Why do You Find Scientific Knowledge and Spiritual Knowledge to be Incompatible?
I still don't know what is being called "spiritual knowledge." I've asked multiple times including in one of the two threads to which you alluded above (as did two others), which referred to spiritual knowledge and wisdom and its relative value to scientific knowledge. There was no answer from either the poster addressed, who started his thread, nor any of the others that use such phrases. I asked for a working definition of both knowledge and wisdom, gave mine, and asked for examples of spiritual knowledge and wisdom, and why they met that person's definition. Crickets.
And that offer is made again. Give me a definition of knowledge and how what you are calling knowledge qualifies.
I've noted that I explored this kind of thinking and activity 30-35 years ago, found that it had little of value to me to offer then, and asked for ways in which this so-called spiritual path might be of value to somebody like me. Again, crickets.
So, my working hypothesis that there is nothing there for me, stands unchallenged by any answer, and that such pursuits must be filling some need in those pursuing them that I don't have and that there is no value there for me, remains unchallenged by any answer or example.Also, that these people really know nothing inasmuch as they are unable to deonstrate otherwise upon request.
Now to your question, it's not a matter of incompatibility. There is nothing offered from the spiritualists with which to compare scientific knowledge. How can mist be incompatible with substance? How can poetry be incompatible with a recipe or directions to a home, both of which are examples of actual knowledge by my definition, if the recipe and driving directions lead to their desired outcomes?
For this thread, I'll repeat: knowledge is the collection of factual ideas, facts being linguistic strings (sentences, paragraphs) that accurately and reproducibly map some aspect of reality determined empirically. Truth is the quality that all such propositions contain.
And wisdom is knowing what to apply intelligence to in order to obtain maximal satisfaction and ataraxia. If intelligence is knowing how to get what you want, wisdom is knowing what to want - achieving what what goals will facilitate the pursuit of happiness.
I can demonstrate examples of each and explain if requested how those examples rise to these definitions. The spiritualists apparently cannot. I suppose that if they could, by now, at least one would have done so.
Instead, I get poetry, which can't be incompatible with anything, since it apparently has no specific meaning. As best I can tell, these people are in search of a feeling, not knowledge. I challenge them to offer a counterargument with clear definitions and examples of what is being called knowledge (or wisdom), and if they cannot, to understand why what they are doing has no benefit for those not seeking that feeling.