Series: Scientism


  • Blindness in Scientistic Pursuits We are not the masters of our own understanding. In our modern age, we pride ourselves on knowing what we know about the cosmos and calling it everything, yet we remain blind to the very foundations of existence. We gaze at the stars with telescopes and advanced mathematical equations, believing we…

  • Multiplicity of the Quite Unseen “Seen” Where science and metaphysics collide is the limit of materialist-complete explanations for the greatest and most fundamental phenomena that defy reduction. Naturalist explanations own the roost of the daily ins and outs of the physical world, as grounded by the mysteries in the absolutes that, in turn, defy naturalism.…

  • “Incredulity Made Me Do It”: That Improbability Cop-Out of Scientism The universe’s improbability is the primary argument for the multiverse, so statistical incredulity, essentially. This theory proposes that our observable universe is just one of countless others, each with its own set of physical laws and constants. According to this view, the conditions necessary for…

  • When Science Denies the Miracles Foundational to Science and Progress So we confront a doctrine that has shaped modern cosmology and philosophy alike: the mediocrity principle. Mediocrity asserts that we are not special, our galaxy is unremarkable, our solar system is average, and our planet is just one of many in the cosmos. According to…

  • Odds Defying Logic Improbability of life on Earth is inexplicable to scientists and statisticians. The conditions required for life to arise (with all physical constants, stable temperatures, liquid water, a protective atmosphere, and just the right balance of chemical elements) are so finely tuned that even among billions of galaxies, the chance of finding another…