Me
Quote:Is there any aspect of existence that science will not, one day fully and without any leftovers, explain?
If yes - that's what we are talking about
muso wrote on Sep 13
th, 2013 at 9:23am:
Are there any aspects of sentience that can be explained by our knowledge of brain physiology?
If yes, that's what I'm talking about
We are saying the same thing from different ends. There are aspects of sentience and existence that science can explain. But not the whole.
There is a good article in the current New Republic about scientism, the conflating of scientific knowledge with knowledge as such.
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/114548/leon-wieseltier-responds-steven-pinker...Science is interesting but not as a guide to what's most important in life - our interpersonal relationships. In that regard, it is largely irrelevant.
An example (and taster) from the artricle:
In 1997, Jared Diamond published Guns, Germs, and Steel, another scientistic theory of everything. In one of its less charming passages, Diamond proposes “the Anna Karenina principle” for the understanding of the domestication of animals: “domesticable animals are all alike; every undomesticable animal is undomesticable in its own way.” He is mimicking the renowned opening sentence of Tolstoy’s novel: “all happy families are alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” The adage is rather overrated, since all happy families are not alike; but here is how Diamond explicates it: “By that sentence, Tolstoy meant that, in order to be happy, a marriage must succeed in many different respects: sexual attraction, agreement about money, child discipline, religion, in-laws, and other vital issues. Failure in any one of those respects can doom a marriage even if it has all the other ingredients needed for happiness.” This is a fine instance of the incomprehension, and the buzzkill, that often attends the extension of the scientistic temperament to literature and art. Of course Tolstoy had no such sociology or self-help in mind. His proposition was a caution against generalizations about the human heart, and a strike against facile illusions of intelligibility, and an affirmation of the incommensurability, the radical particularity, of individual experience. In-laws!