GrowingSmaller
Muslm Humanist
First. They may have it right. For example someone who believes the world is a computer simulation, may be slightly deviant in their concept of reality, but they may be correct. Until things are different, it will remain their perspective, their "version" of the truth. Alongside others' versions.First, if it only applies to them, how can it be representative of anything in the universe other than them?
Secondly, if you agree that the religious experiences of other people can't be proven to NOT be something from God, why are you not considering that maybe they have it right and you do not?
Secoldly. Its a fact I could be wrong.... but what can be "checked" are the objective consequences of being a Hindu, or a Muslim etc.
Well go ahead yourself. And check the nature of noumenal (or absolute) reality, and get back to us with the results.Sure, go ahead. But if you want your evidence and signs to be convincing, you'd better make sure this phenomenon can be checked.
Prove for instance that we're not in a computer program, or are not being watched over by angels.
It cant be done.
Some things can be done, (e.g. I can assess the consequences of piety, of security via belief in the unseen); and others can't (whether the premises of my faith are 'true' e.g. angels are actual).
Yet, even you have an attitude towards the noumenal (absolute), don't you? I think we all do. But you don't have direct access, even as a scientist you have consequences of your beliefs about it. But your beliefs are limited to the secular, and others aren't.
But if science works (has effects), so does faith. Turn on a defibrillator, but you still have to use it correctly for it to save lives - likewise with religion.
"Exalted is He who created all pairs - from what the earth grows and from themselves and from that which they do not know" Quran.
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