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Comment Re:Theology is better than those (Score 1) 273

Theology can't be taught from a neutral viewpoint because it only exists in the context of the religion that the theologian believes. Theology can include philosophy but it is invariably tainted by the specific religion that the theologian embraces.

All philosophies depend on presuppositions. If the presuppositions are wrong, then everything that comes from those premises cannot be reasonable sustained. But that's the point. Science takes this a step further by adding the deductive property of falsifiability to test the presuppositions for truth.

Comment Re:Theology is better than those (Score 1) 273

No, I do not believe I am confused. Charles Sanders Peirce, the father of modern scientific inquiry, believed that the tri-part mathematics of logic (induction, deduction, and abduction) applied equally to philosophy, mathematics, the social and natural sciences, and squishy meta-physics. This is as late as the 1870's. Today science stresses the deductive property of falsifiability as essential to science (and sets it apart from philosophy and mathematics, which are therefore not true sciences), but that is a relatively recent concept, as I said above.

Comment Re:Theology is better than those (Score 1) 273

Induction is just one mere tool to be used. Putting everything that uses a specific tool is folly.

You may think it folly, but the historical fact is that up until about 200 years ago, the Venn diagram between mathematicians and theologians was pretty inclusive. Newton and Pascal wrote more prolifically on theology then they did math. When education was rare, and education in philosophy (and thus inductive logic) was rarer, the same people had to wear many hats, and their output in those disparate fields hewed pretty closely together.

Theology is certainly not philosophy. Testability is the cornerstone of science. Rational theories are the cornerstone of philosophy. Theology is neither rational or presents theories, but interpretations of dogma.

This is false. Rational theories are the cornerstone of philosophy; that much is correct. But the whole point of systematic theology is that for the prescribed axioms, the proofs are indeed rational. You do not agree with many or most of those fundamental presuppositions but that does not make the theology, in and of itself, irrational per se. Theology is absolutely a philosophy. Your beef is clearly with religion or spiritual faith (which, while relying on theology, is a belief system and not a philosophy).

Comment Re:Theology is better than those (Score 1) 273

Theology, when taught from a neutral viewpoint, is a philosophy. Science and math were also, at one time, considered "philosophies", in that they, all three, relied on inductive proof techniques developed by the classical philosophers. With the development of the scientific method, however, science stands apart on a new basis of testable hypotheses. It is my understanding that math is considered by many to not be a science on this basis.

Comment Re:what? (Score 2) 65

The "Internet of Things" concept may be new to our households, but the military has been using it for as long as they've had wigwams waving their little flags around. For military commanders, access to accurate, comprehensive data is an extreme force multiplier.

Comment Re:Internet without evangelicals = Win (Score 1) 293

These sorts of meta-communities spring up wherever Christians in large enough numbers congregate because they meet a felt need.

See, on Facebook, I have my friends, my coworkers, my relatives, and a lot of random acquaintances that I happened to hit it off with, but may never see again. I value these relationships, but at the same time, there needs to be significant self-monitoring. Sometimes, I would like to discuss politics or religion with my wider group of friends, but I can't on Facebook, because I have a very diverse audience. Once I disclaimed, "For my Christian friends, what are you views on X?" turned into a flame-fest with a number of my atheist acquaintances dropping by to tell me how illogical my faith was. While I'm not afraid of that conversation, it is a long one, and not the one I was looking for at the time. Ever since then, I have had to self-moderate. No politics, no religion, and god help me if I get drawn into a anti-vaxxer post (it's my kryptonite; I must comment, just like my atheist friends and posts about religion). Pretty much the last month has just been me hiding from Facebook and avoiding my feed like the plague.

Now, if I had a post privacy option on FB that said "Public/Friends Only/Political Affinity/Religious Affinity/Retard Shots Are teh Devil" I could more freely express my feelings and views, that'd be perfect. So this site has an actual legitimate purpose. Sifting through hundreds of your friends religious and political posts are not really helpful to you, right? If everyone availed themselves of such an option, I think everyone's feeds would be clearer and less irritating; after all, FB is a terrible place to proselytize, for anything.

That being said, this site looks terrible and I wouldn't use it. But the concept isn't awful, per se.

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