Talk:Non-overlapping magisteria

Latest comment: 3 years ago by Robynthehode in topic Contrast with Hume's is-ought gap?

Michał Heller edit

What about a Polish philosopher (professor of philosophy and Catholic priest) Michal Heller? He is one of those who discussed the overlapping or non-overlapping of _The Magisteria_ (ie. Science and Religion). His work has been awarded with the Templeton Prize. A wiki page about him is here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micha%C5%82_Heller Is there anybody well-read in his works to take on his philosophy? Critto (talk) 00:03, 27 November 2012 (UTC)Reply


Move? edit

The following discussion is an archived discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

The result of the move request was move. Jafeluv (talk) 20:04, 26 July 2009 (UTC)Reply


Non-Overlapping MagisteriaNon-overlapping magisteria — MOS:CAPS, google books suggests that both are acceptable but the latter is in keeping with the manual of style — WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 12:46, 20 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

Because the above template didn't let me, here are the results for the google books search - there seems to be both caps and lowercase used, the more "serious" books (including Gould's own) seem to use lower case. I can't think of a reason to use lower upper case, except It Makes It Look Important. The original essay seems to use lower case (and no hyphen). WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 16:14, 20 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
The move looks a good idea to me. In your above comment you probably mean "can't think of a reason to use upper case". There are several incoming links to be cleaned up, whether the move takes place or not. Johnuniq (talk) 23:57, 20 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
Oops :) If the page moves, I have no problem correcting incoming links (thank you popups!) WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 00:19, 21 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
Move makes sense to me. ChildofMidnight (talk) 03:55, 21 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
Right. It should be lower case. Without the hyphen in the original, with the hyphen in subsequent editions. Best, Miguel Chavez (talk) 04:10, 21 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
No strong opinion. But WP:MOS does not really support the move. It's somewhat silent on title capitalization, but all the examples in WP:MOSTITLE and WP:LOW seem to use title case. Ooops...it's not a title, but just a concept. I'm OK with the move. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 12:20, 21 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

Lack of reference for a Dawkins claim edit

I am not able to find any reference for Dawkins claiming that "if DNA evidence proved that Jesus had no earthly father, Dawkins claims that the argument of non-overlapping magisteria would be quickly dropped", this looks like 'original research' to me - i.e. somebody is paraphrasing Dawkinses general position to put words into his mouth. Paraphrases don't bother me, but there is a quite idiosyncratic logic to this argument that does not actually sound like Dawkinsian philosophy to me at all (Would Dawkins really claim that finding that Jesus didn't have a father would convince him that religion had been proven correct? I don't think he would). But I could be wrong - people who are more avid readers of Dawkins might know where it is that he says this exact thing. Thoughts?

—Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.194.160.4 (talk) 05:27, 22 January 2010 (UTC)Reply 

This argument is Dawkins' and is from The God Delusion. Dawkins' argument is that religious claims for NOMA would be dropped were scientific evidence supporting religious claims to be found.

It's on page 59: --quote-- To dramatize the point, imagine, by some remarkable set of circumstances, that forensic archaeologists unearthed DNA evidence to show that Jesus really did lack a biological father. Can you imagine religious apologists shrugging their shoulders and saying anything remotely like the following? 'Who cares? Scientific evidence is completely irrelevant to theological questions. Wrong magisterium! We're concerned only with ultimate questions and with moral values. Neither DNA nor any other scientific evidence could ever have any bearing on the matter, one way or the other.' --quote-- — Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.242.7.7 (talk) 17:43, 30 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

Fix up to related article edit

i cleaned up the article on Rocks of Ages, which is very much a companion article to this one.Mercurywoodrose (talk) 16:16, 22 May 2010 (UTC)Reply

Reference Sam Harris' "Moral Landscape" edit

--this article should reference Sam Harris' book, The Moral Landscape, which claims that science can address issues of morality normally assigned to the religious realm. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.42.190.56 (talk) 06:24, 1 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Criticism edit

Er... am I doing this right?

A few paragraphs in the Criticism section are sloppy and use biased language.

