There are also potential normative applications of science which could be highly questionable. For instance, common sense and epidemiology would tell us that the most effective way to deal with HIV (or any transmissible disease without a sufficient non-human reservoir) would be to ruthlessly quarantine all infected individuals and wait for the human vector population to die out. From a cold, hard, logical point of view, that's the most sensible solution. But our sense of morality (informed in no small part by religion) discourages that.
I'd just like to elaborate on how wrong this is, because, as has been mentioned, that's
not the only goal.
The goal to eliminate that sort of disease goes hand-in-hand with several other goals, and applying ruthless quarantining and such would compromise
those goals.
This just goes to show that when people criticize "cold, logical thinking" it's usually because they don't know how the logic involved actually works.
It's also rather absurd to say that ethics have nothing to do with logic. Ethics and morality need not even be informed by religion (this is a common mistake people make). Proper ethics are logically-sound and work towards foreseeable goals and conclusions.
@Svafa because it would be useless. I mean god has no observable action on uranus that we know of.
Or god is a big rock in space.
Well all this is philosophical nonsense and the main reason why philosophy is more and more discarded.
This is a obvious dead end. If you don't trust anything you cannot deduce anything. Then it got no interest. And it's useless to think about it.
The thing about philosophy is that it's very easy to be taken seriously if you say you are one, even if what you're saying is ill-reasoned. It's not philosophy that's bad, it's abuse of philosophy.
I see a lot of bitching back and forth about whether or not you can "prove" Pluto, or God, or what have you. This is ridiculous. Science (and life) is never about absolutely proving anything, except possibly in cases where you're working from axioms in an a priori manner (such as a geometrical proof).
The reason to think Pluto exists isn't "I saw it with my eyes". If I had never heard of Pluto before, and it came to me in a vision, I shouldn't necessarily trust that vision, nor should other people.
The reason to not trust God to exist simply because I (or someone else) "saw" him is that the alternative explanations are too numerous and far more likely. We know that the human mind has a tendency to come up with some pretty weird shit in dreams, hallucinations, and other altered states, and sometimes even when we think we're pretty lucid, and these things always turn out to not be easily reproducible or applicable to the world around us. Yes, a lot of people have claimed to see God; a lot of people have also claimed to see things that are mutually-exclusive with God, as well as various
forms of god(s). It's all about which explanation seems more applicable to the real world. Saying "God exists and told me A, B, and C" because you saw him doing so in a religious experience is easily explained by factors we already know of, without introducing God, is going to be mutually contradictory with what all kinds of OTHER people think God said to them (or what God is), is in no way verifiable, and is in fact no more applicable to your own life or anyone else's than whatever dreams you had last night.
Science (and empirical, functional thought in general) isn't about "proving" things one way or the other, it's about observing patterns and coming up with functional models for how the world around us works in order to predict and plan events.
More of the extreme examples were simply my own ponderings on why we're so willing to accept one "absurd" claim and not another. If we're willing to accept the existence of one thing we've only ever heard of through hearsay, then why not another?
How about the fact that it's been
independently confirmed time and time again by different people in a non-contradictory and non-controversial manner? If this "hearsay" were wrong, then evidence to that point would be obvious and all around us, because it would be trivial to acquire it. It's extraordinarily unlikely that an object which should be easily-observed could just be made up on the spot by countless independent people and organizations without anybody actually noticing.
That's what it's about: Confidence in the information being presented, and weighing the options. I think Pluto exists because it's easily observed, countless people have done so independently of each other and agree about it, and highly conclusive evidence to the contrary would be easy to acquire.
Pluto is easily falsifiable. God is not.