The fact that people have different perspectives so they all come to different conclusions in no way means that spiritual truth and God are not real. Scientific facts cannot be compared to religious truths without committing the fallacy of false equivalence.
Again with the excuses.
If something is an objective fact, they will reach the same conclusion no matter what their perspective is.
One does not get different values for the height of the Eiffel Tower simply because they have different perspectives. One's perspective does not change the length of time it takes for Mercury to orbit the sun.
Something that is actually real and exists outside of the people measuring it. Something for which testable evidence can be shown.
I am not trying to measure anything. I just look at the evidence to determine if it exists.
So you are trying to measure the realness of it. You are measuring whether it exists in reality.
That is another big fat straw man. I did nothing of the sort. You cannot remove your own bias long enough to even read and understand what I am saying, you keep projecting your bias onto me. It is not even worth responding to because I already explained how I became a Baha'i in the other post where you made a straw man.
I do remember you posting once that you only seek the evidence that supports your belief. Sadly, I can't find that post at the moment.
My faith does have criteria but that list was made by me.
That's not what I asked though, was it?
Does the Baha'i faith itself specify any criteria?
How do you know? Many people say they detect God all around them and to them God is just as real as the wind and light. But spiritual detection is not the same as physical detection.
Of course, wind and light can be independently measured. God cannot. If you and I are in the same place, we will agree on what the wind is, whether it is strong or weak, warm or cold. We will agree on what the light is, whether it is bright or dark, white or coloured.
But such agreement about God is impossible.
You read into that. All I was saying is that you did not see what was there. There is nothing rude or arrogant about that.
And in doing so you were saying that I am blind or otherwise not good enough to reach the same conclusion that you have reached - a conclusion that you conclude MUST be true because you can't imagine that you are wrong. (I mean, you certainly haven't reached your conclusion because you have evidence for it.)
Did you even use the method I suggested you use and then find nothing there?
You know I was a believer for about 20 years, right?
What is it with believers, they always think that anyone who doesn't share their faith has just not been doing it right. And if they do it the right way, all of a sudden, they'll become believers in an instant. What is up with that?
I am just being honest and since I am not trying to win a debate it hardly matters.
That's good. I used to think that Baha'i was a fairly sensible faith. You've certainly corrected that impression!