Scientism
Scientism is the belief that only natural science can lead to rational belief and that science exists without limits. Scientism support that only science can give the best knowledge and such claims have been controversial to most public debates because not all individuals believe in the same aspects. With the existence of scientism, humanities are expected to adapt to ways of natural science so that they can have better knowledge and understanding of nature. A scientist believes that any nonscientific sources of a belief are unreliable and this is what has makes people deny the concept.
One of the arguments against it is that even the most crucial natural science requires deliverance of non-scientific sources of belief for instanced memory, auditory perception and logical intuition, an indication that the scientism cannot exist alone. Although scientism provides the evidence of the occurrence of phenomena, it requires other support systems and perceptions such as visuals for a complete investigation of a phenomenon. Therefore, it is not the only measure of rationality as it depends on other natural aspects of life. Memory, visual and other natural aspects of life are required to make scientism a reality.
The other argument against scientism is the fact that scientific reasoning can be justified on non-empirical grounds. For instance, when a scientific occurrence appears in the past consistently, it can easily be predicted in the future without consideration of scientific rules. This is a confirmation that science is not the only source of knowledge as humans can depend on memories, and history to base their knowledge.