Philosophical naturalism asserts that the natural world, as perceived by the five senses of mankind, is all there is (see also: Atheism and naturalism). It is also called metaphysical naturalism and ontological naturalism. It is a logical result (but not a necessary result[2][3]) of methodological naturalism, the doctrine which assumes a priori[4] ("from the first" or "from the beginning") that there is no way to contact, detect, or otherwise empirically observe the supernatural. While most philosophers of science adhere strictly to this view and positively deny that any supernatural or miraculous effects or forces are possible, a small minority of them also believe that the reality of existence includes invisible, supernatural and immaterial reality or realities and that there are other ways of knowing the supernatural besides empirical observation.
Believers in philosophical naturalism assume that man has evolved to perceive all that exists, although there is no empirical or logical basis for this belief. Indeed, physicists generally believe in the existence of some kind of "dark matter" beyond perception.
Philosophical naturalists go one step beyond methodological naturalism and reject the existence of the supernatural altogether, citing "an utter lack of empirical evidence." They maintain that only natural forces can affect things natural and make changes in nature, and only according to the laws of nature, "the laws of nature" being both those laws discovered by science to be operating in nature and those laws not yet discovered but which will be discovered in the future. Philosophical naturalism is therefore a philosophy of acquiring knowledge. Because of their insistence that there is an utter lack of scientific (empirical) evidence to support religion, most philosophical naturalists are also atheists.
It is helpful to have a clearer definition of general terms as they more particularly relate to the expression philosophical naturalism.[3]
monism: Philosophy The doctrine that there is only one principle of being or ultimate substance, as mind or matter; the primary theory that reality is a unified whole: opposed to pluralism.
[< NL (from New Latin) monismus < Gk. (from Greek) monos single.]
dualism: The state of being twofold; duality; Philosophy The theory that the universe is composed of two principles, as mind and matter, or spiritual and physical; Psychology The theory that man's mind and body are two different entities, but intimately correlated and interacting; Theology The doctrine that there are two eternal and opposing principles or beings, one good and the other evil; a form of polytheism called ditheism or duotheism (compare Manichaeism).
[< dual < L dualis < duo two; ditheism < Gk. di- < dis twice + theism < Gk. theos god]
nature: the fundamental qualities or characteristics that together define the identity of something; essential character; sometimes capitalized as Nature, the overall pattern or system of natural objects, existences, forces, events, etc.; also the principle or power that appears to guide it; the entire material universe and its phenomena.
[< OF (from Old French) < L (from Latin) natura < natus, pp. (past participle) of nasci to be born]
natural: produced by or existing in nature, not artificial; of, pertaining to, or involving nature or the study of nature.
[< F (from French) naturel < L naturalis < natura, nature, character]
supernatural: Existing or occurring through some agency
[5]
beyond the known forces of nature; lying outside the natural order; above nature; distinguished from preternatural;[6] believed to be miraculous or caused by the immediate exercise of divine power; pertaining to the miraculous.
[< Med.L (from Medieval Latin) < L super- above + natura nature]
cause: The agent or force producing an effect; a person, occasion, condition, etc. giving rise to a result or action; contrasted to effect.
[< MF (Middle French) causatif < L causativus < causa cause]
power: Ability to act; capability; potential capacity; strength of force put forth; the right, ability, or capacity to exercise control, effect change; any agent that exercises power, as in control or dominion; any form of energy available for doing work.
[< OF poeir < LL potere < L posse to be able]
force: Dynamic power or energy; potential or active strength; power exerted on any resisting person or thing to compel change or action; also, the use of such power; coercion; the quality of anything that tends to produce an effect on the mind or will; capacity to convince or move; anything that changes or tends to change the state of rest or motion in a body.
[< F < L fortis brave, strong]
patient: Anything passively affected by external actions or impressions; that which is acted upon by that which acts; contrasted to agent.
[< OF pacient < L patiens, -entis, ppr. of pati to suffer, (to submit)]
operation: The act or process of operating; the exercise or application of force; action.
[< OF, deed < L operatio, -onis work < operari to work]
influence: The power of persons or things to produce effects on others, especially by imperceptible or indirect means; power or indirect sway resulting from social position, wealth, authority, etc.; an influence, one who or that which possesses the power to affect others, especially indirectly.
[< OF < LL (Late Latin) influentia < L influens, -entis, ppr. (present participle) of influere < in- in + fluere to flow]
effect: Something brought about by some cause or agency; result; consequence; contrasted to cause; ability to effect, to bring about, accomplish, should be carefully distinguished from affect, to act upon, influence; effective, having capacity to produce some (observable) result by active force or operation.
[< L effectus, pp. of efficere to bring about < ex- out + facere to do, make]
philosophy: The inquiry into the most comprehensive principle of reality in general, or of some limited sector of it such as human knowledge or human values; the love of wisdom, and the search for it; a philosophical system; also a treatise on such a system.
[< OF filosofie, philosophie < L philosophia < Gk. < philosophos < philos loving < phileein to love + sophia wisdom < sophos wise]
truth: The state or character of being true in relation to being, knowledge, or speech; conformity to fact or reality; conformity to rule, standard, model, pattern, or ideal; conformity to the requirements of one's being or nature; that which is true, a statement or belief that corresponds to the reality; a fact as the object of correct belief; reality; veracity; that which is right, according to divine law; fact.
[< OE (Old English) treoth < treowe true]
substance: The essential nature that underlies observable phenomena; that reality in which qualities or attributes inhere,
[9]
such as size, shape, color, weight, hardness, softness, visibility, invisibility, strength, (the "accidents") which a thing has, its sensible manifestation, but which are not in essence or reality the thing itself, its "form" as distinguished from the matter that embodies it. See Realists and Transubstantiation.
[< OF <L substantia < substare to be present < sub- under + stare to stand]
In philosophy, naturalism is the "idea or belief that only natural (as opposed to supernatural or spiritual) laws and forces operate in the world." [10] "Naturalism can intuitively [11] be separated into an ontological and a methodological component." [12]
Ontological refers to the philosophical study of the nature of reality (Ontology). The ontological component is concerned with the contents of reality, asserting that reality has no place for ‘supernatural’ or other ‘spooky’ kinds of entity. By contrast, the methodological component is concerned with the ways of investigating reality, and claims some kind of general authority for the scientific method. Some philosophers equate naturalism with materialism. For example, philosopher Paul Kurtz argues that nature is best accounted for by reference to material principles. These principles include mass, energy, and other physical and chemical properties accepted by the scientific community. Further, this sense of naturalism holds that spirits, deities, and ghosts are not real and that there is no "purpose" in nature. [13] Such an absolute belief in naturalism is commonly referred to as metaphysical naturalism. [14]
Metaphysical naturalism, also called ontological naturalism and philosophical naturalism, is a philosophical worldview and belief system that holds that there is nothing but natural elements, principles, and relations of the kind studied by the natural sciences, meaning those required to understand our physical environment by mathematical modeling. Metaphysical naturalism holds that all properties related to consciousness and the mind are reducible to, or supervene upon, [15] nature. Broadly, the corresponding theological perspective is religious naturalism or spiritual naturalism. More specifically, metaphysical naturalism rejects the supernatural concepts and explanations that are part of many religions.
