Thanks for your post Darkhorse (and I dont't mean the Fonzie one
)
Nice to see you again as it were and what an interesting and thought provoking analysis you make. I for one find it illuminating and fascinating and I find myself agreeing with a lot of it's content.
In my rather clumsy way I have been trying to simply question the validity in stating any kind absolute, no matter where it came from. I simply proposed to show that belief is quite different from truth.
One thing that I cannot reconcile however is the tone of your post to a degree, where it seems to denigrate science because in some way people who place faith in it ( and I do not mean in the context of religious faith) are faulty in their logic.I get the distinct feeling that you are using as an argument, that because science is flawed, in some way demonstrates the existence of a deity.
Also is evident to me where you say the thread effectively demonstrates Aquinas' folly. ' It is easy to use flawed logic in defense of perceived truth (Aquinas did this very thing).' My only point is if that is goes for science philosophy and indeed thought process itself, then equally it goes for religion, faith beliefs, or one's own God.
Anyway as the Fonze would say......... heeeeeeyyyyyyy
)Nice to see you again as it were and what an interesting and thought provoking analysis you make. I for one find it illuminating and fascinating and I find myself agreeing with a lot of it's content.
In my rather clumsy way I have been trying to simply question the validity in stating any kind absolute, no matter where it came from. I simply proposed to show that belief is quite different from truth.
One thing that I cannot reconcile however is the tone of your post to a degree, where it seems to denigrate science because in some way people who place faith in it ( and I do not mean in the context of religious faith) are faulty in their logic.I get the distinct feeling that you are using as an argument, that because science is flawed, in some way demonstrates the existence of a deity.
Also is evident to me where you say the thread effectively demonstrates Aquinas' folly. ' It is easy to use flawed logic in defense of perceived truth (Aquinas did this very thing).' My only point is if that is goes for science philosophy and indeed thought process itself, then equally it goes for religion, faith beliefs, or one's own God.
Anyway as the Fonze would say......... heeeeeeyyyyyyy