sojourner
Annoyingly Progressive Since 2006
Love is like beauty, in that neither one can be measured or quantified. I'm not moving goalposts, and I'm not "demonstrably, factually wrong." The quality of love depends far more on personal meaning (like beauty) than it does on quantifiable measurements. That's because love has scope and meaning far beyond just its measurable, chemical reactions. If that weren't the case, most songs wouldn't be about love, and we wouldn't have love poetry. Love may involve measureable, chemical reactions, but love is not those reactions, themselves. That's what you're trying to claim and you're mistaken. Speaking of goalposts, it's like a sporting contest. Is the "measurable outcome" of the game "better" if it's a rout, or if it's a one-point squeaker? We don't know -- the numbers don't tell us that. All they tell us is "who won the game." Is that the sum total of the game? No! Personally, I couldn't care less if the Timberwolves win or lose -- wouldn't watch them either way. If the Cowboys lose big time, that's important to me. If they win huge over their arch-rival, that's huge to someone else -- in a different way. If they pull out a squeaker, it's important in yet a different way. The numbers simply don't tell us everything, and the numbers aren't the thing, itself. They are merely indicators of the thing.And off you go moving the goalposts and hoping nobody notices. You got caught in a claim that was demonstrably factually wrong, yet instead of admitting your error, you're changing your argument. Oh wait! Love didn't work? Let's try beauty!
Yeah, I think we're done here.
Theology is similar, in that the factual numbers can tell us a lot about the world, but they can't provide what the world may mean. Theology provides vehicles for meaning -- like art and poetry and music (which is, incidentally, why those things are used in religious worship). There simply are no objective, measurable facts that provide the basis for the existence of meaning, or the scope of love, or the proposition of God.
If you can't understand that, then there's no help for you, and you'll just have to live with your delusion that human experience can be boiled down to its constituent facts and no more. If that's the case, we are done, because there's no arguing with willful ignorance.