The driving motivation for ontological naturalism is the need to explain how different kinds of things can make a causal difference to the spatiotemporal world, the universe of spacetime. Thus many contemporary thinkers adopt a naturalist view of the mental realm because they are fully persuaded that we will be unable otherwise to explain how mental processes can causally influence non-mental processes, how the nonphysical can affect the physical, how the mental and spiritual supernatural realm can affect the material natural world (or if it can actually have any effect on it in any way). Similar considerations motivate naturalist views of the biological realm, the social realm, and so on. The modern history of psychology, biology, social science and even physics itself can usefully be understood as a history of these disciplines having been made to be primarily dependent on the acceptance or rejection of naturalist ontological principles and methodological precepts. Many professional, academic and scientific careers, and reputations, have been made and destroyed solely on the basis of an acceptance or rejection of these principles and precepts, as a kind of litmus test of intellectual integrity and professional competence imposed by the philosophical and scientific communities (see ostracize).
There are different varieties of Metaphysical Naturalism, but they are usually separated into two general categories:
The belief that everything which exists is no more extensive [16] than its physical properties, and that the only existing substance is physical. Thus, everything that has ever been observed is in actual fact the product of fundamentally mindless arrangements or interactions of matter-energy in space-time, and it is unreasonable to believe anything else exists. See Dualism.
The belief that reality consists of many different substances (including abstract objects and universals) in addition to those fundamentally mindless arrangements or interactions of matter-energy in space-time.
Naturalism is inconsistent with any kind of Theism and is compatible with Atheism. The direct opposite of Naturalism is Supernaturalism, which accepts the existence of such things as supernatural beings, magical objects, Platonic forms or the existence (for example) of love, or of evil, as a cosmic force. (See Demiurge [17] and Satan.)
In science, the assuming of naturalism as a valid approach in working methods, without necessarily considering naturalism as an absolute truth with philosophical entailments, is called methodological naturalism.[18] Thus, in contrast to metaphysical naturalism, methodological naturalism refers exclusively to the methodology of science, for which metaphysical naturalism provides only one possible ontological foundation. Compare Agnosticism.
A modern prejudice drawn from philosophical naturalism holds that "if it's not scientific, it's not a fact, and has no reality; and if it's not a part of nature, it doesn't exist". This belief is held by many ordinary persons who with simple unquestioning faith believe in the reliability of the scientific method as the sole means of establishing truth. They dismiss all supernatural interventions in human history, and the possibility of divine revelation and miracles, by categorizing these phenomena as having only a psychological genesis (wishful thinking). And from this assumption all reports of them, as being phenomena directly caused by supernatural agency,[5] are represented as being ipso facto [19] (by that very fact alone) solely a record of the product of ignorance and primitive thinking, misinterpretations of natural phenomena, superstition and delusion, "which any rational person of intelligence can safely dismiss as entirely unreliable nonsense, since all the available empirical evidence acceptable to legitimate and impartial researchers proves scientifically beyond any reasonable doubt that the supernatural cannot possibly exist."
See Logical fallacy, Circular reasoning, Tautology, No true Scotsman, "Your theory does not work under my theory, so your theory must be wrong", Intellectual dishonesty, Invincible ignorance, the Fallacy of invincible ignorance and Bigotry.
Critics of philosophical naturalism are able to respond by analogy that there are forces and objects in nature not perceptible to human senses and not observable by ordinary instrumentality which do in fact exist. For example, sound frequencies, lightwaves and radiation not perceptible to human senses but which require highly specialized equipment to detect, which only specially trained and highly qualified individuals can interpret correctly; fundamental subatomic particles for which there is no certain proof but only "suggestive indications"; mathematical relationships and theorems incomprehensible to the average person which may or may not yet (but still might) be proven; concepts of love, loyalty, patriotism, truth, scientific elegance, known, discussed and (not fully) understood but fundamentally non-quantifiable. The power of an invisible magnetic field, which is not matter, to move some physical material objects, which are matter, cannot be explained by the doctrine that only material objects exist and that only a material object can impact or move another material object. Some general studies in Physics such as mechanics and thermodynamics do not advert to the theories and methodology of Quantum mechanics because it has no direct bearing on those researches, but the whole realm of scientific study is incomplete without it. Philosophical naturalism is an inadequate, even inappropriate, approach to the study of the whole of reality, as a thermometer is an inappropriate instrument for measuring the strength of the sun's gravitational force in the solar system or the density of planetary mass. Some aspects of human behavior and human psychology are still acknowledged by scientists to be "not (yet) predictable", and suggestive of free will, but which for now are assessed according to the theories of "behaviorism", and these are known from their evident effects to be part of existence and therefore within nature (natural). From this may be offered extrapolated support for the reasonable possibility of invisible beings and intelligences who act with free will, and are powerfully able to interact with and intervene in nature and in human affairs: spirits, angels, demons, God.
If "Nature" is defined as existence and reality and whatever exists is real and natural, whether it is uncreated or created, then logically God as the natural (existent) uncreated cause and sustainer of all natural creation is the meta-natural or preternatural[6] ground of existence, and it is from this that the existence of God is natural and God is a natural Being who cannot be classified as a super-natural being who exists outside of existence and reality, which therefore would be an absolute contradiction. And it is in the sense that nature is existence and existence is natural, and in the sense that the laws of physics solely limited to a spaciotemporal universe do not exhaust all the possible laws of existence, of nature, that the naturalists are correct in rejecting the supernatural as a possibility existing outside of nature (existence). According to theism, the natural (physical) has been generated by the supernatural (spiritual) and thus there is no illogic or inherent impossibility or contradiction in the assertion that the spiritual realm of existence (nature) can supervene in the physical realm of existence (nature). Both theists and philosophical naturalists hold that there is only one unified reality of existence. But philosophical naturalism dogmatically excludes a priori a major aspect of reality as a nonexistent unreality (the Fallacy of exclusion), and sees the whole of creation (the universe) as the whole of existence. See Essay: Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?.
There are also documented cases of former nonbelievers and well-known militant atheists such as Will Durant, [20] Antony Flew and Mortimer Adler who testify to the compelling reasonableness of the evidence for the existence of God, and others who have publicly presented written testimony to their unexpected experiences of first-hand, personal encounters with the presence of God and in consequence have renounced their prior unbelief, which can be lawfully substantiated as being admissible reports of what in jurisprudence are called "anecdotal evidence" of "reliable witnesses", reports (depositions) which would be entirely acceptable or admissible as lawful testimony in a Court of Law (see Swinburne's argument from religious experience). And there are those rigorously attested and documented occurrences of miracles of healing and physical intervention not explainable by recourse to the normal physical laws of science and medicine, even by nonbelievers, for example those at Lourdes in France, and those supporting the canonization of saints in the Catholic Church.
