Greetings everybody - i’ve been a way for a while and i’m unfortunately going to probably miss the next week’s worth of responses but…
Do they argue for that specific causation?
Wanstronian. Yes they do. Just to let everyone know, i’m **very **touchy about the use/misuse of cases in the history of science since every single polemicist from Richard Dawkins to Dinesh D’Souza wants to say “Ohh Religion has been BAD/GOOD for Science!”
When every single professional trained historian of science i’ve ever known has given the more common sensical answer of “It all depends on what predispositions exist at the time.”
No - far from it, what a petulant comment. Science can’t provide the absolute truth about everything - nothing can. What science can do, as long as it’s not infused with religion or other superstition, is provide the best available objective explanation of our environment.
I think its more appropriate to say we’re able to eliminate false conclusions about the environment we live in. “Mid-level” things like cells or atoms we can be certain about in terms of their mechanistic properties.
When we start talking about thing on the level of quarks and gluons or smaller or gigantic phenomena such as whole galaxies - well, we become quite cautious. Some of us do at least, as i’m sure Anselm can attest - there’s always a physicist willing to conjecture about something as wild as a Particle so inimical to nature that it goes back in time to prevent its discovery - (see Large Hadron Collider).
You Physicists have all the Fun.
There is plenty of evidence that God exists. You are mixing up evidence and proof. You just do not accept the evidence.
More appropriate to say we don’t accept the assumptions. Because what is at issue is what exactly constitutes evidence.
ANY system of thought can be rational. No really, think about it for a second. You start of with a set of principles or assumptions that are considered by some to be “self-evident” (ie: Unprovable) and you build a set of rules or laws based on those propositions.
Aristotlean Physics, Stalinist Communism, Ayn Rand’s “Objectivism” - they all make sense on paper. But how well do they match up/map over Experience?
We can “move the goal post” all day claiming what is or isn’t acceptable for what constitutes evidence. We can shout rant or rave about how the other person hasn’t “opened their minds” to the possibilities - and i’m sure a Postmodernist Literary Critic would take us to task for “not opening our minds to the possibility there is no objectivity” or a Hindu asking us to “open our minds to the existence of the law of karma.”
Moving the goal post gets us nowhere.
If you disagree, please post an example of how religion makes a scientific theory of your choice, objectively more valuable. Even better, please post a scientific theory that relies on religious doctrine at some point, and show how this theory is superior to one that doesn’t.
Or perhaps a more humble approach - let’s forget about “objectively more valuable.”
Can anything currently within the theological structure of Catholicism offer either inspiration/insight into a line research of
METHODOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCE.

uts on his Neuroscientist cap:
Oh Wastronian, before you start to say that no religion can do that - allow me to offer an example.
Tibetan Buddhism. Full Disclosure: No i am not a Tibetan Buddhist. BUT, the Dalai Lama has been engaging those in the field of Neuroscience for quite some time.
In fact he recently spoke a the last Society for Neuroscience conference in the UK.
Now is he trying to convince us of the efficacy of Reincarnation or the Law of Karma? No.
The Tibetan Buddhist’s have started off quite small really - they wish to talk about the nature of the mind. In their own way, these people have been studying it for more than 4,000 years - trying to provoke meditational states that would lead to enlightenment.
And lo and behold, what many of us would have considered to be nonsensical 19th century stories about Tibetan monks melting ice with their minds (EDIT before someone gets the wrong idea - they increased their body temperature through sheer thought alone)…well…turned out to be true. (Herbert Benson, Harvard Medical College, MD/PHD - see Tummo).
From there started well, a veritable cottage industry of research projects based on analyzing the meditating mind - with some rather surprising results.
I’ve got meditation/yogic masters with 40+ years of experience showing up at Harvard, Mass Gen, and the Waisman Center in Michigan and delivering some rather jaw-dropping results.
But you see, my dear Catholics, they didn’t try “moving the goal post.” They stepped up to the plate, looked us straight in the eye and said, “We think your mistaken. And we’re going to
show you.”
Now this hasn’t gotten all of us wanting to convert to Buddhism. But it has opened a dialogue, because it has allowed us to explore something together. In a non-adversarial fashion.