Well, there's math. It has material representations, but not material reality.
Yes; it has conceptual & abstract reality.
But a sort of a parallel is seen in our descriptions of quantum physics, where we sound more philosophical than scientific, but insist it is scientific. If the claims are in fact valid, then what is conceptual and abstract is valid. And again, granted, I don't put those on the same level with what we are talking about, so maybe this isn't fair.
The only scientific description of quantum physics is a mathematical one. The various 'interpretations' of QM are hypotheses of arguable scientific merit.
I'm a bit hamstrung in my arguments because something that I think is altogether valid, I can't prove to someone who claims to need empirical proof.
Proof is for logic, mathematics, and alcohol. A scientific and/or critical thinker looks for 'evidence beyond reasonable doubt'. Long experience tells us that just
thinking that something is 'altogether valid' is not a reliable guide - which is why the methods of science have been developed.
To me, the empirical evidence of the fact that there IS fact, and existence, is proof of God, through the simple logic I tried to describe below, and several other ways, but I am told repeatedly that if they are sufficiently explained by naturalism, (and apparently they are happy with that for absolute origin), there is no need for a supernatural explanation. So they like infinite regression and I like first cause.
Infinite regression vs first cause is a false dichotomy, and first cause is special pleading. But we've been over this ground. In any case, what you or they might
like is not a reliable guide to what is real or true.
Mark Quayle said:
One of the simplest logics is that everything we see came from something else. While it may be an awkward way to put it, that something else is therefore more REAL than what we see.
I continued the point below, in the two categories —what IS and what is BECOMING. Many things that are becoming come from other things that are also becoming, but in the long run it all begins with what is not Becoming, but IS. This ("IS") may sound like stasis, but it is the only source of NEW. This "IS" can be the only brute fact, therefore of a reality beyond what we are familiar with.
This sounds like an echo of Aristotle's principles of change and being at rest... but his ideas were less ambiguous. I think you're begging the question by asserting what IS as something different from what is becoming. Everything we know is changing over time; in that sense what IS and what is BECOMING are different descriptions or views of the same things.
But accepting, for the sake of argument, an IS that is the only source of NEW (I don't think these capitalizations are helpful), then, as I've said before, the IS must change to produce the NEW. IOW, the IS is BECOMING by producing. In the case that the IS is
all there is, it must also BECOME the NEW.
But such vague and ambiguous terms can be used to argue almost anything, and in any case, the stuff we have knowledge of (your 'BECOMING') is natural and the stuff we don't have knowledge of is unknown, so it doesn't help clarify the meaning or utility of 'supernatural'.
So, to me, anyway, this first cause, that IS, is the default fact, and as a result, our very thoughts are subject to its causation, whether they result from concepts or empiricism. And this, to me, at least, demonstrates a similarity between what what we see and what we don't see. It all comes from God. God need not be measured by us. It is we who are measured. We like "objective existence", but we are not the only ones looking. I can imagine angels having the discussion of whether the universe, and particularly, humanity, exists!
You simply assert God as the source, but nothing you've described so far implies or requires the supernatural, let alone a particular anthropomorphic deity.
Mark Quayle said:
The fact it is not based on our notion of reality (empirical, or, falsifiable) doesn't mean it is less real, or, at least, less "fact".
The fact we call something real doesn't make it real. It only means we think it is. It is real TO US. But there is more than just us, to observe fact, if there is this default self-existent First Cause, and its view of fact is more full and accurate.
It's a question of definition; we can be mistaken about whether something fits our definition of reality or not, but you need to justify why something does or doesn't fit the definition or provide a reasonable alternate definition of reality. To justify why something does or doesn't fit the definition reality, you need a reasonable definition of that thing - and, as I said earlier, I don't think defining something in terms of what it isn't, i.e. 'not natural, is adequate. So, I'm asking for such a justification from those who apparently think there is one.
FrumiousBandersnatch said:
Physical influence implies physical existence, i.e. material reality.
That can't be proven. But we trust and use it for fact every day. But we have no explanation for existence. We don't know why it is trustworthy fact.
It's not a matter of proof, it's a matter of definition - something that produces an effect on a physical system is a physical influence on that system. We may not know what it is, but it's a physical influence. The non-physical (concepts, abstractions) can influence the physical indirectly through their physical representations (e.g. via human behaviour), and the supernatural certainly does that, but that applies to all products of the imagination.
... if God (first cause) exists, then whether supernatural or material, the separation seems to me to be a point-of-view thing —our categorization— but both being of one source makes them both natural, or if you wish to say that all that descends causally from first cause is supernatural, then everything is supernatural. I'm just saying that where what we call supernatural intrudes on what we call natural, which intrusion we call 'miracle' or such, maybe is only SEEN as such by us, but in fact is more accurately merely unusual.
Whether or not God exists, if everything is natural or everything is supernatural, then there is no way that one can 'intrude' on the other.