All of these arguments in favor of the supernatural against the doctrine of philosophical naturalism are dismissed by philosophical naturalists as having no validity because of their insistence a priori that the natural world is all there is and that the supernatural cannot exist but is a product of the human imagination. However, instantly rejecting a (supernaturalist) theory merely because it infers [22] from the available evidence things that a conflicting (naturalist) theory would not infer is not logical and is not good science, because the rejection is based on a prejudice which precludes objective and dispassionate examination of all the evidence with resultant neutral interpretation of facts (objectivity).
"Naturalism" is a term that is applied to many doctrines and positions in philosophy, and in fact, just how it is to be defined is itself a matter of philosophical debate. Naturalism is in general an approach to philosophical problems that interprets them as more easily articulated through the methods of the empirical sciences or at least, without a project of theorizing that is distinctively a priori by involving an unproved assumption from which to begin. For much of the history of philosophy thinkers and researchers have widely held that philosophy involved a distinctive method, and could achieve knowledge distinct from that attained by the special sciences. Thus, metaphysics and epistemology have often jointly occupied a position of "first philosophy," by attempting to lay the necessary foundation or basis for the rational understanding of reality and the justification of claims of knowledge. Naturalism rejects philosophy's claim to that special status.
Naturalism seeks to show that philosophical problems, as traditionally conceived, whether in epistemology, ethics, philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, or other areas, are badly-formulated and can be resolved or entirely displaced by appropriately naturalistic methods. Naturalists frequently assign a key role to the methods and results of the empirical sciences, and sometimes aspire to reductionism and physicalism. However, there are many versions of naturalism, and some are explicitly non-scientistic. What all versions of naturalism have in common is a repudiation by naturalists of the view of philosophy as exclusively involving any kind of a priori theorizing concerned solely with a distinctively philosophical set of questions divorced from the natural world.
Naturalistic thinking has a long history. In more recent decades it has been especially prominent, and its influence is felt all across philosophy. Different periods in the history of philosophy exhibit different emphases in what are the most prominent and pressing concerns, and there are reasons why different issues are at the forefront at different times.
In antiquity, basic questions about the constitution of reality motivated various conceptions about the material substance of things, about whether that substance is material, and about the relation between matter and whatever else might constitute reality. Views ranged from variants of (recognizably naturalistic) materialism to those that included decidedly non-materialist and non-naturalist elements, such as Platonism and Aristotelianism. [23]
In the works of the Ionian pre-Socratic philosophers the ideas and assumptions of philosophical naturalism were first seen. The earliest Pre-Socratic philosophers, such as Thales, Anaxagoras and especially Democritus, were labelled "natural philosophers" because they sought to explain everything by reference to natural causes alone, often explicitly excluding any role for gods, spirits or magic in the creation or operation of the world.
These early philosophers subscribed to principles of empirical investigation that strikingly anticipate naturalism. Thales is considered to be the father of science, because he was the first to offer explanations of natural events without attributing them to supernatural causes. [24]
This eventually led to fully-developed systems such as Epicureanism, which sought to explain everything that exists as the product of atoms moving in a void (Atomism), or the advanced Aristotelianism of Strato of Lampsacus (c. 335 - 269 B.C.), who sought to explain everything that exists as the inevitable outcome of uncreated natural forces or tendencies.
In classical Indian philosophies, naturalism was the foundation of two of six orthodox schools of Hinduism, (Vaisheshika, Nyaya), and of one heterodox school (Carvaka). [25] [26] The Vaisheshika school is traced back to 2nd century B.C. [27] [28]
Metaphysical Naturalism is most notably a Western phenomenon, although one tradition within Confucian philosophy (dating back at least to Wang Chong in the 1st Century, if not earlier) embraced a view that could be called Naturalism.
With the rise and dominance of Christianity and the decline of secular philosophy in the West during the Middle Ages, Metaphysical Naturalism became heretical and eventually illegal.
During the 12th century Renaissance in Europe, the modern emphasis that we find in methodological naturalism had its origin primarily in the ideas of medieval scholastic thinkers:
By the late Middle Ages the work of Christian natural philosophers had come to typify the search for natural causes. Although these left the door open for the possibility of direct divine intervention, they frequently expressed contempt for contemporaries who invoked the miraculous rather than searching for natural explanations, whom they regarded as soft-minded. Jean Buridan (ca. 1295-ca. 1358), a University of Paris cleric described as "perhaps the most brilliant arts master of the Middle Ages," contrasted the philosopher's search for "appropriate natural causes" with the common folk's habit of attributing unusual astronomical phenomena to the supernatural, such as eclipses of the sun and moon, comets, and meteor showers. The fourteenth century natural philosopher Nicole Oresme (ca. 1320–82), who went on to become a Roman Catholic bishop, admonished that, in discussing various marvels of nature, "there is no reason to take recourse to the heavens, the last refuge of the weak, or demons, or to our glorious God as if He would produce these effects directly, more so than those effects whose causes we believe are well known to us."
Throughout the medieval period, debates over the status of universals and the nature of the intellect, the will, and the soul were especially central. In large part, this had to do with their significance for issues in natural theology. And prominent among the debates were questions concerning the relation between soul and body and whether and how the soul survives the death of the body. This was because of their significance for the individuation of persons, the possibility and nature of immortality, and for the nature of divine providence (see Anselm of Canterbury, St. Thomas Aquinas). These families of issues were prominent in all three of the great Western religious traditions, Jewish, Christian, Moslem. They are though, enduring philosophical questions. Many of them have roots in the Classical tradition of pagan antiquity in Persia, Greece and Rome, but not all of them.
In the early modern period (c. 1450 through 1790 [29]) debates about the respective roles of reason and the senses in knowledge were especially prominent. They had long been important, but there was a revived interest in skepticism and the possibility of knowledge. Also, debates concerning determinism and free will attained high visibility. In both cases, the explanation had to do, in part, with the impact of dramatic developments in scientific theorizing. Those developments led to large-scale revisions in the conceptions of many things, including human nature and human action.
