V
Vonsalza
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I find this kind of subtle, intellectual beauty is often found in Oxford’s definitions.I wouldn’t use the idea of “proof”. I would use the word, “supports” the conclusion. Proof implies that every other possible solution has been dismissed as not valid and this is the only solution.
It does not require proof because it’s a nigh-impossible standard for non-material ideas (a la, “social science”). “Evidence” is a bit more subjective and you’ll find that lots of Christians employ evidence of all different sorts in their reasoning.
And as I keep repeating quite a bit, the scientific method is only useful for evaluating things that are material, determinable, quantifiable (thanks @Wesrock).That is why the logical conclusion sounds only like the hypothesis step in the scientific method, we still need to test this against reality to see if it matches.
The scientific method is a wonderful tool. But a screwdriver won’t do everything. Sometimes you need a wrench. The method does have its limitations and, in fairness, your educators probably covered it. It cannot make value judgements like “global warming is bad” or “murder is wrong”. Since global warming and murder are a part of our reality, a paradigm based solely on the scientific method will have some pretty big holes…
To be frank, I am culturally Christian, but I’m not culturally theistic.To me, this sounds like being culturally religious. Which is fine too.
I require a reality where law and morals limit bad behavior in a way that isn’t arbitrary. Raping children can’t be wrong only because we’ve declared it so by act of democracy.
This is where the metaphysical comes in. And the metaphysical, like all other things, requires a cause for its effect. This necessitates “god”. Now this doesn’t mean it has to be an old man with a white beard. But it has to be something that is likely as non-material as metaphysics itself.
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