Why I am not a Naturalist (by Timothy Williamson)

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Why I am not a Naturalist (by Timothy Williamson)

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What Is Naturalism?
by Timothy Williamson
September 4, 2011
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/04/what-is-naturalism

I am sometimes described as a naturalist. Why do I resist the description?

...naturalism becomes the belief that there is only whatever the scientific method eventually discovers, and (not surprisingly) the best way to find out about it is by the scientific method. That is no tautology. Why can't there be things only discoverable by non-scientific means, or not discoverable at all?

What is meant by "the scientific method"? Why assume that science only has one method?...One challenge to naturalism is to find a place for mathematics...which proves its results by pure reasoning, rather than the hypothetico-deductive method.

...Still, I sympathize with one motive behind naturalism — the aspiration to think in a scientific spirit. It's a vague phrase, but one might start to explain it by emphasizing values like curiosity, honesty, accuracy, precision and rigor. ...

The scientific spirit is as relevant in mathematics, history, philosophy and elsewhere as in natural science. Where experimentation is the likeliest way to answer a question correctly, the scientific spirit calls for the experiments to be done; where other methods — mathematical proof, archival research, philosophical reasoning — are more relevant it calls for them instead. ...

Naturalism tries to condense the scientific spirit into a philosophical theory. But no theory can replace that spirit, for any theory can be applied in an unscientific spirit, as a polemical device to reinforce prejudice. Naturalism as dogma is one more enemy of the scientific spirit.
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Alex Rosenberg: Why I Am a Naturalist

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Why I Am a Naturalist
By ALEX ROSENBERG
September 17, 2011
NY Times

Naturalism is the philosophical theory that treats science as our most reliable source of knowledge and scientific method as the most effective route to knowledge. In a recent essay for The Stone, Timothy Williamson correctly reports that naturalism is popular in philosophy. In fact it is now a dominant approach in several areas of philosophy — ethics, epistemology, the philosophy of mind, philosophy of science and, most of in all, metaphysics, the study of the basic constituents of reality. Metaphysics is important: if it turns out that reality contains only the kinds of things that hard science recognizes, the implications will be grave for what we value in human experience.  ...