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries enthusiasm for the naturalistic study of nature picked up as more and more Christians turned their attention to discovering what they came to regard as the "secondary causes" that God employed in operating the world. Galileo Galilei (1564–1642), an Italian Catholic, one of the foremost promoters of the new philosophy, insisted that nature "never violates the terms of the laws imposed upon her." [30]
A number of philosophers during the Enlightenment, including Francis Bacon and Voltaire, outlined philosophical justifications for removing "appeal to supernatural forces" from investigation of the natural world. When Pierre Simon de Laplace was asked about the lack of any mention of God in his work on celestial mechanics, he is said to have replied, "I had no need of that hypothesis." [31]
It was only when the political advances of the Age of Enlightenment made genuine free speech possible again that a few intellectuals (like Baron d'Holbach in the 18th Century) publicly renewed the case for Metaphysical Naturalism, under the label of Materialism. Later, with scientific advances in quantum physics, this developed into the more far-reaching doctrine of Physicalism which excludes Supernaturalism. Subsequent scientific revolutions would offer for biology, geology, physics, and other natural sciences, modes of explanation that were not inherently theistic.
Steven Schafersman, president of Texas Citizens for Science, an advocacy group opposing creationism in (government-funded) public schools, [32] claims the progressive adoption of methodological naturalism—and later of metaphysical naturalism—followed the advances of science and the increase of its explanatory power. [33] These developments also caused the diffusion of philosophical positions such as existentialism which were associated with metaphysical naturalism. [34]
In the twentieth century a focus on questions of meaning and semantic issues played a role in many different philosophical movements (from logical positivism to ordinary language philosophy). It was widely thought that linguistic approaches might untie some age-old philosophical knots. Willard Van Orman Quine, George Santayana, and other philosophers in the 20th century argued that the success of naturalism in science meant that scientific methods should also be used in philosophy. According to this view, Science and Philosophy are said to form a continuum.
The term naturalism in current usage derives from debates in America in the first half of the last century. It has no very precise meaning in contemporary philosophy. The self-proclaimed 'naturalists' from that period included John Dewey, Ernest Nagel, Sidney Hook and Roy Wood Sellars. For them, nature is the only reality. There is no such thing as 'supernatural'. The scientific method is to be used to investigate all reality, including the human spirit:
"So understood, 'naturalism' is not a particularly informative term... The great majority of contemporary philosophers would happily... reject 'supernatural' entities, and allow that science is a possible route (if not necessarily the only one) to important truths about the 'human spirit'." [35]
These philosophers aimed to ally philosophy more closely with science and away from theology and religion. They urged the opinion that reality is exhausted by nature, containing nothing ‘supernatural’, and that the scientific method should be used to investigate all areas of reality, including the ‘human spirit’ (Krikorian 1944, Kim 2003). See Hypothesis.
As applied to contemporary philosophers ‘naturalism’, so understood, is not a particularly informative term. Different contemporary philosophers interpret ‘naturalism’ differently. This inevitably leads to a divergence in understanding the requirements of what constitutes a philosophy of ‘naturalism’. This disagreement about usage is no accident. Those philosophers with relatively weak naturalist commitments are inclined to understand ‘naturalism’ in an nonrigorous way, in order not to disqualify themselves as ‘naturalists’, while those who uphold stronger naturalist doctrines set forth more rigorous criteria to define what they regard as legitimate ‘naturalism’. However it is regarded, ‘naturalism’ is widely viewed as a positive term in philosophical circles—few active philosophers today would characterize themselves as ‘non-naturalists’.
The meaning of the term "methodological naturalism" as it is currently used today is recent, and something of an innovation, [36] unheard of in ancient or medieval schools of thought. The term "methodological naturalism" had been used in 1937 by Edgar S. Brightman in an article in The Philosophical Review as a contrast to "naturalism" in general, but there the idea was not really developed to its more recent distinctions. [37] According to Ronald Numbers, it was coined in 1983 by Paul de Vries, a Wheaton College philosopher. De Vries distinguished between what he called "methodological naturalism," a disciplinary method that says nothing about God's existence, and "metaphysical naturalism," which "denies the existence of a transcendent God." [38]
The main problems of philosophy have not really changed over time, but there are differences in what motivates certain formulations of them and ways of addressing them. In recent philosophy, the methods and the results of the sciences are again playing an increasingly important role in motivating new philosophical conceptions, even involving overall conceptions of philosophy itself. Various versions and defenses of naturalism are currently at the center of many philosophical debates.
Naturalism is a decidedly philosophical view, according to which philosophy is not a distinct mode of inquiry with its own problems and its own special body of (possible) knowledge. According to many naturalists, philosophy is a particular kind of reflective attention to the sciences and is continuous with them. They maintain that this is so not only in the sense that philosophy's problems are motivated by the sciences, but also in that its methods are not fundamentally distinct from those of science. Naturalists affirm with confidence that the sciences afford us a more systematic, rigorous, and explanatory conception of the natural world than is supplied by common sense. Christians affirm with informed common sense that a naturalism informed and shaped by science and human reasoning alone is at its best an incomplete approach to the whole of reality because of its inherent limitations and evident defects which have been carefully critiqued by noted philosophers (see below: Arguments Against Naturalism, and Philosophical critiques of philosophical naturalism).
Modern naturalism is the belief that nature is all that exists, and that all things supernatural (including gods, spirits, souls and non-natural values) therefore do not exist. It is often called Metaphysical Naturalism or Philosophical Naturalism or Ontological Naturalism to distinguish it from Methodological Naturalism. It holds that any mental properties that exist (and hence any mental powers or beings) are causally derived from (caused by), and ontologically dependent on, operative systems of non-mental properties, powers or things (meaning that all minds, and all the contents and powers and effects of minds, are entirely constructed from or caused by natural phenomena). Some naturalistic beliefs claim that what is commonly called supernatural is, in fact, part of the natural world. The distinction "supernatural" is thus regarded as a misleading term based simply on a common contrasting of the visible and perceptible to the invisible and (normally) imperceptible in the ordinary human experience of the world.
In philosophy, Naturalism is a theory that relates scientific method to philosophy by affirming that all beings and events in the universe are natural (whatever their inherent character may be). Therefore, all knowledge of the universe is to be included in scientific investigation. While naturalism in theory denies the existence of truly supernatural realities, it makes allowance for the supernatural, provided that knowledge of it can be had indirectly—that is, that natural objects be influenced by the so-called supernatural entities in a detectable way. (See Cause and effect and Theophany.) Where naturalism makes provisional (conditional) allowance for the possibility of the supernatural, philosophical naturalism (absolutely) makes no allowance for the possibility of the supernatural.
Adherents of naturalism (naturalists) assert that natural laws are the rules that govern the structure and behavior of the natural universe, that the changing universe at every stage is a product of these laws. [39] Naturalism presumes that nature is in principle completely knowable. [40] There is in nature a regularity, unity, and wholeness that implies objective laws, without which the pursuit of scientific knowledge would be absurd. Man's endless search for concrete proofs of his beliefs is seen by adherents of naturalism as a confirmation of naturalistic methodology. Naturalists point out that even when one scientific theory is abandoned in favour of another, man does not despair of knowing nature, nor does he repudiate the “natural method” in his search for truth. Theories change; methodology does not.