Jacoby cites Sam Harris who shows science can frequently demonstrate whether particular beliefs increase or decrease suffering and Harris derives moral values from this. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.225.168.13 (talk) 08:14, 2 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Criticism edit

The Criticism-section is blown up to more than 50 % of the article. However, it does not address the most relevant questions of Gould's NOMA concept.

One important question seems to be, whether texts of Abrahamitic religions have to be understood in a literal sense only or rather in an allegorical sense. While the allegory is traditionally dominant in the Jewish and Christian hermeneutics (and afaik also Islam), both religious fundamentalists and new atheists only take the literal sense seriously. Natural scientists seem to have a culture of clarity and certainty and often seem to be threatened by ambiguous religious texts. One easy way to resolve the disturbing ambiguity is to declare them as unscientific rubbish, without considering what could be their value, beyond making factual statements.

It is also argued that natural sciences could adress moral questions, which is a rather questionable idea, as scientists can aptly describe human behaviour, but hardly develop criteria to evaluate it ethically.--Olag (talk) 19:28, 30 September 2012 (UTC)Reply

NPOV? edit

These sentences use heavily biased language.

-Religion has too frequently made us feel guilty about enjoying harmless pleasures and reduced happiness. -People want a separate province for their specific religion and exclude other religions. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.216.148.203 (talk) 02:58, 3 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Correct. All POV should be strictly eliminated, and replaced with strictly objective language. So the objective reading should be:
Religion has systematically encroached on the magisterium of physical and biological science in its moralistic pronouncements over the pursuit of physical pleasures and well-being, and issued moralistic condemnations about the pursuit of happiness and friends, which belongs by essence to the magisterium of biological and psychological science.
Each religion claims absolute validity in its separate magisterium and community and by essence erects itself as an absolute interpretation that excludes and opposes all the interpretations from any different religion. In that sense two religions are incompatible and try to avoid friction by exercising their different magisteria by regulating different communities, and whenever possible, affirming the validity of their specific magisterium in different geographical areas. This essential feature has been observed and recorded in the history of all religions. The question of defining boundaries has proved to be the perennial "fly in the ointment" for co-existence of different religions, and has been a major factor in all wars of religion recorded in history.

--ROO BOOKAROO (talk) 17:40, 17 April 2013 (UTC)Reply

Dead Link edit

The external link to http://www.bostonreview.net/BR24.5/orr.html is no longer valid. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 138.29.16.23 (talk) 15:54, 24 September 2013 (UTC)Reply

Critical bloat edit

Much of what is written in the bloated criticism section of this article seems to be criticizing something that is not NOM. Other statements, in addition to being off topic, violate NPOV.

  • Jacoby maintains that scientists as well as the religious sometimes carefully practise the fictional concept NOMA… Leaving aside the NPOV adjective fictional, we have the implication that scientists and’the religious are non-overlapping sets, which is demonstrably false.
  • [R]eligious people and scientists … have different views about whether a six-day-old embryo is or is not a person. In addition to the issue bulleted above, we also have the issue that whether a fetus is a person is not a scientific question, but a philosophical one. This is not an example of overlap between science and religion.
  • What is said above applies to all of the other objections made to religious morality, such as stem cells, cures, and vaccinations. The counter-morality is not scientifically based, and so is not an example of overlap.
  • [S]cience can frequently demonstrate whether particular beliefs increase or decrease suffering. Not only is this claim dubious, but it is irrelevant, since the belief that increasing or decreasing suffering provides "moral values” is not a scientific belief.

I could go on, but will stop for now. Suffice it to say, these are the most egregious examples. Deleting them will lead to a greatly improved article.

Rwflammang (talk) 23:19, 17 July 2014 (UTC)Reply

Point of Order edit

I would just like to point out, in the context of NOMA, that no-one here has observed, and perhaps people are unaware, that the Mormon Church--that is, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and /or any belief system descended from the teachings of Joseph Smith--has a very unique perspective on this, in a religious sense. The church does not teach that there is such a thing as scientific truth vs. religious truth. In the context of their scripture Doctrine & Covenants 118:18, they have a saying (easily searchable on their website) that "all truth may be circumscribed in one great whole." The idea being, that IF religious and scientific, or even religious and religious, knowledge appears contradictory, it is only because, in the words of one of their leaders, Dieter F. Uchtdorf, "What may seem contradictory now may be perfectly understandable as we [continue to] search for and [one day] receive more trustworthy information."

