that1dude:
You said that “there are many things that science cannot explain, yet we believe that they do exist.” No WE don’t. Rational people might hope, or conjecture about these things, but we do not “believe” them. The humble and honest person admits that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
Once more you insult the intelligence of someone who thinks differently from you, you are saying that rational people do not “believe” (boy, you do love logical fallacies!). Cargau just stated a simple fact: “there are people who believe in stuff that cannot be scientifically proven”. It is a fact no matter whether the beliefs are wrong or not or if you like it or not, but you cannot just insult someone because you do not agree.
I do find funny the way that many people talk about what is and what is not Science in spite of the fact of do not working in Science and not knowing well what it is. I am not saying that it is your case, I am saying that it is not the mine. I am a scientist (a chemist to be more exact), and I do know how Science works.
Just to very briefly summarize it, Science has tools to describe and explain how nature works, and then make predictions based on these explanations. Two very important things in Science is that it must have experimentation and its explanations must be based on the natural laws.
Now, just follow a simple logic: if God is the creator of our Universe and the natural laws (time, space, etc.), then he MUST exists separately from these stuff. It implies that God would not be limited to time, space, natural laws, the boundaries of our Universe, etc.
If the assertion of a God who created our Universe implies that He is not limited by the natural laws, and Science MUST explain stuff based just on these natural laws, then how could the scientific tools verify the assertion? It can neither prove nor disprove the existence of God simply because its tools are able to handle with stuff inside the natural laws while God is outside these laws.But not proving does not mean disproving (I can guess by your posts that you do not understand well this part), Science is just is unable to solve the question of the existence of God.
It is perfectly possible to believe in God and accept Science at the same time, and many scientists do. I recommend you to read the book “The Language of God” by Francis Collins, leader of the Genome project.
By the way, I do recommend you to do much more reading. Nothing of what I have said means that catholics gratuitous accept as truth everything that cannot be empirically proven, by the way the very Bible asks to be rigorous with the beliefs one accept so one will not believe in a false doctrine. But I could realize by your previous posts that you just cannot understand (or accept) that the people debating with you used some revelated truth as an argument, and you almost always replied with some harsh statement insinuating that it would be irrational.
It would be if the Catholic Church, or the whole Christianity, gratuitously accepted every supposed “revelation”. The catholic doctrine survived for 2000 years, it encountered the hardest objections and hardships, and it survived. It was enough time to develop very solid and safe concepts. But how could we know that something came from God and not some human mind? There are several approaches that have to be done, like checking the historicity of the claims, the coherence between them, the coherence inside the doctrine, etc., etc., etc.
Of course one cannot talk about everything in a discussion board, that is why I recommended you to do much more reading. I would recommend you to start by the book “Mere Christianity” of C. S. Lewis, where he make a solid case for Christianity. I would also recommend reading the books of St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas, who are people that also make a rational defense of Christianity.
If you want to know what the Catholic Church teaches or not, read the
Conpendium of the Cathecism and them the very
Cathecism.
When one have strong convictions that the Bible (from which the catholic doctrine is based) is valid, so it is OK to use these stuff in arguments to rationally conclude something. Or at least it would be easier to respect the people you understand and talking about something you have have knowledge.