I don't need to find what's better here, because in my view science doesn't contradict religion at all except in places where it plays as science but is really pseudoscience through too much theorizing and too little facts
You are again changing what we are talking about.
The thread is about "reasonable faith". I said that arguments that use unsupported premises are infinite in number and
are never reasonable. You claimed that an argument with completely unsupported premises (baseless assumptions) are still
reasonable.
I maintain that they aren't. The point of an argument is to get to a decent answer for some problem or question. The point of an argument is to become wiser, not to "just believe" something.
So I ask again:
how do you find out what's true if not buy testing if it works as an explanation??
Advanced QM is all about this.
Quantum mechanics is pseudoscience???
So for me, I can have all the science in the world and all the good religion in the world. You atheists just like partying till 8.
Again talking around the point being made.
How do you assess the truth / accuracy of an argument if not through testing it in the real world to see if it holds up? How do you assess the truth / accuracy of the conclusion if you can not support the premises?
Do you agree that we can make up any number of arguments
where the conclusion logically follows from the unsupported premises while being completely and utterly wrong anyway?
That's even sneakier.
You're saying it's not about what works per se, but about what works in bringing about truth.
We were talking about a methodology to come up with explanations. We were not talking about phenomena and the effect they produce.
I was talking about "premises supported by empirical data as the best method we currently have". About what
works to come up with explanations that make sense and are usefull. You then started talking about the psychological effect of certain beliefs.
Those are 2 completely different things.
But that would be a veracity standard, since it's about truth rather than what works
Ow for crying out loud...
I repeat my question:
how do you find out what is true without testing it against reality?
So even though you mention pragmatism (what works), you're really speaking of veracity. Make up yer mind, young man (where's the fist shaking emoticon when you need it?).
No. You are again confusing yourself (or attempting to confuse me or the audience) by trying to bicker again about definitions and philosophical / formal logic jargon. All that stuff is irrelevant to practical application of reason and argumentation.
What I'm saying is
that you can not know what is true without testing it against reality. And if your argument is actually true,
it will work when you test your argument against reality.
The "working" part is the evidence of the truth of the argument.
The "not working" part is the evidence against the truth of the argument.
I'm saying that you can't obtain (or know) one without doing the other.
If you think you can, you are welcome to answer my question, which I will repeat a 5th time for your convenience:
How do you find out what is true without testing it against reality?
And to repeat it once more:
if you test it against reality and your test is successfull, then your argument/explanation works