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warpspeedpetey
Guest
Physics deals with the physical.Physical in a physics sense, but not physical in an everyday sense.
Photons are physical objects.Light is physical in the former but not the latter
No, they don’t but that’s an entirely different subject., and even thoughts arise from a material basis,
If thoughts were emergent than they would be material by definition. Just the arrangement of the various particles in your brain.but are not material in an intuitive sense.
As there are no two senses to of physical, there is not a latter and a former for you to be confused about. Further you didn’t qualify one kind of evidence at one time, and one kind at another. Even if you had, I would think you hard pressed to justify the claim.I think empirical is synonymous with the former but not the latter sense of physical, so I was not clear but there is no necessary contradiction in saying that evidence has to be physical in one place and then that ‘any kind of evidence will do’ later.
As to rationality, I would never counter the value of reason operating with evidence, only the idea that reason as operating devoid of the empirical is capable of giving knowledge of the world. What good is maths at telling us what is here? Alone, it tells us nothing, but combined with astronomy, it can tell us that the sum of the energy content of the universe is nil, an interesting thought with regards to whether we are a colossal accident.
The way I visualise this debate, it is of marginal importance(!). I’m trying to maintain a space for the value of evidence speaking as an atheist, and you seem to be trying to make space for non-evidential claims as a theist, but this is not necessary where Christianity is based on the evidence of the apostles, not their claims to knowledge of the imperceptible.