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True love waits in haunted attics
No, I'm down with the best method for determining truth from falsehood (in the real world).
In that case, you can't say that empirical evidence is the primary or exclusive standard, given that it fails (doesn't work) in validating itself. You can use empirical evidence as one of the standards, and arguably it's the most rigorous, but unless you accept another standard that validates empiricism itself, you're left with self-negations. This other standard is intuition, given that the philosophical underpinnings of empiricism are ascertained through this, such as uniformity in nature, the existence of the external world, etc. You can't reason these things to conclusions. You sense them.
Hypotheticals aren't necessary for this argument.
Is there a pyschological study which evidences that it is better for an individual to believe things that are false instead of things that are true?
Well, if we assume that God doesn't exist, I think that's precisely what studies on the psychological value of religion prove. In some points, compared to nonbelievers believers have an advantage, e.g. (and don't hold me to this), with group cohesion or sense of belonging, or a sense of transcendent meaning.
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