JessFR
Bluelight Crew
In my opinion, humans as a whole have an unhealthy obsession with death.
Given it is the only thing you can be certain of, I understand our obsession. We may not discuss it enough but it is the subtext of much of our behaviour and fears.
Maybe the unhealthy part is our fear of death. Whilst its natural to fear death, even the most frightened person dies. Its hard to say fearing death makes living better.
What I'm trying to get at is the belief that things like spirituality can't be probed by science, and so every person's subjective opinion on the matter is what has to be trusted instead. Personal beliefs I have nothing against, but some people go as far as to suggest that if you're trying to base your spiritual beliefs on scientific knowledge, then you're doing it wrong.
What most don't realize is that if something can't be verified and isn't based on existing knowledge, then it's just conjecture/pure speculation. All the biases humans are prone to when it comes to subjective opinions or observations aside, this kind of freedom to suggest anything is counterproductive in my opinion, and results in an exercise in futility as far as discussion of such topics goes if the deciding factor is "I believe so".
The issue is that there are different standards of evidence and different hierarchies of evidence across many systems. What is beyond the domain of science to analyze is entering the realm of conjecture, unless the subject matter touches on the periphery of science, in which case science can make educated guesses based on the kind of probabilistic extrapolation you mentioned earlier. Those probabilities themselves are based on a self-referential authority within science that the body of work is concrete and therefore a suitable platform for less concrete explorations. Every human system has these self-referential authorities. It's a constant philosophical problem. In other words, during the era of alchemy and astrology, these sciences were viewed as concrete. Now they're not. This internal correction is common to all systems, including spiritual ones, not just science. That's why the critique that spirituality is not self-corrective because it's purely opinion doesn't add up. What does that mean for people who never have the privileged of learning the scientific method? What does their reality mean?
The other issue is language, IMO. A lot of systems are saying similar things but they talk past each other or dismiss one another due to inclusivity. For example, I practice Classical Chinese Medicine. It's based on inductive reasoning over thousands of years of observation. It was a scientific model that arose from Daoist and Buddhist philosophy, later becoming its own logical framework. We use that same diagnostic system today. The same is true of the Vedic texts, probably about 5,000 years old. We are supposed to toss out entire bodies of knowledge as "conjecture" just because the scientific method hasn't probed them, or currently can't? I have used medical methods that have no basis in modern science in of themselves, to cure people of disease. Seriously... I have cured some people of cancer and other conditions, using just a straight CM model. Science doesn't yet know why it works in general.
Science is just more convincing because it explains things in the dense physical, which is the basis of our more material existence. But because it cannot explain consciousness, life/death, and other big questions, other branches must take over. It's just strange when some scientists acknowledge these limits while simultaneously calling other systems pure speculation. How exactly do they expect the knowledge gap between their system and others to be explained? Are we just supposed to sit with that nothingness and absence of personal meaning?
On that note... science is very privileged. Not many people have access to the academic journals or the peer reviewed process. Maybe if everyone in the world were on equal footing and was privy to this info, as well as methods, we could understand what's really going on.
What is the goal of science, in your mind? I know the basic definition, but I'm thinking more in the grand scheme. What is the goal?
Are all forms of logic the same, even if their epistemologies (ways of seeing and explaining reality) are different?
If something we observe works but can't be translated between systems of logic, how do we reconcile that? (I have seen this many times and can give many examples.)
Can science ever be truly separate from cultural and personal ethos? (Values, biases, cultural norms, epistemologies, etc.)
jammin83 said:I guess i just am failing to realize what good science is actually doing us. Seems like most things that we are discovering are going to waste. We are still destroying our environment, and its damn near impossible to go through a day without being poisoned (esp in the US of A). [...]
In the US, our water is fluoridated. our food consists of GMOs without labels, we still put HFCS in everything, we are actively poisoning people, myself included. our farming practices deplete natural nutrients from soil and deprive us of the things we need to sustain life.
not trying to break up what seems to be a pretty good discussion developing, but a couple thoughts if you dont mind.
I guess i just am failing to realize what good science is actually doing us. Seems like most things that we are discovering are going to waste. We are still destroying our environment, and its damn near impossible to go through a day without being poisoned (esp in the US of A).
Most of our brightest engineers go into oil or defense. I live in an area that has a lot of defense contractors and its kind of sad to see so many people that think they are participating in something good. its disgusting to me. sure, maybe some are in the communications dept or something, but others are actively finding ways to eliminate life in an 'efficient' manner. makes my skin crawl.
we still drive gas powered vehicles, our medical institutions keep us sick, make us sicker, and focus on maintenance drugs instead of cures. when a pharma company provides a useful drug that saves lives, it jacks up the price so much that only the wealthy can afford it.
In the US, our water is fluoridated. our food consists of GMOs without labels, we still put HFCS in everything, we are actively poisoning people, myself included. our farming practices deplete natural nutrients from soil and deprive us of the things we need to sustain life.
I can't help but feel that most our scientific advances are serving special interests. making money is great and everything, but I just don't know how much all of our advances have helped human kind in any sort of meaningful way. our society sucks, our medicine sucks, we blow people up for kicks and money, and the beneficial discoveries that are made are suppressed or gouge consumers. its ridiculous.
as long as money rules the world, most of science is going to go to waste. Its just another thing thats used as a means of control.
I don't believe in neutral, there is no working around biases. I think people are being guided in one way or another and objectivity is just about impossible to obtain.
As for the fluoride, GMO and other stuff; well, that's just conspiracy theories. Fluoride in the amounts used in drinking water is practically harmless to the body, but it helps strengthen the enamel; in some places fluoride is added to drinking water, in some places with naturally high fluoride levels, some of it has to be removed to maintain a healthy concentration. As for GMOs - everything is GMO. If you do selective breeding, then your resulting plant is genetically modified through selective breeding (choosing particular genes over less desired ones). There is no fundamental difference between ways a gene is incorporated into the genome of a plant - you can "insert" it using vectors (what you call GMO), or you can do it by selective breeding. Except the former option allows for more precise modification. If you own a dog of a particular breed, then your dog is GMO.
It certainly doesn't make life better. It makes it worse in almost uncountable ways. Check out Ernest Becker's Denial of Death and you may find yourself in agreement with him that fear of death is responsible for most if not all the ills of humanity. His theories are very compelling IMO and have all been backed up by scientific studies done by the TMT folk (Terror Management Theory). That book changed my life more than anything else I've ever read and I've read a shitload of books in 63 years. It completely blew my mind into smithereens.
this isnt a science forum, this is a philosophy and sprituality forum, and last i checked anyone could post anything they wanted to so long as its within the forum guidelines. so quick to dismiss things you have little knowledge or understanding of bc you know something about chemistry. it discourages people from posting, which as a mod, thats more than a little inappropriate.
Luck is me simply imposing my will on the universe causing it to bend in my favor, if I continue to expend energy on something eventually what i want to happen will happen.