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Avatar von Richard Ward

I see it like this:

The truth conditions (repeatability, falsifiability etc.) for scientific statements all involve an ability to reliably predict and manipulate what might be called "states of the world".

Scientific truth is inescapably pragmatic - the power to predict and the power to instrumentalize.

As such it is enormously useful, but not more than this. At any one moment it is the set of currently most practically efficient cognitive nets that we have available to project upon the world. It helps us to survive and flourish and its interpersonal character is a vitally important glue for society.

But...

It has no metaphysical or ontological implications.

In particular, it cannot deny the legitimacy of alternative cognitive nets for other (less instrumental) aspects of our existence. To talk of gods, souls, beauty, goodness, qualia, etc. is to invoke a different cognitive enterprise that aims at a completely different understanding of human experience. Science is ultimately about control. Art, religion, morality, spirituality, mythology, superstition etc. are about something more like a personal awakening to more fundamental, non-instrumental regions of experience. They do not conflict with (and cannot be disproved by) science because they they are engaged in a wholly different pursuit.

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Avatar von Christine Bott

Oh wie spannend! Mit meiner unschuldigen Frage wollte ich keineswegs einen Gottesbeweis heraufordern- weiss ich doch, dass die Existenz dessen, was wir Gott nennen, nicht bewiesen werden kann. Ebenso wie die Nichtexistenz nicht bewiesen werden kann. Das alles befindet sich jenseits dessen, was wir wissen können, ist also Glaube. Auch dass Menschen womöglich einen Gott brauchen, beweist nicht dessen Existenz. Berge, Seen, Wälder sind auch nicht da, weil ich sie brauche.

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