Neon: The idea that I'm trying to sum up is the concept that nothing exists outside the material universe - that matter and energy are all there is, and that the supernatural is not merely outside the realm of science, but is non-existent. ... So my point is that, while the presupposition of materialistic naturalism may not be advocated by name in academia and the sciences, the idea permeates the environment, and the upshot of that is that it's practically required to be an atheist to function in that arena
My claim: Some scientist accept this as true, some do not. Many (if not most) has never considered the question and feel it is rather silly. Many would properly ask which definitions you are using of "energy" and "matter" if you feel superstrings, spacetime or quantum fields fit in those exact categories.
I have never encountered a scientist in my professional life who made such a claim. Why should one make this assumption?
I know this type of accusation is the current fad on youtube and appolegetics; "those close minded scientists". In fact a significant proportions of scientists are theists; do you also feel they make such an assumption?
My question is what evidence you have this view is shared by a majority of high-profile scientists? (not Matt Dillahunty). Specifically, that they would not be swayed by evidence to the contrary? I find the question particulary interesting with respect to christian, jewish and muslim scientists.
My reading and observation to this point have led me to believe that what I write is true - can you say any differently about what you write?
I don't think it is fair or reasonable to make this sort of accusation without having better evidence than this. Could you give some of your best sources for the claim?
I've had atheists demand evidence for the existence of God, and then, under questioning, admit that no evidence could ever be presented that would convince them to believe in God.
I have had theists use the jesus-on-toast argument. While I might be tempted to throw in such a silly claim so as to not address what you are actually writing, I find it irrelevant to this conversation and a waste of your time.
I'm not talking about six-day creationism here, but the reasonable conclusion that when one sees a universe with an overwhelming appearance of design, one may conclude that there is most likely a designer behind that universe. It seems reasonable also to believe that such a designer cannot be analyzed or known by the same methods by which the universe is measured (i.e., the physical sciences), but would have to make its presence known through revelation.
The eye showed evidence of design, but that turned out to have arisen by natural means. The solar system showed evidence of design but turned out to have come about by natural means.
Clearly, actual design by an intelligence is not the only reasonable conclusion one can draw from an "overwhelming appearance of design" and to use apparence of design as a clear argument for an designer is thus highly dubious. The discovery institute claim to try an develop methods and make discoveries that allow us to draw the inference from apparent design (or pattern to use a less loaded word), however on purely technical grounds their best work i am familiar with is a disaster and not taken serious by academia simply because it does not pass the usual standards of rigor one expect of other scientific ideas.