B
bentcurve
Guest
We can never fully prove anything besides our own existence, so therefore faith is the nature of our reality. I have faith that yellow looks like yellow, even though I have no way of proving it. I have faith that I am here typing this, and not in a coma, but no way of proving it.
All reality is based on perception and observation, and those are a fallible source. All we can do is use reason to process our observations, and make assumptions based on these.
So looking for final valid proof of anything is not possible. Therefore, science is no more solid than religion. So on and so on.
Also, I think it is important to make a difference between the idea of knowing something, and proving something. I can know God, and I can experience God, without having proof of God. Experience and proof, or evidence, are different things.
Kierkegaard- “God is indirectly experienced in the experience of the absolute dependency of our own existence.”
He argued that we could know God by experience him, and that the simple act of existence allowed us to do this. Through this process of experience we can form a knowledge of God, how we he works, and how we relate to him. Obviously, this is what theology does, it complies the revelations and knowledge of those in the faith before us so we might have a better place to start.
So you can know something, even if you cannot provide evidence for it. I think faith needs knowledge, and justification, but not evidence or proof.
All reality is based on perception and observation, and those are a fallible source. All we can do is use reason to process our observations, and make assumptions based on these.
So looking for final valid proof of anything is not possible. Therefore, science is no more solid than religion. So on and so on.
Also, I think it is important to make a difference between the idea of knowing something, and proving something. I can know God, and I can experience God, without having proof of God. Experience and proof, or evidence, are different things.
Kierkegaard- “God is indirectly experienced in the experience of the absolute dependency of our own existence.”
He argued that we could know God by experience him, and that the simple act of existence allowed us to do this. Through this process of experience we can form a knowledge of God, how we he works, and how we relate to him. Obviously, this is what theology does, it complies the revelations and knowledge of those in the faith before us so we might have a better place to start.
So you can know something, even if you cannot provide evidence for it. I think faith needs knowledge, and justification, but not evidence or proof.