That seems a bit silly. From a religious standpoint, nature is a creation, like software. I'm pretty sure I'm not going to discover Linus Torvalds, Michael Dell, or Bill Gates in my computer.
Ok, tell it to the these guys:
Others such as Francis Collins, Kenneth R. Miller, and George Coyne argue for compatibility since they do not agree that science is incompatible with religion and vice versa. They argue that science provides many opportunities to look for and find God in nature and to reflect on their beliefs
Wiki
These are modern religious scientists but the desire to see god reflected in his creation is hardly a new one for theists.
Yeah, equating naturalism with the scientific method is something certain naturalists love to do, but it's hardly correct.
As Underseer points out - it depends on your flavour of
Naturalism and so can be perfectly correct. Keep in mind methodological naturalism takes no position on the existence or non-existence of the supernatural, unlike Metaphysical naturalism. It only strongly infers the non-existence of the supernatural given its stubborn refusal to make itself known in any meaningful way.
You really going to take the illogical position that naturalism equates to the scientific method? Seems like an aphilosophical attitude rather than a philosophical position.
Methodological naturalism does equate with the scientific method
and is a philosophy of knowledge. From wiki -
It is a "ground rule" that "requires scientists to seek explanations in the world around us based upon what we can observe, test, replicate, and verify
Who argued that specific point? And why, pray tell, does something need to be falsifiable to be true? <-- what did he just do there?
It was a reference to an earlier discussion between us regarding your implication that the universe could be the result of a mathematical meta function that describes both the history, present and future of all its components. I can't remember which forum it was in. Apologies if it was a bit obscure, I know you have been very active on these boards.
Seems to me that there's very little way to tell if something is true unless it can potentially be disproved. Otherwise we devolve to assertion.
I can see how your post might apply more to metaphysical naturalism - if one has accepted as dogma that the universe is entirely natural then it seems unlikely that they will change their mind. But the same charge can be laid at the feet of a majority of world views.
So I have two questions:
1) Do you contend that the scientific method should be un-hitched from methodological naturalism? That we should seek explanations for events that cannot be observed, tested, replicated or verified?
2) What sort of evidence do you have, or think would be sufficient, to make naturalism a defunct philosophy of knowledge and philosophical world-view? Specifically, I guess, in terms of the cells molecular motor - see mods this is not a derail