While naturalism has often been equated with materialism, it is much broader in scope. Materialism is indeed naturalistic, but the converse is not necessarily true, for naturalism as a whole is not strictly limited to the materialistic. Strictly speaking, naturalism has no ontological preference; i.e., no bias toward any particular set of categories of reality. Dualism and monism, atheism and theism, idealism and materialism are all per se compatible with it. As long as all of reality is held to be natural, no other limitations are imposed. Naturalists have in fact expressed a wide variety of views, even to the point of developing a theistic naturalism.
Only rarely do naturalists give attention to metaphysics (which they regard with scornful ridicule), and they make no philosophical attempts to establish their position. Naturalists simply assert that nature is reality, the whole of it, which includes God as the source and summit of all reality for those who believe in God. There is nothing beyond, nothing “other than,” no “other world” of being.
Naturalism's greatest vogue occurred during the 1930s and ’40s, chiefly in the United States among philosophers such as F.J.E. Woodbridge, Morris R. Cohen, John Dewey, Ernest Nagel, and Sidney Hook.
Naturalism includes but should not be equated with (thought to be another name for) any one of several related philosophies. Although these are related to naturalism, there are differences:
Materialism asserts that all things are composed of matter, and that all phenomena emerging within material existence (such as thoughts) are solely the result of material interactions.
Physicalism asserts that the only things that exist are those subject to the laws of physics.
Scientism asserts that all that can be known and will be known is what science tells us.
Nominalism asserts that the only things that exist are individuals (as opposed to Platonism's Ideas). See Realism.
Metaphysical Naturalism, Philosophical Naturalism, is the belief (as described in detail above) that nature is all that exists, and that all things supernatural (including gods, spirits, souls and non-natural values) therefore do not exist.
Methodological Naturalism is the assumption that observable events in nature are explained only by natural causes, without assuming either the existence or non-existence of the supernatural, and so considers supernatural explanations for such events to be outside science. It holds that the scientific method (hypothesize, predict, test, repeat) is the only effective way to investigate reality, and that such empirical methods will only ascertain natural facts, whether supernatural facts exist or not. [41]
Absolute Methodological Naturalism is the view that it is in some sense impossible for any empirical method to discover supernatural facts, even if there are some.
Contingent Methodological Naturalism is the view that, from past experience, empirical methods are far more likely to uncover natural facts than supernatural ones, so that it is generally an ill-advised waste of resources to pursue supernatural hypotheses, but it would not be impossible to confirm them empirically if any were found.
Humanistic Naturalism holds that human beings are best able to control and understand the world through use of the scientific method, because concepts of spirituality, intuition and metaphysics "can never progress beyond personal opinion". Everything is regarded as a result of explainable processes within nature, with nothing lying outside of it.
Ethical Naturalism (or Moral Naturalism) is the meta-ethical theory [42] that ethical terms can be defined without the use of ethical terms (such as "good", "right", etc.), and moreover that these non-ethical terms refer to natural properties (as opposed to relating the ethical terms in some way to the will of God).
Sociological Naturalism is the sociological theory that the natural world and the social world are roughly identical and governed by similar principles. It is closely connected to Positivism, which advocates use of the scientific method of the natural sciences in studying social sciences. See Marxism.
Naturalism typically leads to the following beliefs:
Naturalists offer the following arguments in support of their position (see Logical fallacy):
Argument from Precedent: For over three hundred years, empirical methods have consistently discovered only natural things and causes, even underlying many things once thought to be supernatural. Hence, we should presume that any unexplained fact has a natural explanation until we have empirically proven otherwise. (Fallacies of Relevance based on the age of an idea and Circular reasoning.)
Argument from Best Explanation: Sound naturalist hypotheses about scientifically unexplained facts still out-perform all other hypotheses in explanatory scope and power, and have to resort to fewer ad hoc assumptions [43] than any supernatural alternatives. (Fallacies of Composition, Cherry picking and Overgeneralization.)
Argument from Absence: If the supernatural does exist (whether as gods, powers or spirits), it is so silent and inert that its effects are almost never observed, despite extensive searching. (Fallacies of Argument from silence and Invincible ignorance.)
Argument from Physical Minds: Scientists have accumulated vast evidence that the human mind is a product of a functioning brain, which is entirely constructed from different interacting physical systems that evolved over time through the animal kingdom. (Fallacies of Your theory does not work under my theory, so your theory must be wrong and Cherry picking.)
Cosmological Argument: The formation of intelligent life via natural processes is very unlikely unless the universe were immensely old and big, but that is exactly what we have found to be the case, and supernaturalism has not given us any insights into a more likely alternative universe. (Fallacies of Manufacturing facts from a theory, Argument from silence and Your theory does not work under my theory, so your theory must be wrong.)
Argument from the Implausibility of Alternatives: In the absence of any reasonable argument to believe anything supernatural exists (or explains anything), and in the presence of some reasonable arguments to believe the natural world exists (and explains everything), then Naturalism should be accepted until disproved (see Occam's razor). (Fallacies of Circular reasoning, Genetic fallacy, Ad hominem abusive, and Proof by authority.)
The arguments against Naturalism are, to a large extent, arguments for a God, or for some kind of intelligent design (see Christian apologetics):
Argument from Despair: Naturalism leads to human despair because it allows for no cosmic meaning of life and the elimination of free will (and therefore of hope and moral responsibility and the expectation of good); it violates the innate human intuitive perception that life and existence has an ordered purpose for being.
Argument from Religious Experience: Many people claim to have seen, felt or talked to God or any number of other spirits, including highly intelligent persons who once denied the existence of the supernatural, and claim that these religious experiences refute naturalism.
Argument from Miracles: Often, some carefully documented miracle is offered as evidence refuting naturalism, including "alleged" cases of supernatural healing, of fulfilled prophetic or psychic predictions, or the "supposed" impossibility of composing some book (like the Bible or the Koran) without spiritual or supernatural aid.
Argument from Necessity of God: It is in some sense impossible for the universe to exist, and to achieve the apparently impossible feat of life as we know it, unless it is caused or cohabited by a supernatural person.
Argument from Cosmological Design: The fundamental constants of physics and the laws of nature appear so finely-tuned to permit life that only a supernatural engineer can explain it.
Argument from Improbability of Life: The origin of life was too improbable, statistically [44] and mathematically, (with a probability tending to zero) to have occurred without supernatural intervention and therefore naturalism fails to explain the appearance of life.
Argument from Biological Design: Certain structures in evolved organisms (e.g. the eye) are too complex ("irreducible complexity") to have evolved by natural selection and can only be explained as the result of intelligent design.
Argument from Consciousness: Some argue that conscious experience (or qualia) has not been, and cannot be, scientifically explained.
