Is rational thinking over rated?
Posted: Mon Feb 20, 2012 6:00 pm
I really have been enjoying this website. There are alot of things here I have always believed but really didn't know how to put into words. I have never believed that science and the Bible contradicted one another like many atheists would like for everyone to believe. I am not a scientist but I have worked in a related field for nearly 30 years now. In my early 20's I had the opportunity to make and assemble parts for Space Shuttle missions as well as other high tech type projects. I have worked with NASA engineers, military engineers, and have made parts for a nuclear reactor. I more recently made part of the Spitzer Space Telescope. For the last 7 years I have worked with state of the art robotics in the auto industry. Throughout my career I have worked with some highly intelligent people and got to see science in action. Recently I have noticed the New Atheists movement and the push for "rational thinking". The reason I am posting this is that I feel the need to say something about rational thinking. What I want to say is: Rational thinking is over rated.
Working with robots I see it everyday. Robot movements depend on how many axis it has and the positions it can achieve using the motors for each axis. So a robot makes decisions based on the "logic" written in it's software. This is the robot's reality, it's universe. Of course there are movements and positions impossible for the robot to achieve and in this case there is a situation referred to as singularity. This is when a command is made for a position that the robot can't calculate or logically achieve based on it's written parameters. When this happens I have seen the robot behave erratically or just come to a complete stop. To the robot all rationality has broken down.
For robots rational thinking works, well, most of the time but this is one reason I think rational thinking is over rated: Humans aren't robots. Consider a robot's reality to a human's reality. A robot makes decisions based on what it "knows" to be true inside it's own realm. Outside of that it's reality breaks down and it's rationality is useless. It is in a state of singularity. In a human's reality, the universe, all the things we know scientifically and philosophically normally make sense but there is a point where all human knowledge breaks down and rational thinking is useless. It is a state of singularity for humans.
Like robots, many humans act erratic or completely stop when in singularity. I don't think human beings were meant to be in this state. "Rational thinking" as defined by atheists doesn't resolve singularity. Christianity does resolve it.
Anyone here have any thoughts on this? This is just the way I look at it anyway.
Working with robots I see it everyday. Robot movements depend on how many axis it has and the positions it can achieve using the motors for each axis. So a robot makes decisions based on the "logic" written in it's software. This is the robot's reality, it's universe. Of course there are movements and positions impossible for the robot to achieve and in this case there is a situation referred to as singularity. This is when a command is made for a position that the robot can't calculate or logically achieve based on it's written parameters. When this happens I have seen the robot behave erratically or just come to a complete stop. To the robot all rationality has broken down.
For robots rational thinking works, well, most of the time but this is one reason I think rational thinking is over rated: Humans aren't robots. Consider a robot's reality to a human's reality. A robot makes decisions based on what it "knows" to be true inside it's own realm. Outside of that it's reality breaks down and it's rationality is useless. It is in a state of singularity. In a human's reality, the universe, all the things we know scientifically and philosophically normally make sense but there is a point where all human knowledge breaks down and rational thinking is useless. It is a state of singularity for humans.
Like robots, many humans act erratic or completely stop when in singularity. I don't think human beings were meant to be in this state. "Rational thinking" as defined by atheists doesn't resolve singularity. Christianity does resolve it.
Anyone here have any thoughts on this? This is just the way I look at it anyway.