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The Science of Unknowable and Imaginary Things
Author(s) -
Jack David Eller
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
socio-historical examination of religion and ministry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2637-7519
pISSN - 2637-7500
DOI - 10.33929/sherm.2019.vol1.no2.04
Subject(s) - metaphysics , the imaginary , epistemology , philosophy , speculation , exegesis , philosophy of science , scientific theory , theology , psychology , economics , psychotherapist , macroeconomics
In this paper, I address the question of whether metaphysics and theology are or can become science. After examining the qualities of contemporary science, which evolved from an earlier historic concept of any body of literature into a formal method for obtaining empirical knowledge, I apply that standard to metaphysics and theology. I argue that neither metaphysics nor theology practices a scientific method or generates scientific knowledge. Worse, I conclude that both metaphysics and theology are at best purely cultural projects—exercises in exegesis of local cultural and religious ideas and language—and, therefore, that other cultures have produced or would produce radically different schemes of metaphysics or theology. At its worst, metaphysics is speculation about the unknowable, while theology is rumination about the imaginary.

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