Argument from Reason: Certain features of human reason (e.g. intentionality, mental causation, abstract objects, the existence of logical laws) cannot be explained by naturalism.
Argument from Physical Law: The mathematical nature of physical laws entails a supernatural mind behind them, and naturalism can provide no ontological foundation for such physical laws.
Argument from Incoherence: Because naturalism assumes that everything is physical, using physical data in support of it would constitute circular reasoning.
Moral Argument: Naturalism cannot explain the existence of moral facts.
Evolutionary Argument: Maintaining the truth of both naturalism and evolution is irrational and self-defeating because the probability that unguided evolution would have produced reliable cognitive faculties is either low or inscrutable, and so asserting that naturalistic evolution is true also asserts that one has a low or unknown probability of being right.
Methodological naturalists believe the scientific method to be the best way to determine the truth. Because supernatural, intelligent forces, if they exist, are claimed to be unpredictable (not subject to cause and effect) and hence unrepeatable (not falsifiable), these naturalists exclude the possibility of supernatural or magical intervention in the physical world as the effect of non-physical intelligences exercising free will.
Methodological naturalism concerns itself not with claims about what exists but with methods of learning what nature is. It is strictly the idea that all scientific endeavors—all hypotheses and events—are to be explained and tested by reference to natural causes and events. The genesis of nature (for example, by an act of God) is not addressed. This second sense of naturalism seeks only to provide a framework within which to conduct the scientific study of the laws of nature. Methodological naturalism is a way of acquiring knowledge. It is a distinct system of thought concerned with a cognitive approach to reality, and is thus a philosophy of knowledge. Studies by sociologist Elaine Ecklund suggest that religious scientists in practice apply methodological naturalism. They report that their religious beliefs affect the way they think about the implications - often moral - of their work, but not the way they practice science. [45] [46]
In a series of articles and books from 1996 onward, Robert T. Pennock wrote using the term "methodological naturalism" to clarify that the scientific method confines itself to natural explanations without assuming the existence or non-existence of the supernatural, and is not based on dogmatic metaphysical naturalism (as claimed by creationists and proponents of intelligent design, in particular Phillip E. Johnson). Pennock's testimony as an expert witness [47] at the Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District trial was cited by the Judge in his Memorandum Opinion concluding that "Methodological naturalism is a 'ground rule' of science today": [48]
"Expert testimony reveals that since the scientific revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries, science has been limited to the search for natural causes to explain natural phenomena.... While supernatural explanations may be important and have merit, they are not part of science." Methodological naturalism is thus "a self-imposed convention of science." It is a "ground rule" that "requires scientists to seek explanations in the world around us based upon what we can observe, test, replicate, and verify." [49]
Philosophers and scientists must be careful how they formulate questions or hypotheses for research. For example: "if a lie is false, does it exist?" [50]
If a judge excludes as inadmissible all damning evidence against a defendant charged with murder, a verdict of "guilty" is unlikely.
Because of their insistence that there is an utter lack of scientific (empirical) evidence to support religion, most philosophical naturalists are also atheists, while a minority are theists. While scientists and historians admit and simply acknowledge the possibility that unique phenomena or events have actually occurred in history and in nature, and that some of them have been reliably attested by first-hand witnesses and recorded as factual in oral or written tradition or in documented testimony, the fact that they are unique and therefore unrepeatable and unpredictable makes them non-falsifiable, and this excludes them as subjects of scientific study. [51]
An obvious example of a contradiction to the paradigm of falsifiability in science is the established scientific study of the Big Bang theory of the origin of the universe (cosmogony), which by definition is not proven to be a repeatable event or phenomenon, but for which many scientists claim there is substantial supporting evidence; even while many of them, in accord with philosophical naturalism, deny that it has a supernatural divine cause. In Logic this is an example of the fallacy of special pleading. Philosophical naturalism is thus a contrast to the theology of Deism which postulates a divine cause of a wholly mechanistic universe (a "cosmos", from Greek kosmos, "order", system or mechanism) subject entirely to the operation of created laws of nature, a view of existence described in the Bible in 2 Peter 3:3-4.First of all you must understand this, that scoffers will come in the last days with scoffing, following their own passions and saying, "Where is the promise of his coming? For ever since the fathers fell asleep, all things have continued as they were from the beginning of creation." (RSVCE)
Naturalists acknowledge the opposition of religion to philosophical naturalism, and observe that religious schools of thought argue for the existence of the supernatural alongside the natural, by proposing two orders of one reality which coexist together without any contradiction. With the exception of pantheists—who believe that Nature and God are one and the same thing—theists challenge the idea that nature contains all of reality, the visible and the invisible. According to some theists, natural laws may be viewed as so-called secondary causes of god(s). In response to the range of religious opposition philosophical naturalists argue that in order to "compete" with science religious philosophers and theologians have created and arrayed against philosophical naturalism "pseudoscientific" theories like intelligent design (ID) which "supposedly" prove supernatural intervention in natural phenomena and assert that the supernatural is "somehow immune" to science, meaning that it is "somehow" not subject to scientific scrutiny or to scientific laws. These naturalists assert that such "pseudoscientific" religious theories "work about as well as cargo cults[52]", and are just as equally "unconvincing, unsupportable, undemonstrable," and "unprovable" to people of "rational intelligence". Inability to demonstrate (to the satisfaction of naturalists) that these assertions are other than a subjective judgment (unsubstantiated opinion) demonstrates (to naturalists) argument based on the fallacies of proof by assertion and "invincible ignorance" (see hostile witness, personal attack, ad hominem, deliberate ignorance). However, philosopher Antony Flew [53] who was "One of the leading analytical philosophers of the twentieth century" (Daniel N. Robinson, Philosophy Department, Oxford University), and other informed writers such as Anthony Zee [54] and Kurt Gödel, [55] and Robert Spitzer, S.J., PhD. [56] point out that the inductive argument from the order of nature itself, its inherent "symmetry" and not simply the laws of nature, and what is called "fine-tuning" in physics, leads one inexorably (relentlessly, unavoidably) to the conclusion that existence includes the immaterial (or non-material) supernatural, and that the rationality and intelligibility of the cosmos is rooted in the Mind of God [57] "immortal, invisible, God only wise, in light inaccessible, hid from our eyes". [58] These have reasoned a posteriori [59] with rational logic from all the available evidence that the natural world is not all there is. This has been pointed out with impeccable logic in the Bible:
“ | "If through delight in the beauty of these things they assumed them to be gods,/ let them know how much better than these is their Lord,/ for the author of beauty created them./ And if they were amazed at their power and working,/ let them perceive from them/ how much more powerful is he who formed them./ For from the greatness and beauty of created things/ comes a corresponding perception of their Creator./ Yet these men are little to be blamed,/ for perhaps they go astray/ while seeking God and desiring to find him./ For as they live among his works they keep searching,/ and they trust in what they see, because the things that are seen are beautiful./ Yet again, not even they are to be excused;/ for if they had the power to know so much/ that they could investigate the world,/ how did they fail to find sooner the Lord of these things?" Wisdom 13:3-9 (RSVCE)
"For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. Ever since the creation of the world his invisible nature, namely, his eternal power and deity, has been clearly perceived in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse; for although they knew God they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking and their senseless minds were darkened. Claiming to be wise, they became fools". Romans 1:19-22 (RSVCE) |
” |
Alvin Plantinga, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Notre Dame, [60] and a Christian, has become a well-known critic of naturalism. [61] He suggests, in his evolutionary argument against naturalism, that the probability that evolution has produced humans with reliable true beliefs, is low or inscrutable, unless their evolution was guided (for example, by God). According to David Kahan of the University of Glasgow, in order to understand how beliefs are warranted, a justification must be found in the context of supernatural theism, as in Plantinga's epistemology. [62] [63] [64] Plantinga argues that together, naturalism and evolution provide an insurmountable "defeater for the belief that our cognitive faculties are reliable", i.e., a skeptical argument along the lines of Rene Descartes' Evil demon or Brain in a vat. [65]
Take philosophical naturalism to be the belief that there aren't any supernatural entities—no such person as God, for example, but also no other supernatural entities, and nothing at all like God. My claim was that naturalism and contemporary evolutionary theory are at serious odds with one another—and this despite the fact that the latter is ordinarily thought to be one of the main pillars supporting the edifice of the former. (Of course I am not attacking the theory of evolution, or anything in that neighborhood; I am instead attacking the conjunction of naturalism with the view that human beings have evolved in that way. I see no similar problems with the conjunction of theism and the idea that human beings have evolved in the way contemporary evolutionary science suggests.) More particularly, I argued that the conjunction of naturalism with the belief that we human beings have evolved in conformity with current evolutionary doctrine... is in a certain interesting way self-defeating or self-referentially incoherent.
