redbaron
irony based lifeform
I'm presuming to you metaphysicality is the science of that beyond, or preceding, physicality (immateriality?). In which case it seems the essence of the argument comes down to whether there is such thing as metaphysicality, or whether that can be reasonably assumed to be the case.
Gold star for you. Xoxoxo.
Unsure if you would agree, but if metaphysicality could be demonstrated it would logically follow to me that if one's object of interest was physics (physis-nature) then the study of metaphysics would clarify that object in a way much greater than a study of purely physics in-of-itself, because you would be studying that which physics originated from. You'd be attaining towards a meta-perspective of physics.
It's a very big if and even then I'd have to question whether or not the logical follow-on you're talking about is indeed the logical follow-on. It would help (maybe) but we'd have the problem that the originator may bear little to no resemblance to the outcome.
If an alien were able to study our origins on Earth in a primordial soup (sorry anti-Evolutionists, this discussion is going to assume Evolution is real) would that at all assist them in understanding our present day civilizations? Not rhetorical, I actually wonder.
Your argument makes sense from the position that metaphysicality can be presumed to not exist, or that, occam's razor, any phenomena one might claim in defence of metaphysicality could better be explained in terms of physics, or natural phenomena.
That's a close enough approximation. I notice that people tend to object to me taking a starkly naturalistic view of the universe. As though I'm limiting myself by only considering "mere" naturalistic phenomena. The scope of what is naturalistic could easily encompass a universal god (shock horror), it's just that I tend to not be so quick as to assume the significance of some concepts on the natural world.
The conflict naturally comes as a result of some people thinking that we should presume the existence of spooky haunty things, whereas I don't see any reason to presume them. It's not a matter of should or shouldn't for me.
A more interesting question to this discussion would be what kind of evidence could one present in favour of metaphysicality?
I'm trying to get Sinny or computerhxr to do that, but they don't want to. I've tried hundreds of times really because I agree that's the most interesting question.
The answer though is apparently off-limits and not able to be discussed.
This statement interests me. I would be interested to know what "spiritual" is to you?
I personally hate the word because no matter how you define it, someone else will disagree.
What I suppose most people could agree on, is that a large part of spirituality involves attaining a greater understanding of our place in the cosmos and a greater understanding of ourselves by extension - or vice versa.
If we can agree on that, then naturalistic* science can indeed be profoundly spiritual in and of itself.
*Referring to science as naturalistic is awfully redundant because science is obviously naturalistic but it's impossible to know what other people consider to be science that actually isn't.