Saturday, September 27, 2008

Mechanistic Materialism: The Religion of Science

As much as "science-minded" evolutionists would seek to have you and I believe otherwise, everyone sees the world through the filter of their own private beliefs and presuppositions. For instance, I begin all study and learning with the presupposition that there is a God who created the heavens and the earth in six literal days, thousands of years ago. I believe that the universe is created with order and design thus making scientific study possible. This is my world view. It's the filter through which I process all other information.

The statement I just made is illegal in the county I live in. A teacher would be fired for saying it in the classroom, or even publicly outside of the classroom. So why, given the supposed freedom of ideas in this country, could a teacher not be able to even question the theory of evolution in a classroom? The answer is the ideological world view known as materialism; and, more specifically, mechanistic materialism. And believe it or not, it has major implications on your personal freedoms.

The conservative believes that our Bill of Rights, enumerated in our United States Constitution, are not given to us by our government. We do not have these rights because a government says we do. These rights are inalienable, and given to us by God Almighty. Our government's job is not to give us these rights; it's job is to protect our God-given rights from being tread upon. If God gives us these rights, then they can only be taken away by him.

If, however, our government is the granter of these rights, then they can also take them away. This is the reason why many other democracies fail, and it is also the reason why mechanistic materialism is so dangerous to our democracy.

The materialists' world view believes that only those things which are verifiable by scientific testing and empirical evidence are real. The mechanistic materialists take it one step further and say that only those things made of atoms, and can be tested scientifically and empirically are real. For this reason they deny the possibility of the existence of God or anything supernatural. They have led a campaign since the 1940s to have everything God-related discredited and thrown out of the classroom. Our children only learn Godless science and other fields of study in public schools and universities now.

First, I must say, the hypocrisy and lack of logic of this worldview is amazing. First, the assumption that everything that exists must have empirical evidence is itself something for which no evidence can be provided. We who practice philosophy call this a logical fallacy. For instance, there could potentially exist a god and there still be no evidence. With this said, the most dangerous problem of this ideology is its desire to remove God from our education system, courts, government, and eventually from our democracy.

A democracy cannot survive without God for many reasons, but for this discussion we will say because its citizens' rights and freedoms would then be granted by the government. If this is so, then your rights would become the subjective whimsy of whichever fragmented group managed to seize power that week. Government would first become nanny, then eventually daddy, and finally, god.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Determinism and Victim Mentalities

While this is not a topic that will come up in most presidential debates, this ideology is core to the worldviews that shape the leaders who shape the direction of our nation.

Ivan Pavlov is know for his ground breaking work on Classical Conditioning. He also won the Nobel prize in 1904. Pavlov observed that the actual physiology of a dog's digestive system could be altered by associating the noise from ringing a bell with feedings.

Later, B.F. Skinner revolutionized the world of behavioral science by applying Pavlov's conditioning model to behavioral studies. He noted that behavior is programmed mostly by environment and positive or negative reinforcements. Skinner is the champion of the modern Liberal mind.

Skinner is considered history's foremost thinker when it comes to behavioralism which gives birth to determinism.

Determinism, like behavioralism, asserts that all human behavior is a product of environmental factors. If a person commits a gratuitous and violent murder, he did so because of the negative influences in his life. There is no such thing as good and evil according to this ideology, only "sick" and "healthy." There is no personal accountability, only "environmental factors."

Determinists mostly see environmental causes in societal ills. If a woman has six kids by five fathers, and is pregnant with the seventh, the determinist sees the culprit of her predicament as learned behavior instead of solely poor decision making.

As many understand, this type of thinking completely diminishes the idea of personal accountability. It only follows that if a person cannot reasonably be held accountable for their actions, and their actions can be harmful to themselves and others, then someone/something needs to step in as caretaker and nanny. Given this natural pattern of logic, and given the liberals belief that the government is the best vehicle for societal advancement, then it only makes sense to a liberal that the government fulfill that role as guardian/caretaker/nanny; who, with lots of our money, can help improve environmental conditions so people will be less likely to exhibit destructive behavior .

Noted liberal philosopher and linguistics professor at MIT, Noam Chomsky, with whom I very seldom agree, correctly noted in his critique of Skinner's work, that the natural progression of the Determinists/Naturalists thinking is a totalitarian state.

Conservatives instinctively see the power of human potential. We are strong proponents of personal accountability. We believe that Humans are created in the image of God and are more than just the sum of their experiences. We revere people who rise from circumstances that provide for a poor environment, and achieve greatness.

We don't tell people they are victims. We encourage people to take control of their own life. We believe the first step to doing this is learning to become personally accountable for the missteps and poor decisions we've made, and learn that if we controlled our failure, we can also control our success.

Humanistic-Collectivism

The Greek philosopher Protagoras coined the defining humanist Mantra. He said "Man is the measure of all things." The humanist believes that all truth and morality can and should only be investigated by, and in relation to, man. In other words, Truth and morality cannot come from God or any religion, but man should set his own rules. The humanist believes that mankind's experience on this earth is all their is; therefor, our collective effort should be in the here and now.

Collectivism can be viewed as the idea that the greatest common good can be achieved through shared effort. While this may sound good on the surface, one must ask himself whose idea of "the greatest good" are we trying to achieve. Collectivism also depends upon the cooperation of a community. Their can be no collective effort with total participation, because without total participation, resources are limited. Oh yeah, collectivism feeds on resources. They are the first thing required of its participants. The problem is that most collectivists see participation as mandatory.

To understand the issue of humanistic collectivism, one must only refer to scripture. Genesis 11:1-9 describes the first attempt at the phenomenon. God told Noah, after the flood, to spread all over the earth and multiply and be fruitful. However, under the leadership of the mighty Nimrod the people united into a humanist society dedicated to a collective effort to make the name of their city great, and to minimize and eventually phase out the need for God. They built the tower of Babel. It didn't turn out so good.

As I will discuss in later articles, the heart of this issue (and every political issue) lies in one's belief in God, or the lack thereof. Humanistic collectivism leaves no room for serving God or following the mandates of any religious system. For the humanistic collectivist, the collective (or state) is the highest power one must serve for the greatest benefit in the here and now.

To be fair, their are humanists who oppose collectivism. .

What is strange about the liberal mentality is that most liberal thinkers are fiercely independent. They strive for the individualists ideal. Liberal authors and thinkers like Ayn Rand and George Orwell railed against the collective mentality. With this said, liberals almost always call for more collectivism in government.

The chink in the liberal armor in any philosophical debate is the question, "If you believe so strongly in the individual, why do you believe governmental (collective) powers should be expanded by..." Fill in the blank with any liberal "universal plan" or "social program."

Look at the issues in this campaign. Health care, taxes, immigration, war, terror, etc. Which candidates have collectivist ideas about the solutions to these issues.