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TruthSeeker60
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There are ways to reasonably control for the fact that some people who pray may be more righteous, pray more fervently, or with more humility, etc. One way is to set up a study by having an entire group of people (say, a church) pray for the entire group of patients who are to receive prayer. That way, even if some of the persons praying had ineffective prayer, the persons whose prayer was of better quality will go towards all (presumably, if the group is large enough, at least some people in that group will offer quality intercessory prayers to god).TruthSeeker60;7664603:
something that one would expect to see evidence in this world (empirical evidence) for. For example, if one was to claim that intercessory prayer increased the likelihood of survival of cancer patients, that’s something that can be tested empirically because it is a claim that would have an effect on reality if true. How else would you test it other than empirical evidence?If the hypothesis was that praying for X to happen in observable reality makes X more likely to happen, that is
With no way to control for all these variables(bolded below) one cannot formulate a testable hypothesis about praying for X.