You deny the evidence that there is for spirits and God. Isn't that confirmation bias?
You are just denying that there is evidence for God when there is. What we do with that evidence is another thing, but the evidence is there.
You just reject evidence when evidence exists.
So far, you haven't pointed to any evidence that isn't imaginary. What objective evidence do you have?
.No science won't consider D because science does not have evidence for D that it can use in science, so science just plods on presuming it is correct that A,B and C explain a phenomenon,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, even if it is unverifiable that this is the case.
If we seriously considered D wouldn't we also have to consider all the hundreds of other unevidenced "possibilities" by the same token -- constructor mice, elves, Brahma, FSM, &al?
en.wikipedia.org
Science knows that certain things can be used in science as evidence and can be verified and falsified and so leaves out God.
It is atheists who are the ones who claim that evidence for God does not exist because it cannot be used by science. So atheists are the stupid ones, not logicians or scientists necessarily.
No, atheists defer belief in God for the same reason science does -- no objective evidence. Scientific utility has nothing to do with it.
Atheism doesn't necessarily claim God doesn't exist, some atheists do, but it's not a definitive feature of atheism.
Atheists and reasonable people withhold or defer belief in everything there is no objective evidence or need for, this generally includes all kinds of gods and other mythical beings, worlds and events.
How would I do that? All I am doing is pointing out that there IS evidence for a God in the Bible and history and nature and experiences of people,,,,,,,,,,,, and that what God in the Bible tells us that He did has NOT been shown to have happened naturally and never will be,,,,,,,,,,, it is unverifiable, just as the existence of God is unverifiable.
There is as much evidence for God in the Bible as there is for Hobbits in Lord of the Rings. They're both just books, written by people. It's amazing how often believers cite the Bible in conversation with rational unbelievers, apparently thinking rational interlocutors will accept its claims as authoritative.
How is there evidence for God in history, unless you including mythology? What historically verifiable events necessitate God/magic?
God in nature? Nature is complex, making it a fertile field for personal incredulity in those ignorant of its mechanisms or awed by its intricacy. Neither is evidence of magic.
Experience? We've gone over this. Anyone can claim empirically unverifiable experiences, and these are myriad. What makes a god claim more likely than any other subjective experience?
You are the one who denies there is evidence for God and maybe that is the reason you probably have so much faith that nature could do the things that need an intelligence to do.
Perhaps I'm unimaginative, but I can think of no other alternatives, once unverifiable subjective experience and tradition are off the board.
They become more likely guesses.
???? -- How so? Isn't the whole methodology of science designed to eliminate guesswork?
Even if the science is spot on in how it would have had to have happened if it happened naturally, it cannot be said that the science could have happened naturally and it cannot be said that it did not happen another way.
So I change the highlighted word to make it make sense.
I don't think I follow. Under what circumstances does it become rational to believe in something that lacks objective evidence of existence?
You speak of another way --
what other way, the supernatural? Without evidence this exists, why should it be considered a reasonable alternative by any rational person?
You're presuming that what science says about something is in the purview of science.
You're presuming that God cannot have done it because you say there is no evidence for God.
You never seem to realise that if science says things happened in the past, it cannot be verified and in that way it is not real science.
What does science study that's not within its purview? Science does not research that for which there is no evidence to evaluate. How could it?
"Goddidit" is not a mechanism, it's magic; it's an assertion of magical agency. Science studies
mechanism. Magic cannot be tested. It's not falsifiable.
I presume 'it' was done by some mechanism or cause-and-effect. I don't presume magic. I think this is reasonable.
If science says something happened, and it cannot be verified, how is it science? This sounds more like folklore or religion.
Science is a dumb tool with big feet and tromps all over theology flowers because it does not know any better and is blind.
Scientists keep travelling where science leads and tromp all over the same flowers in their quest for knowledge within the rules of science.
So science can only use material evidence and so can claim that life is chemical based when that is no more than where the naturalistic scientific evidence leads and which ignores God.
But here is where the thinkers and philosophers and theologians step in and say,,,,,,,,,"You can't do that, it's BS"
Sorry, but this is nonsense. It's an emotional rant.
Current areas of study are pushing against the area that God said He did. So what do you expect.
Why do you say that origin is a real, evidence phenomenon.
How can any conclusions of science in this area be seen as legitimate science when all it can be is educated guesses? How is it even possible that I need to explain this?
Please stop with this "educated guess" nonsense. Science is not religion. It's an investigative modality specifically engineered to
eliminate guesswork.
Yes, you need to explain this.
So? Theology is not there to give us scientific knowledge and science is not there to give us theological knowledge.
What is the methodology of theological research?
Science is being rational and logical given the bounderies it can work within.
It is not rational and logical if it claims to have knowledge of everything in the past when all it has is educated guesses about what MUST have happened given only natural processes.
Science does not claim knowledge of what there is no evidence of, that would be religion. Please stop conflating the two.
Science stays in its lane. It makes no religious claims. It ignores religion.
Religion, on the other hand, makes all sorts of factual and historical claims it has no evidence of. When I point this out, the faithful claim science is trespassing --