their religious sentiment, and had been recruited via their religious affiliations, and were funded by religious networks working explicitly in the furtherance of their understanding of their religion. It's not just that religious people could be bad, because there have always been flawed people, but that people could be bad (from a given perspective) BECAUSE of their religion.
Pol Pot and his regime were explicitly atheist, but that wasn't the motivation for the horrors they perpetrated.
I'm not clear what you mean here'.
You were criticising the 'New Atheist' movement as being unjustifiably empiricist, and I was pointing out that whilst a lot of the disproofs of specific god-claims were empirical, they weren't making an empirical case, fundamentally. The case is the purely rational one that god claims are made and are not adequately supported, and so can be not accepted. Empirical arguments are deployed, in some instances, to show the flaws in arguments in support of the idea of god, but there is not an underlying empirical atheist claim resulting 'not-god'.
Pleading that the Necessary entity is special.
Pleading that the necessary entity, if there is one, for no obvious reason can't be a natural event but must be some magical self-creating intelligence is special pleading, yes.
I cant see it being special being half of the picture, the other being the contingent. What is special is a universe that just is without the principle of sufficient reason required by philosophical empiricism and science.
Given the well-established principles of conservation (energy, momentum etc.) I still haven't seen a coherent argument as to why we shouldn't presume that reality is infinite, and our universe just one event within it.
First a necessary universe would also have to be specially pleaded for in many more ways than a properly necessary being, in other words pleading a necessary universe rather than one that just is would be special pleading.
Perhaps.
Secondly chains of cause and effect require a terminator other wise they are infinite regresses and don't explain anything but particularly the question why is there anything and not nothing.
There could have been nothing, because nothing is not the lower boundary, nothing is the equilibrium point. Energy and matter have both positive and negative manifestations, and so 'nothing' is when they are in balance - nothing is as much part of the infinite reality as any of the rest of it.
And for the 'infinite regress' commentary - infinite regress is a description, not an argument. Yes it's an infinite regress... so?
Day today reality is not a scientific term though
Day to day reality is what can be seen and measured and experienced - what could be a better empirical base than that?
The necessary being only governs itself since it is not contingent on anything else.
You presumption here is that the creator of the simulation is the necessary being, and not contingent on a larger reality.
You can only take it's attributes and see if what they are has also been the content of religious debate before.
Why are we restricted to previous religious arguments, that's begging the question. They have failed, or we wouldn't still be asking the questions.
The problem is that there are some churches who do not believe that holy matrimony was a state between people of different sex and there are people who think that the secular majority / ad populum view should somehow, in the nature of a religious mystery perhaps change that view.
No, the problem is that there are some churches who believe they somehow 'own' the concept of matrimony, and want to stop anyone else from partaking of the civil actions. The only people looking to 'force' churches to change are people within the churches, those of us outside couldn't give a crap as long as you don't tell us what to do and you pay your taxes.
I can't see Zeitgeist changing the holy or whether same sex holy matrimony is viable at the holy level.
What your magic circle of wizards think is part of their spellcasting doesn't matter outside of your temples, unless you bring it out and start swinging around.
If some clergy think that it is God's will for them though I wouldn't intervene.
Again, as long as your internal squabbles stay internal, nobody cares.
Well sometimes God's bound not to want what we want.
Why? If, as you suggest, God is the absolute morality (or, at least, is cognizant of it, depending on your theological persuasion) then we should be in perfect accord with God's view - except that, despite their alleged omniscience and omnipotence and omnipresence, they seem incapable of clearly communicating it.
As i've said the awareness of God is ours, the presence of God is his
Or, as the case may be, the awareness of a god is your symptom, the presence of god is not real.
Then we have no business inflicting it on anyone else
No, we have an obligation to cooperate and build as moral a society as we can, collectively.
O.
[/quote]