NOMA is a cheap attempt to lend credibility to a specific subset of untestable and unfalsifiable concepts, with no good reason given as to why we should respect such a subset of the untestable and unfalsifiable but not the entire set. It is arbitrary and solves nothing.
EDIT: Why doesn't the strikethrough code work for me?![]()
I liked Gould and respect his work, but his efforts regarding NOMA are wrong.
In his terminology, there is a magisterium of science but not a magisterium of religion.
What he and others believed were a part of the 'magisterium of religion' either belong to that of science or have nothing to do with reality whatsoever.
It was a misguided attempt to allow science and religion to coexist in a sane and honest mind. They can not.
Looks more like an ad argumentum to me. Where's the ad hom?Thanks for the ad hominem
NOMA is a cheap attempt to lend credibility to a specific subset of untestable and unfalsifiable concepts, with no good reason given as to why we should respect such a subset of the untestable and unfalsifiable but not the entire set. It is arbitrary and solves nothing.
I know of so few religions that don't make claims about the physical world, that the term rarely applies. I am not sure why Gould liked it so much, given how often religion decided to overlap with the magesterium of science.
Well there is obviously dispute and overlap. But is it legitimate dispute? I think NOMA is about whether or not there is any LEGITIMATE dispute between science and religion, yes? That is - if scientists and religious people both understand and respect the boundaries of their own fields, then they've got nothing to argue about. If they ARE arguing, then it's because someone illegitimately crossed the line in the sand.