Religion
In reply to the discussion: Can you give an example of an argument against religion that is ... [View all]tama
(9,137 posts)is what this forum and language is about. I agree that god as a matter of definition of existing or not-existing is not most meaningful semantic game.
You, as usual, define objectivity by the semantic opposite of subjectivity, revealing again that the subjective-objective distinction is a codependent relation. Bounds of which and freedom from have been subject of much philosophical etc. thought. Also in science, especially in quantum physics.
Fully "objective" view of universe would be possible only for external all-knowing god, science is what we do in participatory and inclusive universe, with naturally limited "subjective" viewpoints - speed of light, event horizons, uncertainty principles etc., condemning us to this or that localized niche of universe and entropic loss of available information. I've been looking for a positive meaning for objectivity in quantum era that would be consistent with scientific advance towards unificatory theory and quantum gravity, and I like what Lee Smolin said about that question: according to Smolin, objective means that when we ask the same questions, we get same answers or similar enough to be able to live in shared world. Of course, we do not always ask same questions, and different questions can decohere into parallel - and/or overlapping - localized "classical universes" or viewpoints of quantum potential.