The âWhat evidenceâ question made me struggle with doubt for years.
Where does knowledge come from if not sensory experience? What other form of â(name removed by moderator)utâ can there be?
Religious thinkers over the centuries have had to agree: ânothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses.â Most people cannot claim to have knowledge put directly into their minds by Godâweâre limited to what we can experience. This really seems to put theists in a pickle: if science encompasses all sensory-verifiable knowledge, and all knowledge must come through sensory means, how
can there be any other knowledge than scientific knowledge? How can we know about the things religions claim are real, like God, the human soul, or objective moral reality, when nothing sensory corresponds to these things?
All or almost all religions make claims about reality that cannot be verified by sensory experience. The crux of our problem is this: how can anyone ever claim to have transempirical knowledge?
The only scenario in which such claims are possible is one in which a transempirical reality is
represented by an empirical reality.
For example: consider yourself. All the various biological parts of you will one day be comprehensively understood by science, including presumably your brain. Most theists believe that these parts are not âyouâ as a person. A positivist however is forced to disagree. Once you are totally biologically understood, you yourself are totally understood. At this point, a positivist may be forced to say that, like the atheistâs idea of God, âwho you areâ as a person, free will, and consciousness exist only in the imagination. (Biologically, the various parts of your brain which create the sensations of free will and personality are physically forced to do so in the same way that a thrown ball is physically forced to land exactly where it does. Because there is no action your brain can take which is not physically forced, there is no room for any other kind of cause. Believing that âyouâ have any real causal influence on your brain would mean admitting that at some point a nerve cell could fire without a physical cause. Thus, âpeopleâ arenât real; they exist only in the imagination. Only bodies are real, because only bodies are empirically knowable.)
A Christian however is allowed to say simply that we know not only all the parts that comprise the object âmanâ but also, through them, man in himself, or man as a person. The biological âyouâ is a representation of the real you, which allows us to empirically if imperfectly know something about you. Only non-positivists are allowed to say fully, âI EXIST!â
This ideaâthat transempirical truths can be known through empirical realityâis the foundation of all religious thought, and the reason why religion can still rationally exist even after the question of how the universe and everything in it works is finally comprehensively answered by science.
The bottom line of this is best summarized in a quote from a book by JPII, whose ideas I have been trying to paraphrase here:
Crossing the Threshold of Hope
⌠In addition, it is not possible to affirm that when something is transempirical it ceases to be empirical.
It is therefore possible to speak from a solid foundation about human experience, moral experience, or religious experience. And if it is possible to speak of such experiences, it is difficult to deny that, in the realm of human experience, one also finds good and evil, truth and beauty, and God. God Himself certainly is not an object of human empiricism; the Sacred Scripture, in its own way, emphasizes this: âNo one has ever seen Godâ (cf. Jn 1:18). If God is a knowable objectâas both the Book of Wisdom and the Letter to the Romans teachâHe is such on the basis of manâs experience both of the visible world and of his interior world. This is the point of departure for Immanuel Kantâs study of ethical experience in which he abandons the old approach found in the writings of the Bible and of Saint Thomas Aquinas. Man recognizes himself as an ethical being, capable of acting according to criteria of good and evil, and not only those of profit and pleasure. He also recognizes himself as a religious being, capable of putting himself in contact with God. Prayerâof which we talked earlierâis in a certain sense the first verification of such a reality.
With this in mind, Iâve found that the things Christianity has to say about life, good and bad, whatâs important and what isnât, desire and indifference, and the things that fulfill us and the things that donât embraces my own experiences.
No, thereâs little in the way of physical evidence I can hand you, but I can honestly draw from my own experience, which is how anyone knows anything anyway.
Some fellow Catholics here might be wondering why it took me years to figure this out, and thinking that Iâm over-complicating justifying religious experience unnecessarily. To me however this one little corner of a random book by JPII was groundbreaking. That line ââŚ
it is not possible to affirm that when something is transempirical it ceases to be empiricalâŚâ blew me away.