A lot of discussion on the nature of Absolutes seems to be quite tough going because of unclear definitions - I encountered this table by Dr T Singh who has a special interest in examining the paradigms that science and religion work out of and I am curious to see if theists and atheists alike agree to it
(of course there are many discussions about exactly what is the substance of the absolute truth, but this is more to establish what criteria such an absolute substance would have to meet)
Basic Features of ............................The View of ................. The View of
Absolute Truth .............................. Modern science............. Religion
1. The Absolute truth exists,
but is not fully conceivable ..................Yes .............................Yes
by the human mind
2. It exists invariantly throughout
space ..............................................Yes .............................Yes
3. It does not change with time ..........Yes .............................Yes
4. It controls and is the source of
all manifestations ..............................Yes .............................Yes
5. It exists as a unified whole .............No.............................Yes
6. It possesses the attribute of
consciousness
(thinking, feeling, willing) .....................No.............................Yes
7. It corresponds with fixed
mathematical expressions....................Yes .............................No
8. The perception of the absolute truth
is limited to matter and materia.............Yes .........................No
energy only
I guess one can argue that there are no absolutes in science, but that is not very helpful, just as religion without philosophy is useless
He explains all these points, but perhaps the most contentious for the material scientist is point 4 so Singh explains ....
....Point 4 should ideally be "yes" in both columns. We should expect the ultimate cause to determine all phenomena completely. The natural laws of modern science, however, must be supplemented by initial conditions describing the state of affairs in nature at some arbitrary point in time. This is a rather unsatisfactory feature of the modern science view, and theories such as Darwinian theory of evolution and the "Big Bang" theory of cosmology may be viewed as attempts to circumvent it ......
Any further ideas .....????
(of course there are many discussions about exactly what is the substance of the absolute truth, but this is more to establish what criteria such an absolute substance would have to meet)
Basic Features of ............................The View of ................. The View of
Absolute Truth .............................. Modern science............. Religion
1. The Absolute truth exists,
but is not fully conceivable ..................Yes .............................Yes
by the human mind
2. It exists invariantly throughout
space ..............................................Yes .............................Yes
3. It does not change with time ..........Yes .............................Yes
4. It controls and is the source of
all manifestations ..............................Yes .............................Yes
5. It exists as a unified whole .............No.............................Yes
6. It possesses the attribute of
consciousness
(thinking, feeling, willing) .....................No.............................Yes
7. It corresponds with fixed
mathematical expressions....................Yes .............................No
8. The perception of the absolute truth
is limited to matter and materia.............Yes .........................No
energy only
I guess one can argue that there are no absolutes in science, but that is not very helpful, just as religion without philosophy is useless
He explains all these points, but perhaps the most contentious for the material scientist is point 4 so Singh explains ....
....Point 4 should ideally be "yes" in both columns. We should expect the ultimate cause to determine all phenomena completely. The natural laws of modern science, however, must be supplemented by initial conditions describing the state of affairs in nature at some arbitrary point in time. This is a rather unsatisfactory feature of the modern science view, and theories such as Darwinian theory of evolution and the "Big Bang" theory of cosmology may be viewed as attempts to circumvent it ......
Any further ideas .....????
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