— Alvin Plantinga, Naturalism Defeated?: Essays on Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism, "Introduction"
Karl Popper equated naturalism with inductive theory of science. He rejected it based on his general critique of induction, yet acknowledged its utility as means for inventing conjectures.
A naturalistic methodology (sometimes called an "inductive theory of science") has its value, no doubt.... I reject the naturalistic view: It is uncritical. Its upholders fail to notice that whenever they believe to have discovered a fact, they have only proposed a convention. Hence the convention is liable to turn into a dogma. This criticism of the naturalistic view applies not only to its criterion of meaning, but also to its idea of science, and consequently to its idea of empirical method.
— Karl R. Popper, The Logic of Scientific Discovery, (Routledge, 2002), pp. 52–53, ISBN 0-415-27844-9.
Popper instead proposed that science should adopt a methodology based on falsifiability for demarcation (fixing or marking boundaries or limits), because no number of experiments can ever prove a theory, but a single experiment can contradict one. Popper holds that scientific theories are characterized by falsifiability.
Robert T. Pennock contends [66] that as supernatural agents and powers "are above and beyond the natural world and its agents and powers" and "are not constrained by natural laws", only logical impossibilities constrain what a supernatural agent could not do. He states: "If we could apply natural knowledge to understand supernatural powers, then, by definition, they would not be supernatural". As the supernatural is necessarily a mystery to us, it can provide no grounds on which to judge scientific models. "Experimentation requires observation and control of the variables.... But by definition we have no control over supernatural entities or forces." Science does not deal with meanings; the closed system of scientific reasoning cannot be used to define itself. Allowing science to appeal to untestable supernatural powers would make the scientist's task meaningless, undermine the discipline that allows science to make progress, and "would be as profoundly unsatisfying as the ancient Greek playwright's reliance upon the deus ex machina to extract his hero from a difficult predicament."
Naturalism of this sort says nothing about the existence or nonexistence of the supernatural, which by this definition is beyond natural testing. As a practical consideration, the rejection of supernatural explanations would merely be pragmatic, thus it would nonetheless be possible, for an ontological supernaturalist to espouse and practice methodological naturalism. For example, scientists may believe in God while practicing methodological naturalism in their scientific work. This position does not preclude knowledge that is somehow connected to the supernatural. Generally however, anything that can be scientifically examined and explained would not be supernatural, simply by definition.
W. V. Quine describes naturalism as the position that there is no higher tribunal for truth than natural science itself. There is no better method than the scientific method for judging the claims of science, and there is neither any need nor any place for a "first philosophy", such as (abstract) metaphysics or epistemology, that could stand behind and justify science or the scientific method. Therefore, philosophy should feel free to make use of the findings of scientists in its own pursuit, while also feeling free to offer criticism when those claims are ungrounded, confused, or inconsistent. In Quine's view, philosophy is "continuous with" science and both are empirical. [67] Naturalism is not itself a dogmatic belief that the modern view of science is entirely correct. Instead, it simply holds that science is the best way to explore the processes of the universe and that those processes are what modern science is striving to understand. However, this Quinean Replacement Naturalism finds relatively few supporters among philosophers. [68]
A philosophical naturalist who does not utterly reject the reports or testimony of the eyewitnesses to the existence of Jesus of Nazareth as a reality in time and space [69] as a real man who lived during the first century in the Roman province of Judea, but who accepts the resurrection of Jesus Christ as a non-scientific and non-historical but (possibly) actual event, is one who denies that his resurrection from death had a supernatural cause and proposes instead an entirely natural cause which has been "misinterpreted" as being supernatural.
By "non-historical", these writers mean "not attested by independent secular historians outside of the Christian community (Church)". Some historians in the 19th and 20th centuries regarded Jesus as a "non-historical person" for whom there is no reliable historical record of his existence from A.D. mid-first-century in Rome or Jerusalem. One possible exception is the passage in Josephus' Antiquities 18.3.3 (63), and possibly one in Tacitus in one page of his final work, Annals, book 15, chapter 44 (written ca. AD 116), referring to Christ, his execution by Pontius Pilate, and the existence of early Christians in Rome. But these are not regarded by them as reliable historical evidence, but only as historical evidence of the existence of the sect of the "Christiani" (Christians) who were perceived as making unsubstantiated and incredible claims about an obscure and unknown Jesus of Nazareth who was executed as a criminal.
While these are cited as historical statements made by authors roughly contemporaneous to the beginning years of Christianity, most current 21st century secular historians dismiss them as citations of unreliable reports and rumors about Jesus having no independently confirming evidence they can accept as historical fact. The writings of the New Testament and the Apostolic Fathers are not accepted by them as documents of reliable historicity ("Is the Bible reliable? The historicity of the New Testament").[70] However, many 21st century professional historians including prominent nonbelievers do accept the factual historicity of Jesus for valid evidentiary reasons.[71] Among the doubting historical skeptics are those liberalist Christian participants in the Jesus Seminar, and the number of 20th century critics who dismiss Jesus' resurrection by proposing the "swoon theory" in which they suggest that the Lord did not actually die on the cross, but lapsed into a comatose or catatonic state like catalepsy which resembles death, and then revived. This 200-year-old hypothesis is generally rejected by Christians, who cite St. Paul:
"If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If for this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most to be pitied." 1 Corinthians 15:17-19 (RSVCE).
