Showing posts with label Skepticism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skepticism. Show all posts

Monday, March 20, 2017

QUOTATION: Scientism

Peter Kreeft


Scientism seems to me to suffer from two fatal flaws. One is logical self-contradiction. For scientism is not a scientific claim about the universe but a philosophical claim, a claim in epistemology, about human knowledge, about the relation between human knowledge and science (or the scientific method). The claim is that only scientific knowledge, knowledge by the scientific method is reliable. But that claim cannot be verified or falsified by the scientific method. There is no empirical data, no mathematical measurement, and no logical reduction of the opposite claim (that knowledge extends beyond science) to a self-contradiction.  If all knowledge claims that cannot in principle be verified or falsified by the scientific method are unreliable and should be rejected, then that very statement is unreliable and should be rejected.
My other objection is even simpler. How can the reliability of one kind of knowledge (science) disprove the reliability other kinds of knowledge? That’s like the ear telling the eye that it is unreliable just because it can’t hear anything, or like the mystic telling the scientist that he cannot have any valid knowledge of reality because he has never had a mystical experience.

--Peter Kreeft, Letters to an Atheist, 2014

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

QUOTATION: Skepticism

G.K. Chesterton
It is assumed that the skeptic has no bias; whereas he has a very obvious bias in favour of skepticism.

--G.K. Chesterton

Thursday, May 5, 2016

QUOTATION: Scepticism

John Henry Newman
A Catholic is kept from scepticism, not by any external prohibition, but by admiration, trust, and love.

--Blessed Cardinal John Henry Newman

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

QUOTATION: The Problem with Skeptics

G.K. Chesterton
I will not engage in verbal controversy with the skeptic, because long experience has taught me that the skeptic’s ultimate skepticism is about the use of his own words and the reliability of his own intelligence.

--G.K. Chesterton