If a certain text is to be interpreted allegorically, it doesn’t give actual information: you sort it out, so the text isn’t telling you what to believe, you are telling the text what to believe. If you cherry-pick what to believe and how to interpret it, then you are not letting the text tell you anything you did not decide to believe to begin with.
It seems to me that cherry picking is precisely what you are doing regarding passages from Genesis. Considering that science and scientific methods for gathering evidence were not formally developed for several thousand years AFTER the Genesis accounts were written, for you to claim these accounts were making “scientific” claims is preposterous at best.
You are reading your own scientific bias into them and forcing them to do what you want them to. You are the one who is “not letting the text tell you anything you did not decide to believe to begin with.” Obviously, the text could not have been “doing science,” since science was not a valid enterprise at the time, so why would we read science into the account except to cherry pick?
It would be prudent of you to follow your own advice here.
Yet, you “read into” the Genesis text your “scientific” expectation as if it must be true that the author of Genesis was making a modern scientific claim by using “day” as a technically precise and scientific unit of measurement, when, in fact, the author COULD NOT have been.
And I do follow my own advice, I conclude no absence of deity through absence of evidence of deity.
Nevertheless there is evidence for lack of some deities. For example the Biblical deity. Since we have positive evidence the world was not created in six days a few thousand years ago; positive evidence that the events recounted in the book of Exodus did not happen; positive evidence that the followers of Jesus Christ cannot bring back the dead, heal the sick, drink poisons and not die, or handle venomous snakes and also not croak… it’s what one could call a failed hypothesis. For that deity, the evidence speaks loudly. The same could be said for the deity of the Quran and those of the Vedas.
So I remain agnostic about the existence of deities through lack of evidence, though firmly mind made up about the deities proposed in the Qur’an, the Bible and the Vedas.
Again, your lack of fair-mindedness is showing. You claim as “positive evidence” that the followers of Jesus “cannot” perform miracles, yet on what grounds do you dismiss the miracle accounts in the New Testament and those in the lives of the saints? Have you looked into these miracles, or is your position one of dismissal by metaphysical presumption?
Good. Because that was not my point. I am (again!) agnostic about the deity. Please pay attention and let’s not go over this point again.
What deity in particular? Do you even know what “in particular” means?
“Possible evidence” explains nothing, only actual evidence explains.
Actual evidence has a very limited scope since what counts as “actual” depends upon predetermined standards for evidence which is, in fact, biased against the supernatural, since only physical evidence is allowed to count, and biased in favour of what our predispositions determine the evidence should look like. How would we even have a clue as to what supernatural causation would bring into the explanatory picture when, by method, only physical explanatory possibilities are sought?
If only natural events can count as evidence (owing to our methods) then it would be senseless to make a claim that supernatural causes have been disproven or ruled out, precisely because these were never allowed to be considered in the first place.
It seems you read nothing of what I wrote. Or perhaps you did not understand, so let me explain it another way. Every statement of a particular deity (Zeus, Jesus, Vishnu, etc) is in itself a set of hypotheses about the world (for instance hypothetically: “Megagawd made everything taste like vanilla and so everything tastes like vanilla and he saw that it was good”, but the world actually does not taste like vanilla, so it’s a false statement). How the Biblical god is falsified is through the examination of what is said in the Bible and contrasting it with the real world…
Certainly, if a claim logically entails that “everything tastes like vanilla” and would continue to do so to this day, then you might have a case for saying Megagawd did not make everything taste - in any lasting way - like vanilla. However, if the claim was that Megagawd made everything that was part of the king’s banquet taste like vanilla, you have not disproven that claim by demonstrating that your breakfast cereal does not, today, taste like vanilla or that Megagawd could not have done such an act in the past because he does not do so to your repast today.
Likewise, you cannot count the fact that you have never witnessed anyone rise from the dead as disproof of the claim that God raised Jesus from the dead. The Resurrection of Jesus was claimed to have been a special case for special reasons. You can’t claim that because human beings are not typically raised from the dead that Jesus COULD NOT have been. It is only your own metaphysical presumptions that lead you to that belief. It isn’t even a case of “lack of evidence” because exemplary eye-witness accounts of the event do exist and it is only a bias against miracles that would lead you to discount them. If these accounts had left out all supernatural references you would have no issue concerning their authenticity.