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Duong_Nguyen
Guest
That’s an invalid definition for existence. What about the supposed dark matter? It is unobservable. Yet we hypothesize that it exists because we notice visible matter’s patterned gravitational behaviors.donsnow:
I imagine, though, that you’re talking about something that can’t be observed, measured, or demonstrated at all. How, then, do you know it exists? I define “exists” to mean “manifesting in some way, such that it affects the world.” Anything that conforms to that definition must be observable or measurable in some way; anything that doesn’t manifest in a way that affects the world is indistinguishable from something that does not exist.
Likewise, the faith can’t be measured, but we do observe the behaviors of people of faith. If science can assert for dark matter’s existence, why can’t we assert metaphysical realities exist as well?
I said that it lacks evidence that can be observed. It may have evidence beyond science. Like other ideas, science had to advance before it could get the correct picture. We went through at least 3 theories about the shape of the atom before we rested on what we have today. All I’m saying is just we are looking beyond what science is capable of today towards what it can prove in the future: the existence of metaphysical realities.donsnow:
In fact, I assert that accepting claims without evidence – which, as you’ve indicated above, is precisely what faith means – is generally a harmful thing for society.
Blaming us for all the world’s problems is pretty easy. I’ll counter with how eugenics led to some pretty crazy scientists leading racial purges and the like. Just look at Heinrich Himmler en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich_Himmler. Religion alone is not alone when it comes to having crazy people. Bottom line is crazy people will be crazy no matter if they use religion or science to back them up.donsnow:
Religious terrorism, religiously-motivated child abuse, religiously-motivated discrimination, etc. are just the icing on the cake – there are plenty of positively harmful examples that result from ignoring evidence and believing in stuff you want to be true. And it’s the “moderate believers,” the people who aren’t hurting anyone directly and who think faith is just dandy, who provide cover to the folks who do the real damage.
That would be all well and good, except for the fact that the faithful want temporal power – i.e. power within my “sphere of inquiry.” They want to legislate their morality, they want to censor the opinions of others, and they want to take over the world by force in some cases.
When the religious stop wanting power in this world and instead stick to ruling the imaginary heavenly kingdom in their heads, then I’ll stop criticizing them so vocally. Until then, expect wild claims to be challenged.
Also who says that science should be governing society? Where does science get its right whereas other ways of thinking do not?