L
Leela
Guest
I’ve become more and more doubtful about the utility of “evidence” and “reason” as a cudgel to be used against believers. Believers generally do claim to have good reasons for their beliefs and value evidence as much as the next person even if the next person happens to be an atheist. We can argue about what reasons are better and worse than what other reasons and what evidence ought to be considered convincing and what our standards for justifying beliefs ought to be like, but claims that believers are simply irrational or not attentive to the evidence don’t hold water.Well, no. It comes down to the fact that there is absolutely zero evidence for the existence of anything at all supernatural.
Now that fact doesn’t mean there’s proof positive that there is no supernatural – but it does mean that there is no good reason to accept supernatural claims at all.
I do think there is much to be said about the notion that faith is often used as a license to believe in spite of an inability to provide good reasons for belief, an inability to provide counterarguments to the arguments for disbelief, and evidence to support their claims, but I think a given believer may be just as respectful of evidence and reason as a given atheist. There are some very intelligent and thoughtful believers out there, and I don’t think that we can explain away the fact that such people have come to some different conclusions than ours by just saying that they must be being unreasonable or inattentive to evidence.
I don’t think that there is anything more to be made of the term “evidence” than whatever experiences may help us get consensus about a belief. If that is the case, then we all probably believe lots of things without having any way to convince others of the truth of all of our beliefs. I don’t subscribe to any nuclear anihilation theory of evidence that treats certain experiences as so powerful that no one can resist adopting a certain belief without denying their obvious validity as a sheer matter of will. The ability of a new experience to change a belief will always depend on current beliefs as well as past experiences, so what is presented as strong evidence by one person may not convince another. When that happens, it doesn’t mean that the one let unconvinced just doesn’t care at all about evidence.
Of course, when it comes to making scientific claims, we are engaged in a public project where consensus is always important. One doesn’t get to claim something is scientifically true without having any way of trying to get consensus on the matter or one is simply not doing science. Likewise, if one uses a belief as justification for trying to enforce moral obligations on others, then that person is participating in a public project where demands for evidence will need to be met. But if one holds a belief with no demand that anyone else adjust their behavior to that belief, then the person holding such a private belief need face no obligation to provide evidence.
Best,
Leela