All claims about the world outside of people’s minds require empirical evidence drawn from the world around them.
There it is again. Earlier, you claimed:
And all reasonable people dismiss a priori, non-empirical evidence when it comes to evaluating claims about the world outside of our heads.
This is the claim that I’m saying is obviously wrong, if you mean empirical in the sense that term is used within science. Theoretical statistics, for example, is mathematical, but doesn’t go off of empirical data alone. And outside the natural sciences, claims subject to repeatable experiments are just not standard fare – that’s not the method used by historians, philosophers, etc.
Besides that, you’re making an affirmative claim here that only empirical claims are valid forms of acquiring knowledge, and that “reasonable people” dismiss all other forms of knowledge. You’ve already contradicted yourself by showing that there are certain claims you accept a prior without empirical data, so by your own standards, you’re not reasonable. But this standard itself isn’t reasonable, in that there’s no possible way to design a falsifiable experiment to test this claim.
Obviously, claims about things like my inner state (like, “I feel happy right now”) only require the evidence of my own personal observation of my inner state.
Except that none of the examples I gave were “I feel happy” claims. They were things like, “Alexander the Great existed.” The natural sciences can’t prove that.
I’m not saying that empirical evidence is necessary to support every claim – just those claims that pertain to the world outside of my head.
Again, this is a non-empirical claim being used as a binding vise on logic.
And the claim that “a disembodied intelligence exists and created the universe and cares for everything in the universe and intervenes in nature” is a claim about the world outside of my head that needs to be justified with evidence.
Yes. We agree on this, but it’s because it’s a positive claim, not because it’s a claim about natural science. As such, the evidence isn’t going to just be regarding the natural sciences, since that’s perhaps the least related of the modes of inquiry.
My point is that we are talking about the supernatural here – something or Someone operating beyond, and in possible contravention of, the laws of nature. Now, those laws of nature themselves point to a Lawgiver, which is a proof for God. But for the major claims of Christianity, we’re pointing to the things beyond the laws of nature. Trying to use a method designed for the natural sciences to determine: (a) the nature of One who can abrogate or suspend those laws, or (b) where those laws came from, is a self-refuting proposition. It’s like trying to use a calculator to figure out whether Leibniz or Newton invented calculus.
Again, “new atheists”…or any other kind of atheists…don’t demands “scientific empirical data for everything.” I don’t demand empirical scientific data to know that “I’m hungry right now” – since it’s a claim about my inner state, my observation of my inner state is sufficient for that claim.
See above.
But when the conversation is about the world outside of our heads, evidence drawn from the world outside of our heads is necessary. And when the conversation is about something within the realm of science, then scientific, empirical evidence drawn from the world outside of our heads is necessary.
Certainly, the existence of God impacts the world of science, just as it impacts the world of literature, politics, sociology, etc. But to then reduce the God-claim to a scientific question is unfounded. We’re saying that science proceeds from God. That’s a claim beyond the realm of science.
What you’re doing here is playing a disingenuous game where you observe that empirical evidence isn’t necessary for every last single claim and then you try to make believe that empirical evidence isn’t necessary for a claim about the world outside of our heads…the very place where empirical evidence is necessary!
There are forms of compelling evidence beyond empiricism. Sound Socratic logic is superior to empiricism, for example. You keep claiming that I’m using feeling examples: “I feel hungry,” etc. But that’s just dismissive of the actual argument.
Your whole argument is a bunch of hand-waving in an attempt to convince gullible people that they don’t need evidence to believe in an extraordinary claim about the world around them.
You’ve completely misunderstood the argument, and clung to an irrational dichotomy between “feelings” and “science,” which eviscerates all other forms of rational inquiry.