The following is a condensation and summary drawn from multiple sources[75]
The New Age critics of Christianity claim that Jesus was no more God than any other human being, that God the Father was Himself once a man like us, and the only difference between him and us was his knowledge, and that he taught the liberating knowledge (Greek gnosis) that the supernatural and the natural are one continuum of being, that there is no real division or "dichotomy" in the existence of being between the natural and the supernatural, and that his resurrection was in reality "the powerfully liberating psychological realization of his unity with the whole ground of being". Thus there is no death, and the only real sin is ignorance, which can be overcome, so that, potentially, each of us can realize that we are God and already have divine power and wisdom, if only we accept it.[76]
In this way, and in all variations of the same kind of "naturalist" teaching, the supernatural resurrection of Christ is done away. The orthodox (Greek "ortho, right, doxos, doctrine") teachings of Christianity and the Bible (containing what "Esoteric Christianity" calls "metaphorical symbolic imagery of esoteric truth") are given to the masses as the "exoteric (for the many)" doctrine as a means of relieving them of fear. The "esoteric" (for the few) doctrine, the Secret Doctrine, is given privately by word of mouth only to a smaller, select number of qualified individuals in every generation as the liberating gnosis that they are one with nature and the whole of the universe, with skill to use the forces of nature as an "expression of the mind of God".
The difference between this spiritual naturalism or religious naturalism and philosophical naturalism is that philosophical naturalism rejects the possibility of the personal postmortum survival of the human person and the possibility of invisible, immortal existence before the Final Resurrection. Philosophical naturalists view those who do not subscribe to philosophical naturalism as ignorant and deluded and unwilling to see reality as it is.
Both of these spiritual naturalist and philosophical naturalist views are utterly rejected by Christians as representations of blasphemy and expressions of spiritual rebellion. They are represented by various forms of Gnosticism and the New Age Movement (Cosmic Humanism), of Pelagianism and of Secular Humanism which reject the reparation for sin achieved by the saving redemption of mankind on the Cross accomplished by Jesus as the unique and only-begotten Son of God, the Word of God made flesh, and head of the human race, who suffered, died, and rose again, and ascended into heaven, who has sent the Holy Spirit on the Church since the day of Pentecost to guide us into all truth, and will come again in glory to judge all mankind, and save from his righteous wrath all those who from their hearts trust in him as their own personal Savior, "who obey the truth and by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality" (Romans 2:5-8), and to condemn to hell all who hate or ignore goodness, virtue and the truth, all who have rejected him.
Philosophical naturalism has consistently shown itself to be a nonscientific religious perspective that is adverse to impartial inquiry into the nature of reality according to the scientific principles of methodological naturalism. Its adherents and defenders have consistently shown by their writings and opinions a prejudicial intolerance of fundamentally human intuitive understandings of reality and an anti-intellectual rejection of compelling evidence, evidence that has proven acceptable to profound thinkers and researchers. It is not science, nor is it a scientific approach.
Ipso facto, by its a priori absolute rejection of the possibility of the supernatural, and in particular by its denials of the possibility of the bodily physical resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead and the existence of God, philosophical naturalism represents an approach that is militantly anti-Christian, and overtly hostile to religion and to human culture.
"My teaching is not mine, but his who sent me; if any man's will is to do his will, he shall know whether the teaching is from God or whether I am speaking on my own authority. He who speaks on his own authority seeks his own glory; but he who seeks the glory of him who sent him is true, and in him there is no falsehood."
John 7:16-18 RSVCE
The Founding Fathers of the United States of America expressed the same idea:
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." Declaration of Independence
"You will not apply my precept," he said, shaking his head. "How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth? We know that he did not come through the door, the window, or the chimney. We also know that he could not have been concealed in the room, as there is no concealment possible. Whence, then, did he come?"
In addition, Arthur Conan Doyle as Sherlock Holmes adduced roses as evidence of (Divine) Providence.
"Our highest assurance of the goodness of Providence seems to me to rest in the flowers. All other things — our powers, our desires, our food — are all really necessary for our existence in the first instance. But this rose is an extra. Its smell and its colour are an embellishment of life, not a condition of it. It is only goodness which gives extras, and so I say again that we have much to hope from the flowers."
...I do indeed think that evolution functions as a contemporary shibboleth by which to distinguish the ignorant fundamentalist goats from the informed and scientifically literate sheep.
According to Richard Dawkins, 'It is absolutely safe to say that, if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in evolution, that person is ignorant, stupid, or insane (or wicked, but I'd rather not consider that).'
Daniel Dennett goes Dawkins one (or two) further: 'Anyone today who doubts that the variety of life on this planet was produced by a process of evolution is simply ignorant—inexcusably ignorant.' You wake up in the middle of the night; you think, can that whole Darwinian story really be true? Wham! You are inexcusably ignorant.
I do think that evolution has become a modern idol of the tribe. But of course it doesn't even begin to follow that I think the scientific theory of evolution is false. And I don't.
4 part series by Dr. J.P. Moreland on the philosophy of scientific naturalism
naturalism.org
Naturalist Newsletter
Center for Naturalism
Naturalism: The Naturalistic Worldview
Naturalism David Papineau, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Naturalism at PhilPapers
Naturalism entry in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Naturalism at the Indiana Philosophy Ontology Project
Naturalism entry in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
The Craig-Taylor Debate: Is The Basis Of Morality Natural Or Supernatural? William Lane Craig and Richard Taylor October 1993, Union College (Schenectady, New York)
biologos.org
"Naturalism" article in The Catholic Encyclopedia
Alvin Plantinga (1994). "Naturalism Defeated". (pdf)
A shorter version of C. S. Lewis' Dangerous Idea
Philip Johnson's Evolution as Dogma: The Establishment of Naturalism from First Things
Robert A. Delfino's (2007) Replacing Methodological Naturalism Metanexus Institute. Archived from the original.
Robert A. Delfino's (2011) Scientific Naturalism and the Need for a Neutral Metaphysical Framework
This list includes bibliography and titles of selected sources and is not an attempt to be exhaustive. It includes some of the most relevant works of thinkers referred to in the article and also some important works by thinkers who are not named in the article.
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Honderich, T., 1982, ‘The Argument for Anomalous Monism’, Analysis, 42: 59-64.
Horgan, T., 1993, ‘From Supervenience to Superdupervenience: Meeting the Demands of a Material World’, Mind, 102: 555-86.
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