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On 4/27/24 1:09 AM, Martin Harran wrote:
>
No, my issue is not with science favouring the study of one of them
because it is relatively easy to study it using well-established
practices that have produced good results in other areas; my issue is
science *ruling out* one of them out in principle. To some extent,
that is understandable because of it being so much less amenable to
study using those well-established practices but in the same way as we
figured out gravity, I think we should be able to figure out ways of
studying the effects and symptoms that would come from dualism.
As I understand it, lots of people *have* figured out ways to study
effects that would come from dualism, and those effects are not there.
Thus we reject dualism not because it is hard to study, but because it
has been studied and found wanting.
>I get the impression, however, that it goes deeper than just being>
difficult to study, there seems to be near-paranoia about opening a
door that might let God in. Take, for example, the early work done by
Rupert Sheldrake. He came up with the idea of 'morphic resonance',
that there is something like a cloud of collective memory that
everything adds to and draws from. He did some research using chickens
and published it in book form. Sir John Maddox viciously attacked the
book in an editorial in Nature, in a statement that caused
considerable jaw-dropping in the scientific ommunity, described it as
"the best candidate for burning there has been for many years."
Sheldrake's proposal is quackery. Anyone with more than a passing
familiarity with the many and various forms of quackery does not need to
read past the two words "morphic resonance" to by 99% sure that it is hokum.
>I don't have an opinion either way on Sheldrakes' ideas and I'm>
certainly not seeking to defend them, but what disturbed me was that
Maddox made no scientific attempt to critique his ideas and research,
baldly claiming in a BBC interview that "Sheldrake is putting forward
magic instead of science, and that can be condemned in exactly the
language that the Pope used to condemn Galileo, and for the same
reason. It is heresy."
How does one give a scientific critique of magic?
If anything can
happen, how do you test for "anything"?
>'Heresy' is a word that should not have any place in science.>
Why not? Surely metaphors have a place in science, and "heresy" is
useful as a metaphor.
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