I wonder how this compares to other religious or scientific leaders/thinkers of today, and what anyone else's thoughts are? Also, would this point be sufficient, with (easily obtainable) references, to place on the main page, perhaps in the criticism section? Though this position has been held by the Mormon Church by some 180 years, making it more a philosophy in line with Enlightenment thinkers than in opposition to today's NOMA ones. Playerpage (talk) 20:41, 1 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

I am not aware of any church that teaches scientific truth vs. religious truth. Averoes and Siger of Brabant are both sometime claimed to have taught such a distinction, but that thesis, even if they asserted it, was specifically condemned in the middle ages. Rwflammang (talk) 01:36, 3 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
I'm sorry, but I kind of thought that was the the thrust of NOMA. There is Science, and there is Religion, and never the twain shall meet.
I know in a PRACTICAL sense there aren't a whole lot of religions out there trying to make their members parse dogma from the observed, scientific world, but there are a great deal--most of them, I would feel confident saying--who teach the NOMA-style separation of experiences. I was merely trying to point out that the Mormon Church is the only (Western, Abrahamic) religion I know of that eliminates that separation, not just practically but also theologically. Playerpage (talk) 07:47, 29 November 2014 (UTC)Reply
I guess you missed a critical distinction. There are two magisteria, but only one truth. The magisteria do not overlap, but logic, reason, critical thinking, in sum, truth, apply to both. As for religions other than Mormonism that "eliminate that separation", they all do, or at least, I know of none which do not. Making a distinction between religious and scientific truth makes no more sense in those religions than making a distinction between scientific truth and mathematical truth. Nevertheless, science and math represent two distinct magisteria. Rwflammang (talk) 03:39, 30 November 2014 (UTC)Reply
Well, if I missed it, then the entire study of NOMA seems to have done the same. When dealing with NOMA and magisteria, I have TRIED to look up even a simple definition of what magisteria IS, but the top 50 results--even from sites such as Webster--are usually variations on "magisterial." I finally found a site, Wordnik, that placed all uses it could find of the word side-by-side, and just let me figure it out on my own. (https://www.wordnik.com/words/magisteria) From what I can gather, the way you use the word, you intend for me to understand the definition of "magisteria" to be "domains of teaching" (see the reference to Conservapedia's entry), but that does not appear to be the universal definition. After all, Stephen Jay Gould's "Rock of Ages" argued that science and religion are "distinct realms of understanding" under NOMA. That does not sound to me like a "many paths up the mountain" approach to finding The One True Truth that you claim it is.
Even here, on this page--in this very "Talk Section"--users argue that religion is the problem, and not the correct path to truth. (See the NPOV section above.) If NOMA is merely an argument for separating methodologies, not separating Truth Itself, then yes, I--and a whole lot of people have missed something.
I am merely arguing that, as NOMA advocates on this board have made several claims that science and religion work best separately, and that religion in particular is hostile to science, there is at least one Western religion--The Joseph Smith Restorationist Movement--that does not hold that worldview, or at least did not have to be "brought around" to it, because it was not hostile to science from the start. I'm sure there were others. And if you need an example of current churches that ARE hostile to science, and do not regard what it uncovers as "truth," just look up Creationism. Playerpage (talk) 18:59, 1 January 2015 (UTC)Reply
Plurals are not usually listed in the dictionary. Try looking it up under its singular form, "magisterium". Here, for instance. Rwflammang (talk) 20:12, 2 January 2015 (UTC)Reply
Oh, and also, a definition is given in the article. Rwflammang (talk) 20:16, 2 January 2015 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for that. The definitions in the article and in the link you provided do point to a "separate area of study/domain of teaching" view of the word. It would be helpful if the article didn't assume that everyone reading it understood Latin, and simply pointed out that one is the plural of the other. Still, my original point stands, I believe. There are many scientists who believe you cannot be religious and truly scientific, and there are many religious people who will turn to their religious authorities (living or written) far ahead of any announced scientific theory or finding--just witness the anti-vax craze. I still think a religion, be it LDS or any other, that attempts to bridge that gap officially and theologically should be investigated and reported on in an article such as this. I admit finding a place in the current make-up of the article would be difficult. Playerpage (talk) 23:16, 19 March 2015 (UTC)Reply
What does the anti-vax craze have to do with religion? It is based on bad science which was looking for a scapegoat for autism. I suspect that most religious people turned to scientific authorities for scientific opinions and religious authorities for religious opinions. And I suspect that "many scientists", at least irreligious ones, are bothered by that last part.
If you don't think the anti-vax craze has anything to do with religion you really haven't been paying attention. Playerpage (talk) 22:28, 24 April 2015 (UTC)Reply
If you don't think the craze has anything to do with bad science, you really haven't been paying attention. Rwflammang (talk) 22:09, 25 April 2015 (UTC)Reply

