3113
Hello Summer!
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2005
- Posts
- 13,823
Actually, I'm with Doc on this one. A rose by any other name and all that. Atheists acknowledge that there is some chemical reaction in the human brain which gives us what is sometimes called numinous experiences, that feeling that there is something mysterious or greater than ourselves. Something "Beyond the natural law." Whether it is beyond or not, as Liar rightly pointed out, can't be known. Because we don't know all natural laws. Once we know 'em, then they're natural laws, right?the view of science as opposed to or set apart from theology [your view], or facts as opposed to mystical experiences [as asserted by other posters] is rather counter to what Kauffman is trying to do, which might be described as reaching a rapprochement in *understanding* between science and spiritual (not necessarily God-related) approaches.
And I mean, talk about Hubris. It's always ironic to me that people say, "Thinking you can know god is hubris!" But thinking you can know and say that god can't be known is also hubris. Insisting that there are things beyond "natural law" is hubris.
What really mystifies me, however, is...what's the big deal? Kauff insists in the video that what he's come up with is "huge." Is it? Why? I'm still going to the grocery store, doing my laundry and arguing with you on-line. My life hasn't radically changed on hearing what he has to say. Nor do I imagine that this new sacred is going to make Catholics stop going to church and seeing god as some loving father, or make those who believe the dinosaurs were put there to test our faith believe differently. And it really isn't going to stop greedy bastards from exploiting what they can, stealing what they can, and fuck anything and anyone they mow down in the process--including rainforests and the people living there, no matter how much damage it does to the planet. So what huge difference is this going to make? In the end, all he's discovered is that part of us that tends toward "theology" (or whatever name you wish to call it) and by that I mean our need to have some sort of "faith" in the existence of something beyond natural law be it in Santa Claus, god or this. It's a part of us that sees patterns instead of random lines and decides that those aren't just random lines on our toast, they're a picture of Jesus, and this couldn't be coincidence, and therefore the toast must be supernatural.
Ironically, the person I'd quote on this is Terry Prachett's "Death" character: "...take the universe and grind it down to the finest powder, and sieve it through the finest sieve, and then show me one atom of justice, one molecule of mercy. And yet, you try to act as if there is some ideal order in the world. As if there is some, some rightness in the universe, by which it may be judged."
It's very nice of Kauff there to want to have a new and universal "sacred" that can cover everything, and if he's your guru and saying something that gives you that sacred in a way that feels right to you, then that's fine. But Doc had the right of it. It really is just another form of theology.