Many folks assert that we should not believe in anything unless there is evidence. Consider for a moment the fact that many things which all of us agree exist have certainly existed for the entire history of the universe, yet evidence for their existence only became available to humankind recently. One good example of this is light outside of the visible spectrum. It's been emitted from stars and other sources for billions of years, so it surely existed throughout the history of mankind. Yet, for most of history, there was no evidence for the existence of most types of light.
Examples could be multiplied: the atomic nucleus, distant galaxies, cellular components. All of them presented no evidence until modern technology allowed humans to perceive them.
So if people in the past chose to believe only in those things for which there is evidence, that would have lead them to incorrect conclusions. Thus it stands to reason that the same approach may lead us to incorrect conclusions today.
Now it may be reasonable to take a philosophical approach that leads us to incorrect conclusions some of the time, if we decide that no better approach is available.
What do you think?
Examples could be multiplied: the atomic nucleus, distant galaxies, cellular components. All of them presented no evidence until modern technology allowed humans to perceive them.
So if people in the past chose to believe only in those things for which there is evidence, that would have lead them to incorrect conclusions. Thus it stands to reason that the same approach may lead us to incorrect conclusions today.
Now it may be reasonable to take a philosophical approach that leads us to incorrect conclusions some of the time, if we decide that no better approach is available.
What do you think?