B
Belloc_Fan
Guest
That second paragraph there completely refutes the first. You’re saying that for certain evidentiary claims, you’d accept them as prima facia true without any evidence.Claims about the world outside of my head are evaluated on the basis of how much evidence they have going for them. The more evidence I have, the more certain I am that they are true, all the way up to 99% (because, obviously, we don’t have absolute knowledge of things).
For some very ordinary claims, I would probably be willing to accept them for the sake of convenience – for extraordinary claims, I would not. If you told me that you had a dog, for example, I’d probably believe you because that’s a very ordinary claim and because it doesn’t really affect me one way or another.
I understand that what you’re actually trying to say is that “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence,” but what you’re actually claiming is that all claims require evidence (which “I have a dog” doesn’t) and that all claims require empirical evidence, which is an arbitrary subset of evidence that I see no defense for.
The problem, more generally, is that most of the New Atheists come from the natural sciences – biology, and the like. They assume that the methodologies they’ve derived from those sciences can be applied outside those fields with equal success. They can’t. Just as you can’t derive a test proving (on the spot, anyways) that someone does or doesn’t have a dog, you can’t derive a test proving that Columbus arrived in America in 1492, etc. The social sciences use total different methodologies and standards of evidence than do natural scientists. I can’t think of any social science claims which would be very testable under the New Atheist’s absurd demands for scientific empirical data for everything – even if there are some testable claims, they’re in the minority.
No, the truth is that for everything from ordinary to extraordinary claims, the historian (for example) relies upon available data. Once in a blue moon, this is archaeology, possibly subject to carbon dating. Much more often, it’s manuscripts – even if a natural scientist can date the manuscripts to a given age, it doesn’t prove that the text is honest.
Christianity relies on standards of data quite similar to what’s relied upon by historians. Read the works of early Church Fathers on these points – they point to old text, to multiple attestation, to continual traditions, and so on. These are all things which a good historian would find to be compelling evidence. They just aren’t “empirical data” in the sense that a natural scientist uses that term.
Likewise, had there been no media footage of the Holocaust, and had the physical and structural remains been lost to time, we would have had to have relied upon the testimony of survivors, just as we did for evidence of the existence of the Black Plague. Would you be right in denying the Holocaust presumptively, because it’s extraordinary claim? Certainly, it is one. If the only available evidence were detailed survivor accounts – just as the only available evidence for the Black Plague was – would you declare yourself AntiSurvivor, and discount all of their testimonies?