Dawkins quote edit

The quote by Professor Dawkins recently added to the article seems to bear only on God's existence, and does not contain any direct criticisms of NOMA. As such it appears off topic and would best be deleted. Rwflammang (talk) 03:44, 20 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

God of the gaps edit

I've added God of the gaps as a see-also for this article, as NOMA is frequently cited as a counter-argument to this. -- The Anome (talk) 09:36, 11 April 2016 (UTC)Reply

Overall standing and issues ? edit

I have tempered the lead which had only Gould proclaiming consensus since the reception area seems nothing but criticisms or limitations. I'm wondering if there are RS giving a general view of its standing and the issues, rather than this item by item part of several folks (picked from no presented basis) that has no summary of what the overall result is  ? My impression is that NOMA is in disrepute, although it's a prominent viewpoint for discussions.

As best I can see, it seems that for ordinary daily work there is usually not interactions, but that NOMA feels like a denialism or doge, but more importantly it just doesn't work, that it's where things DO conect that needs help and that interactions are both factual and unavoidable plus there are stances that oppose trying to have separation. e.g. Dawkins feels religion is not beyond the purview of science, that it should not be regarded as somehow immune or exempt from rational analysis. And ironically, both Gould and Dawkins *are* weighing in here on something outside of science and into the philosophy of religion as well as that of science. From the outside of science side, there is a meme of doing science without considering the values is a 'mad' scientist and bad things result (e.g. Frankenstein, Nuclear bombs, Dr. Moreau). One flavor is even that there are Things Man Was Not Meant to Know. It seems factual that scientist do not refrain om making moral statements or sticking an oar into religion, and vice-versa, and I read that these are simply not NOM - not only did they not stay away, the fields simply are not seperable. More calmly said that science has real-world impacts on people so should consider the consequences and follow ethical guides, and that spiritual leaders must help the concerns of people which often come from recent discovery or use of scientific items. Markbassett (talk) 00:59, 13 February 2017 (UTC)Reply

p.s. what I do see from a BING is consensus seems to be nothing but rejecting NOMA, starts with things like

Markbassett (talk) 02:00, 13 February 2017 (UTC)Reply

^^^^ This gets into the perception of NOMA I was alluding to in Point of Order, above. Playerpage (talk) 00:26, 22 December 2017 (UTC)Reply

Contrast with Hume's is-ought gap? edit

Gould's non-overlapping magisteria seems very closely related to David Hume's is-ought gap. I am surprised to find no contrast between them, or even references to suggest that they are related topics. In my mind, Gould's "facts" and "values" seem to correspond quite obviously with Hume's discussion of "is" and "ought". Am I misunderstanding one or both of these? As far as I can tell, the biggest difference seems to be that Gould pivots to moving his gap to fall somewhere between natural and supernatural, thus dividing the domain of "facts", whereas Hume seems to keep his gap steadily between "facts" and "values". 170.199.177.99 (talk) 15:03, 16 February 2021 (UTC)Reply

If this were discussed widely in reliable sources then it may be included. Please provide the necessary sources as per WP:RS here and then we can see. Robynthehode (talk) 16:17, 16 February 2021 (UTC)Reply